Cheap Arbos (Music) (Paul Hillier, David Beavan, Thomas Demenga, Arvo Part, Dennis Russell Davies, Brass Ensemble, Hilliard Ensemble, Staatsorchester Stuttgart, Christopher Bowers-Broadbent, Albert Bowen) Price
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| ARTIST: | Paul Hillier, David Beavan, Thomas Demenga, Arvo Part, Dennis Russell Davies, Brass Ensemble, Hilliard Ensemble, Staatsorchester Stuttgart, Christopher Bowers-Broadbent, Albert Bowen |
| CATEGORY: | Music |
| MANUFACTURER: | Ecm Records |
| TYPE: | Orchestral & Symphonic, Modern Motet, Estonia, Modern Composition, Classical, Choral, Requiem/Requiem Section, Vocal, Keyboard Work with Descriptive or Unclassified Title, Solo Voice(s) and Small Ensemble, Chamber, Classical Music, Keyboard, Septet for Seven Woodwind Instruments, Concerto, Trombone Concerto |
| MEDIA: | Audio CD |
| TRACKS: | Arbos, An den Wassern zu Babel, Pari Intervallo, De Profundis, Er sang vor langen Jahren, Summa, Arbos, Stabat Mater |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 781182132528 |
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Customer Reviews of Arbos
Arbos I was introduced to this music by a Catholic girl; tragicaly romantic, teenage, and often desperate. This is music that can touch within you a place that only surfaces at the lowest points of your life. It has the effect of being uplifting, crushing, and sobering at various times and often times, all at once.
Arvo Part seems to have looked past the mind candy of Western culture and brutaly felt the numbing destruction that characterizes our times. Yet 'Arbos' does not mirror negativity for its own sake. For as much pain as these works communicate, there is also a rare peacefulness to them. A peace stripped of its naivety, tested and refined by its acknowledgement and subsequent struggles with this world's vicious nature.
One CD; one Work
OK. So he didn't write these all to be one piece of music, but the thing that makes Arbos the sine qua non of Arvo Part's commercial recordings music is that, taken and a whole, it is a primer on his composotional craft.
The full expression of his technique is found in the Stabat Mater, which you'll have to go back 200+ years to Bach before finding an equal example of religious strum und drang subordinated (or elevated) to musical kunst.
The elements of this master stroke are laid bare, pedagogiaclly if not dramatically, in the short works before it.
The "Arbos", acting as sentry between the challenge and the contest, is a pure mensural canon (like the Cantus in Memory of Britten), a fundametal technique in the Stabat Mater.
And, contrary to the "amazon.com essential recording" review above, the De Profundis is not "every measure the same rhythm", but one melodic phrase unit per word (listen to it:
De pro-fun-dis cla-ma-vi ad te Do-mi-ne: 1-3-3-1-1-3: First phrase up, next phrase down; first ascending from the tonic, then descending to the tonic). Simple. Brilliant. Even simpler, Part's technique of melodic elements moving stepping along a scale while harmonic elements skip through a chord are presented in their purest expression in the Pari Intervallo. And the other three pieces exercise similar expressions of these basic elements, all preparing the listener for the Stadat Mater. Or, just sit back and let it all wash over you.
Almost as important for me was the apearance of Gidon Kremer. Being a fan of his work, this collaboration between Hilliard, Kremer and the music of Arvo Part is an exciting listen. Kremer does a fine job on two of the tracks. The final track on the album includes Kremer and is some 23:53 long - so it's not a minor work. If I had to put forth one criticsm it's the inclusion of the title track "Arbos" which is annoyingly upbeat - if searching. It appears twice on the CD. It's not bad music, just not at all in keeping with the rest of the CD. It only lasts 2:25 so isn't too bad. But if you only heard that one track you would have no idea of what the rest of this musci sounds like. Overall - a solid CD.
Hilliard and Kremer - superb!
Some of the work on this CD is minimalist. That is, not much variation in the space of five or six minutes. However, the Hillaird Ensemble produce chorale music. So that's understandible.