As we know from Beata Moon’s previous CDs her music
is unfailingly melodic and unerringly emotional. By all means have a look
at how we have received her previously: piano music on Naxos (
review)
and a selection of her Albany CDs (
review).
Dinner is West is a piano trio in eight little movements. These range
through various brands of delight that veer between a hint of minimalism in
the ostinatos, open-air Copland-like Americana, ear-tickling rhythmic invention,
frosty romanticism, early-Fauré cantabile, a touch of syncopation and
smiling rhapsodic serenading. It is by no means boneless either.
Wood,
Water & Land is for solo marimba. It’s catchy, conspiratorial,
confiding and conspicuously virtuosic. There are plenty of lovely subtle touches,
as in the way the music almost murmurs at 1:50 - quite a feat for a percussion
instrument.
Tenancy is for cello and piano. Its three movements are big-hearted
and pulsatingly dramatic and rhapsodic - progress feels instinctive and the
instincts are good. A healthy sense of movement courses through
Dragonfly
which is for viola, clarinet and piano. Its clarinet line occasionally seems
to reference Nyman’s
Where the Bee Dances and none the worse
for that. The end is thoughtfully inconclusive.
The music-making and imagination at play in the
Dickinson Songs pay
an individual homage to a style very familiar from Barber’s songs. The
Dickinson Songs are as quirky as the words they set. The witty and
zany
I Felt a Funeral is truly memorable as also is the extremely engaging
Hope is the thing with feathers.
Moon surprises with
A Collage of Memories for violin and piano. The
libation of dissonance, disconnect and hysteria is stronger in the first two
pieces than elsewhere. The third,
Reflective, has the rounded passion
and poetry of
Tenancy. In the last two pieces we meet an exotically
dank mix of RVW’s
Lark and Bartók’s
Rumanian
Dances plus elements that are loose-limbed and bluesy. I loved the name
of the last piece in the sequence:
Campy, ma non troppo. The
Rhapsody
for solo piano is played by the composer - she is the pianist throughout.
It comes from the part of Moon’s glossary that accommodates big-hearted
dramatic romance alongside fragments that recalled Einaudi - but there is
more active detailing here.
There is nothing here to harm and much to bless yet Moon manages to steer
clear of the land of bland.
You can hear the composer talking about her music
here
and her own
website will offer further
insights alongside those in the fold out ‘sleeve’.
Criticise this disc because it runs for under an hour but the music assuredly
pleases: a tirelessly sincere and touching combination of song, drama and
dance.
Rob Barnett
Criticise this disc because it runs for under an hour but the music assuredly
pleases: a tirelessly sincere and touching combination of song, drama and
dance.
Full Contents List
Dinner is West for violin, cello and piano (2005)
1 First Impressions 2:34
2 "God Laughs" 3:07
3 Juxtaposin 2:22
4 "The Night Watch" 1:59
5 Form with Circumstance 1:50
6 "A Dream" 2:12
7 Curtain Call 1:24
Wood, Water & Land 4:40
Tenancy for cello and piano (2011)
9 Reflective; Expansive 4:48
10 Playful 2:14
11 Lyrical 4:21
Dragonfly for viola, clarinet and piano (2010) 4:16
Dickinson Songs for soprano and guitar (2006)
13 I'm nobody! Who are you? 0:49
14 The bustle in a house 1:00
15 I felt a Funeral, in my Brain 2:47
16 Hope is the thing with feathers 2:00
A Collage of Memories for violin and piano (2005)
17 Dramatic; intense 1:17
18 Rambunctious 1:18
19 Reflective 2:32
20 Intro; freer 1:50
21 Campy, ma non troppo 2:19
22
Rhapsody for solo piano (2009) 4:22