KEELEY Concerto for Piano and 12 Instruments. Dances with Bears
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Robert Keeley, Rowland Sutherland, Odaline De La Martinez
Genre:
Chamber
Label: Lorelt
Magazine Review Date: 01/2015
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 71
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: LNT138

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Quetzalli |
Robert Keeley, Composer
Lontano Odaline De La Martinez, Composer Robert Keeley, Composer |
On the Tiles |
Robert Keeley, Composer
Caroline Balding, Violin Dominic Saunders, Piano Robert Keeley, Composer |
Dances with Bears |
Robert Keeley, Composer
Lontano Odaline De La Martinez, Composer Robert Keeley, Composer |
Six Inventions for Flute and Clarinet |
Robert Keeley, Composer
Andrew Sparling, Clarinet Robert Keeley, Composer Rowland Sutherland, Composer |
Tales from the Golden City |
Robert Keeley, Composer
Caroline Balding, Violin Lontano Odaline De La Martinez, Composer Robert Keeley, Composer |
Concerto for Piano and 12 Instruments |
Robert Keeley, Composer
Lontano Mary Dullea, Piano Odaline De La Martinez, Composer Robert Keeley, Composer |
Author: Jed Distler
Scored for three clarinets, vibraphone and string trio, Quetzalli’s chordal blocks recall Messiaen’s textures and harmonic language, although On the Tiles for violin and piano lets looser in terms of contrasting material and emotions, especially in the wide-ranging, unfettered violin-writing. The title-piece, Dancing with Bears, is for oboe, violin, viola, cello and piano, and stands out in its subtle slow-moving sequences and the closing Allegro’s angular dotted rhythms and quirky voicings. Virtuoso deployment of registers lends interest to the well-crafted yet rather academic-sounding Inventions for flute and clarinet. Keeley’s annotations admit to his avoidance of writing much for strings until he decided to take the plunge with Tales from the Golden City for violin solo. Despite some fine double-stop passages, the music would gain power and intensity if it branched more frequently into the higher range and made more imaginative use of pizzicato effects.
The four-movement Concerto for piano and 12 instruments offers this disc’s strongest musical substance and intricate scoring. The first movement’s neo-Baroque toccata-like textures get interesting when they begin to slow down and stick together, while the Alla marcia could be likened to Hindemith meeting Spike Jones’s rhythm section. I would have expected a bravura fourth movement rather than a reticent finale but the third-movement Adagio’s fragile instrumental blending and tender lyrical writing is worth this well-recorded and superbly performed disc’s asking price.
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