This is the debut CD of young Norwegian composer Martin Romberg, 
                  and is likely to have very wide appeal: Romberg writes in a 
                  style the notes describe as "post-Romantic tonal". 
                  This means that, while a few crackerjacks will find his writing 
                  decidedly old-fashioned - much of it could have been written 
                  a century ago - anyone with a fondness for evocative, characterful, 
                  melodic music cannot go wrong.
                   
                  French pianist Aimo Pagin's programme consists of two long suites 
                  of piano pieces. Paris-based Romberg's music is mainly based 
                  on themes from fantasy literature, the visual arts, Celtic mythology, 
                  and comic strips: Valaquenta takes its name and inspiration 
                  from the second part of JRR Tolkien's The Silmarillion, published 
                  posthumously in 1977. Valaquenta is a kind of who's who of the 
                  main divine characters constituting Tolkien's Middle Earth universe. 
                  The Tableaux Fantastiques, meanwhile, are based on artwork by 
                  Polish fantasy painter Jacek 
                  Yerka.
                   
                  Romberg's music is deliciously atmospheric and suggestive, a 
                  little in the spirit of Albéniz' Iberia, but most of all reminiscent, 
                  especially in the Tableaux, of Erik Satie's Gymnopédies and 
                  Gnossiennes: warm and lyrical, playful, reflective, impressionistic, 
                  gently exotic. Valaquenta is the longer and livelier work, and 
                  more romantic; its masculinity - relative rather than absolute 
                  - is accounted for by the fact that the seven characters Romberg 
                  describes so musically and memorably are all male. By way of 
                  considerable bonus, Tolkien's Valaquenta is a lot less prolix 
                  in Romberg's hands!
                   
                  Aimo Pagin has played this programme in public twice already. 
                  His performance here is as expressively fluent, attuned and 
                  aromatic as could be wished for in his own recording debut. 
                  Sound quality is pretty good, though not perfect - there are 
                  a few inconspicuous editing joins, as well as very low level 
                  hiss audible in the quietest sections. This latter is curious, 
                  because although the booklet admits to mixing, there is no sense 
                  of over-processing, and certainly no fake-sounding reverberation. 
                  The dreamy artwork and photos of the booklet add to the open-space 
                  feeling of Romberg's music. The English-Norwegian notes are 
                  concise but fairly informative, well written and neatly laid 
                  out. Handily, the booklet can be downloaded for free here.
                   
                  Byzantion
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