New & Notable Classical Albums

1121314151618»

Comments

  • edited November 2020

    Composer: Luigi Nono
    Recording Date: 6-7 Mar 2020
    Recording Venue: BlowOutStudio, Brussels/Belgium
    Release: September 2020


    NONO, Luigi (Venezia, 29.1.1924 – Venezia, 8.5.1990)

  • I'm not sure of the  release info about this.
    - Just posted on Soundcloud:
    httpsi1sndcdncomartworks-yjnOPjUU1u4qanV2-ziHqyA-t500x500jpg
  • edited November 2020


    Vykintas Baltakas
    - is a musical Scheherazade. His music keeps pulling you in and referencing itself, sometimes branching off and reinventing itself, and sometimes returning to where it started. He weaves musical stories that are linked with a delicate interconnected web. . . .

  • edited November 2020
    Not a release, but . . .
    (8 track playlist link)
    #4: Musik til Jydsk Telefon (1965)
    "Music for Jydsk Telefon" is written on one of the many reel-to-reel tapes in the cardboard box archive, and it is electronic music that Else Marie Pade made for a documentary about the telephone company Jydsk Telefon entitled "Of my life and my time".


  • edited December 2020

    Yannis Kyriakides & Electra - Face

    Composed for ELECTRA (Michaela Riener, Susana Borsch, Diamanda Dramm, Saskia Lankhoorn) and made in collaboration with visual artists Johannes Schwartz and Maria Barnas.

    Face is a multimedia composition for voice, violin, recorders, piano, live electronics and video, based on notions of face, not only as a manifestation of emotion and identity, but as a data set to be collected and used by external powers. The piece navigates between the problematic practice of anthropometry in the early 20th century, specifically the measurement of cranial features to determine character types, to the current use of emotional face recognition software to collect data about the emotional engagement of consumers.

    Unsounds - Donemus
  • Thanks! Always delighted by a new Kyriakides release!
  • edited December 2020
    ^^ - Welcome . . .
    httpsi1sndcdncomartworks-u1fHO7BbJBct-0-t500x500jpg
    Para a frente is the first EP by pianist Késia Decoté on Nonclassical. Interweaving evocative piano lines with whimsical toy piano and pulsing electronics, the EP celebrates Decoté’s close collaborations with emerging composers. Taking its name from Yfat Soul Zisso's playful fragment for toy piano, Para a frente includes works by composers Michael Taplin, Angela E Slater, Omar Peracha and Max Gibson.
    Nonclassical image
    Music at The Limes - Candles Piano music by 20th and 21st century  composers  Ksia Decot  piano  OxOnArtsinfo

    Késia Decoté is a pianist from Vitoria, Brazil. She holds a PhD (CNPq scholarship) and MA (Distinction, Santander scholarship) in Contemporary Arts and Music from Oxford Brookes University (Oxford, UK), Master Degree (CAPES scholarship) and BA (Cum laude, CNPq scholarship) in Piano Performance from Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (Rio de Janeiro, BR).  She studied under Mr. Luiz Senise and Dr. Myrian Dauelsberg (piano), and Dr. Ray Lee (Contemporary Arts and Music).

    Késia has been developing a rich and diverse career, as piano soloist, chamber music instrumentalist, contemporary music interpreter and as a musician in theatre productions. As a soloist, Késia has performed solo piano recitals to great acclaim in the UK, Brazil, Portugal, Canadá and Norway. She has also been developing an exciting career as an improviser, being member of Oxford Improvisers, and performing and recording in duo with cellist Bruno Guastalla

  • October 16, 2020 is the official release date for Lovely Music's recording of a wonderful 1995 performance of Robert Ashley's opera FOREIGN EXPERIENCES
    Voices:  Sam Ashley, Jacqueline Humbert
    Voice Recording:  Gustavo Matamoros
    Orchestra:  Synthesized orchestra parts:  Sam Ashley
    MIDI driven orchestra parts: Robert Ashley and Tom Hamilton
    Mixing and Processing:  Sam Ashley
    Produced by: Sam Ashley
    Background Voices:  Robert Ashley, Sam Ashley, Thomas Buckner, Marghreta Cordero, Jacqueline Humbert, Joan La Barbara, Amy X Neuburg
    Background voice recording: Tom Hamilton

    "The original seven-voice version of the opera was recorded in my studio. It was edited by Sam Ashley to match the performance orchestra that had been used in seven-voice performances to that date. Because of the way they are treated, the seven, recorded voices are referred to in this version as the "background voices." Later, Sam and Jacqueline Humbert suggested a "two-voice" version as a performance piece for themselves using the original MIDI generated performance orchestra. Jacqueline and Sam divided the seven-voice original score between them based on decisions about a new way to tell the story. They were recorded live in performance at the Subtropics Festival, Miami, 2002. Then this "two-voice version" CD was produced, to reflect that way of telling the story, using the Subtropics Festival recording along with newly created material and elements from the original performance orchestra and processed versions of the existing, edited "background voices."

    Many of the background voices were processed in an extreme fashion to create extra parts in the orchestra. Sometimes they can be heard as ghostly premonitions similar to "EVP" recordings ("Electronic Voice Phenomena"). "EVP" recordings, important in the 1970's (the time situation of Foreign Experiences), frequently feature subtle "voices" that are either buried in or constructed from noise."

    Robert Ashley

  • edited January 2021

    - The reception of Scelsi has gone through an amazing process: from the passionate hagiography of the early 1980s, marked by the pioneers’ exitement about a musical phenomenon initially nobilitated as “unanalyzable”, through the confusion after Vieri Tosattis confession or assertion (“Scelsi, c’est moi”) immediately after Scelsi’s death in 1988, to a more objective approach to a music that has become almost part of the mainstream. This interesting development is paralleled by an iconographical habit according to which the composer’s face was initially not allowed to be shown – instead the wellknown “Om”-circle served as a demiurgical substitute. Moreover the disciples of Giacinto Francesco Maria Scelsi, Conte d’Ayala Valva, possessed ominous tapes as a precious relic, which initially had to be kept secret.
    In the meantime, this vow has been broken: in 2009, the archive of the Fondazione Isabella Scelsi in Rome opened its doors, and the tapes have since been accessible to an interested professional public. Most of these are sonorous working materials, sounding sketches, on the basis of which a collaborative process was to be initiated: Scelsi recorded his Ondiola performance on tape, thus often producing complex, multilayered sound documents by means of multiple dubbing processes; while Vieri Tosatti and others successfully produced performable scores from those tapes, Scelsi did not always interfere intensively in the process of transcription. Contrary to Scelsi’s noble habitus, he did not use luxurious equipment: the Ondiola is a kind of cheap tube synthesizer with a three-octave keyboard and several filters, his Revox tape recorder a homesuited model from the 1960s – Scelsi, c’est nous!and yet he pursued the highest artistic standards. Lo-Fi quality and extremely delicate musical lines and counterpoints mingle, evoking a very special esthetical aura. That those tapes are accessible now is quite a sensation: the wellknown works can be re-visited in greater detail with regard to the sound documents, and a scripture driven musicology can now be much more overt to the event of sound.

    - In the project Scelsi Revisited the tape material is for the first time reflected in the medium of art: seven composers   (Ragnhild Berstad, Georg Friedrich Haas, Fabien Lévy, Tristan Murail, Michael Pelzel, Michel Roth, Nicola Sani) were commissioned by Klangforum Wien to create new works from Scelsi’s tape music; Uli Fussenegger had prepared data packages consisting of excerpts from two to three tapes each, which Scelsi apparently had not used for the elaboration of de-finitive works, the latter always manifesting themselves in conventional scores. The ensemble line-up of the new compositions had to be based on Scelsi’s work Anahit for violin and 18 instrumentalists (1965), which was also performed in the Scelsi Revisited concerts. All new works presented here are live recordings.

    My two cents: Exceptional, + a number of other superlatives :)

    Giacinto Scelsis Ondiola Authors personal photo
  • From "The Serious Weird Stuff" department:

    Kairos, March 2020


  • @Brighternow - I bought the Scelsi Revisited album through eMusic and am in total agreement with you, an excellent collection. Kairos is one of the best things left on on eMusic
  • edited January 2021
    ^^ Absolutely . . . :)

    I've been searching for the newly dropped 5 solo CD's.
    There's nothing on the Kairos website or on Klangforum Wien.
    I found something on this site and it seems that they were not supposed to be released before  03/12/21.


    Neuwirth produces changing musical textures, boldly and impetuously combining the most contrasting elements.

    'I know that the arts won't change anything, but art can point towards what has become ossified and reveal the desolate state of society and politics. I refuse to be yodelled away.' (Olga Neuwirth)
    - and so she produces continuously changing musical textures, incessantly posing questions, boldly and impetuously combining the most contrasting elements. This album is part of Klangforum Wien's 'Solo' 5-CD series of recordings of pieces for one performer, which is the ensemble's response to the 2020 Covid-19

  • edited February 2021
    ^^ the Solo releases are now on the Kairos website with rearcover, Pdf. linernotes and everything . . .
    ******************************************************************************************
    Excellent Other Minds news:
    Two brand new remote recording works by Alameda-based composer Brian Baumbusch are featured on this album release by Other Minds. Commissioned by the University of California Santa Cruz Wind Ensemble, Isotropes was written in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown and consists of a sequence of varied musical fragments chosen and recorded by each participating musician from their respective homes during quarantine. Together, these fragmented recordings combine to create an ambitious 25-minute work for adaptable orchestra. Also featured on the album is Tides, a piece commissioned by the Creative Work Fund in collaboration with video artist Ian Winters and recorded remotely in lockdown following the cancellation of its March 2020 live premiere. . . .
  • edited February 2021
    Out on a brand new Yannis Kyriakides page on Bandcamp:

    La Mode is a concert installation work conceived and performed by Tomoko Mukaiyama with music composed by Yannis Kyriakides. It was first performed in 2016 at the opening of the National Theatre in Taichung, Taiwan, and involved a close collaboration with the architect of that iconic building Toyo Ito. The CD of La Mode recorded four years later, in June 2020, in the midst of the first Covid-19 lockdown, marks the first time the music was re-interpreted since the premiere. It was sparked off by a new version of the music, that was made into a live-stream concert in the Muziekgebouw, Amsterdam with the collaboration of cinematographer Reinier van Brummelen.
    The concept of the music of La Mode is built on the juxtaposing of an intimate, almost hermetic musical world against the rhythmic drive and structures of the dance-driven music heard in the fashion industry. The two sides of fashion: the exterior one of glamour, consumerism and desire, and the interior dialogue of insecurity, distorted self-image and social alienation.
    Tomoko Mukaiyama
    - is a Dutch-Japanese pianist, performer and visual artist based in Amsterdam. By integrating different disciplines into her art-and-music pieces, Mukaiyama investigates the concept of performance and the limits of the concert hall as we know it. Tomoko pushes the boundaries of the classical music world.
  •  ^^^ ^^^
    Thanks for the info on this.
  • edited April 2021
    ^^ Welcome . . . And credits to celloplayer Peter Hollo.
    It's very unlikely I would have found it without following him.

Sign In or Register to comment.