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            Lawrence DILLON 
              (b. 1959)    
              Violin Sonata Motion (2008) [18:44]  
              Mister Blister, for solo violin (2006) [2:18]  
              Façade, for violin and piano (1983) [8:54]  
              Bacchus Chaconne, for violin and viola (1991) [5:15]  
              Spring Passing, for violin and marimba (1997) [7:13]  
              Fifteen Minutes, for solo violin (with kazoo) (2006) [14:53] 
               
              The Voice, for violin and piano (2008) [4:05]  
                
              Danielle Belén (violin, kazoo)  
              David Fung (piano)  
              Juan-Miguel Hernandez (viola)  
              Stan Muncy (marimba)  
              rec. St John Chrysostom Church, Newmarket, Ontario; Glenn Gould 
              Studio, CBC, Toronto [Façade, Sonata, Voice]; 5-8 February 
              2009. DDD  
                
              NAXOS AMERICAN CLASSICS 8.559644 [61:21]   
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                  By coincidence, Bridge Records have recently released a disc 
                  of American composer Lawrence Dillon's chamber music. It’s 
                  entitled "Insects and Paper Airplanes" and was warmly reviewed 
                  here. 
                  This release by Naxos brings his discography to four, following 
                  a 2002 chamber works volume on Albany Records (TROY 513) and 
                  another with voice, also on Albany (TROY1170).  
                     
                  The Naxos blurb says: "A love for lyricism, a dash of wit, and 
                  what he has called “an irresistible urge” to connect 
                  with the Classical music heritage have remained easily identifiable 
                  hallmarks of Dillon’s music." These words give a pretty 
                  accurate idea of what the potential listener can expect from 
                  this disc. Dillon does have a blog on Sequenza 21.com, a trendy 
                  American site which grandly bills itself as "The Contemporary 
                  Classical Music Community", but which leans heavily towards 
                  music that "refuses to be pigeon-holed": experimental-cum-crossover. 
                  But the nearest the music on this CD gets to that is the short 
                  'duet' in Fifteen Minutes for violin with kazoo - otherwise 
                  this is an hour of music that is often profound without being 
                  pretentious, sometimes light-hearted but never 'lite', humorous 
                  without being arch, and immensely appealing but never frivolous. 
                  According to Naxos's usual formula, {American composer} always 
                  = {American Classics}, but sometimes there is more than a touch 
                  of prescience about such fundamentally commercial choices.  
                     
                  This CD also represents the debut recording of up-and-coming 
                  Mexican-American violinist Danielle Belén, who was Grand 
                  Prize winner at the 2008 Sphinx Competition. Her award charged 
                  her with choosing an American composer with the intention of 
                  recording his or her violin works - she chose Dillon. Her website, 
                  at the time of writing, features a YouTube video of her performing 
                  the Bacchus Chaconne. Her musicianship on this disc bristles 
                  with expressiveness, technical agility and considerable enthusiasm 
                  for Dillon's writing.  
                     
                  The recording covers 25 years of the composer's work. There 
                  are two pieces for solo violin, the brief and zippy Mister 
                  Blister and the quarter of an hour long Fifteen Minutes. 
                  The two are related in that they are in a way the same commission, 
                  one done right, one done wrong - the amusing story is in the 
                  notes! Fifteen Minutes - with a nod to Andy Warhol - 
                  is really 16 individual shorts moulded into a polystylistic 
                  and often technically challenging suite, which includes a variety 
                  turn on the kazoo.  
                     
                  There is one work for violin and marimba, Spring Passing, 
                  an atmospheric, nebulous elegy Dillon wrote by way of tribute 
                  to his father, who died when he was two; and one for violin 
                  and viola, the Bacchus Chaconne, which Dillon composed 
                  as a cathartic response to the very late cancellation of an 
                  almost-finished commission for a cello concerto. The work starts 
                  slowly and deliberately solemnly, all the better to contrast 
                  with the dancy, rock-inflected chaconne that follows, in which 
                  the soloists try to outplay each other, before the work ends, 
                  figuratively, in tears!  
                     
                  The remaining three works are all for violin and piano. The 
                  Voice is Dillon's melancholic, dramatic embellishment of 
                  a transcribed aria for an "unstable" soprano, from his own 2001 
                  opera Buffa. Façade is one of Dillon's 
                  earliest works. In his own words, it takes "an 1890ish waltz, 
                  a pretty salon melody, and twists it through some increasingly 
                  irrational harmonic shifts until it shatters into inarticulate 
                  fragments. After a minute or two of stumbling about in confusion, 
                  it gradually reassembles itself into a fragile version of its 
                  former self." A lovely, sharp, innocuous piece, Dillon reports 
                  that it caused a bit of an uproar at its university premiere, 
                  with a "distinguished professor" instructing his students never 
                  to perform such a shockingly unmodernistic piece!  
                     
                  The final work is also the most important one: the Sonata, 
                  which started out as a flute sonata - indeed it was in that 
                  form that it received its premiere in 2005. Dillon adapted the 
                  work for Belén for this recording. Subtitled Motion, 
                  the intriguing titles of its three movements are: Motion/Emotion, 
                  Emotion/Commotion, and Commotion/Motion. According 
                  to Dillon, the movements explore the conflict implicit in the 
                  titles. The finale contains what he describes as a "whimsical 
                  tribute to early rock and roll", but that should not deter listeners: 
                  from beginning to end this is a fine, impassioned, attractive 
                  work, played alternately with great vigour and delicacy by both 
                  Belén and Australian pianist David Fung, one that deserves 
                  a place in the violin sonata repertoire.  
                     
                  Sound quality is excellent, with little difference between the 
                  church and studio venue, save the atmospheric resonance and 
                  barely audible background traffic of the former. The booklet 
                  notes are fairly detailed and interesting, and all biographies 
                  present and correct. Quality music, quality performances, quality 
                  production.  
                     
                  Byzantion  
                  Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk 
                   
                     
                 
                  
                  
                   
                 
             
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