Ian Pace is an extraordinary pianist. 
          His performances are events, there's always a buzz surrounding them, 
          especially when he programmes the performances himself. Pace seems to 
          thrive on large piano recitals: he has played Messiaen’s complete Catalogue 
          d’Oiseaux, Michael Finnissy’s History of Photography lasting 
          five hours and James Dillon’s now completed cycle The Book of Elements.
        
        Having given the world premiere 
          of Volume III of The Book of Elements - commissioned by the Berlin 
          Biennale - and performances of this and other volumes in France, Germany, 
          the USA and the UK - Ian Pace gave the first performance of the complete 
          80 minute long cycle in the presence of the composer at the Warehouse 
          on London's South Bank.
        
        The Book of Elements consists 
          of five Volumes each commissioned for a different prominent pianist 
          of contemporary music by various music festivals (Vol. I was commissioned 
          for Roger Woodward, Vol.II for Noriko Kawai, Vol. III for Ian Pace, 
          Vol. IV for Rolf Hind and Vol. V for Nicolas Hodges). Dillon adopted 
          an aesthetic of the miniature, the fragment: there is no beginning, 
          no end and no development. Musical thoughts and ideas appear, sparkle 
          and vanish. Dillon’s piano music is a glass bead game: there are complex 
          references and memories of past music: Bartok, Scriabin, Messiaen and 
          many more. But they appear not as quotations in a self-consciously post-modern 
          way, more like shadows. 
        
        Dillon’s music is rhythmically 
          very complex. Ian Pace plays the different time layers effortlessly. 
          But the music remains obscure: all the intellectual effort doesn’t translate 
          into a consistent experience for the listener. Volume III is one of 
          the most virtuosic and absolutely brilliantly performed; Volume IV starts 
          with beautiful, slow moving sound colours reminiscent of Debussy. 
        
        Dillon’s The Book of Elements 
          is a rich challenge for any pianist with an interest in contemporary 
          music. Ian Pace took up this challenge with ease and gave it a truthful 
          first complete performance. For the listener it was less satisfying 
          - The Book of Elements gives the impression of an obscure scholastic 
          exploration of pianistic possibilities, and not so much a development 
          of new musical (and emotional) qualities.
        
        Jean Martin 
        For more information about Ian Pace see http://www.ianpace.com/