Marco Shirodkar’s website: http://www.hovhaness.com/Visions.html 
                
                Hovhaness worklist: http://www.musicweb-international.com/classRev/2000/feb00/hovanessworks.htm 
                
                Hovhaness works overview: http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2001/July01/HovhanessOverview.htm 
                
                  
              The music of Alan Hovhaness has grown from cult 
                status and small numbers to approach the recorded mainstream and 
                a much larger following. Gone are the 1970s when ten or more austere 
                line drawing identically-sleeved LPs and a smattering of black 
                discs from Louisville and CBS carried the Hovhaness credentials. 
                Now there are many CDs although the works awaiting first recording 
                still far outnumber those already recorded. 
              
Centaur push out the boundaries of recorded music 
                yet again. This time they have included in their project three 
                works never previously recorded - at least not commercially. The 
                fourth is presented complete for the first time. 
              
Ode to the Temple of Sound was commissioned 
                for Barbirolli to open the Houston Symphony's 1966 season. It 
                is a prepossessing piece, with ecstatic tintinnabulation, imposing 
                awe, buzzing and whirring tension, the echo of Gagaku, intimations 
                of eternity and a Debussian timelessness. 
              
Vahaken and the Ode are typically 
                otherworldly but Floating World is as strange and 
                dissonant as the Vishnu, Odysseus, Etchmiadzin 
                and Ani symphonies with its slowly groaning trombones 
                sounding like primeval creatures in rut. We are a stranger in 
                a strange land coming to terms which impinge on our consciousness 
                but are outside our understanding – something we cannot assimilate 
                easily. There is beauty there and we sense it but we cannot translate 
                it. The notes by Hovhaness authority Marco Shirodkar help us all 
                they can but ultimately we must just trust and listen again and 
                again. Hovhaness provides an orchestral fabric that rolls and 
                broils, punctuated with a long-gaited deep drumbeat, shimmering 
                and singing in vulnerable fragility. 
              
Zeami Motokiyo was a 14th century Japanese playwright. 
                The Meditation on Zeami was written for Stokowski 
                for the Carnegie Hall in 1963. Like Floating World from 
                a year later it carries the imprint of the composer's Japanese 
                experiences of 1962. It's another work of haunting uncertainties, 
                of chiming bells and slow-blossoming ideas. Its very refusal to 
                rush lends it magic. Its dissonant moments are resolved into a 
                continuum that casts a strong enchantment. 
              
The Vahaken Symphony takes its name 
                from Armenian paganism. Vahagn was the god of wind, strength and 
                courage. This compact three movement work takes us through a silky 
                seamless string anthem underpinned by a flute passing remora-like 
                as a shadow under the strings. Holstian energy meets slowly dissipating 
                sheets of trombone legato. String pizzicato launches some folksy 
                dances. The sweet central Intermezzo recalls the Fauré 
                Pavane. The last movement combines elements of andante 
                and allegro. Unison strings enunciate a curvaceous long-breathed 
                melody borne high by tubular bells and a deep baritonal pizzicato. 
                An oriental sway rises to a whirling celebratory temple dance. 
                
                  
                Rob Barnett