softLOUD

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Steve Reich, James Oswald, Anonymous, David Lang, James MacMillan, Julia Wolfe

Genre:

Instrumental

Label: Delphian

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 56

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: DCD34213

DCD34213. softLOUD

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Eight Arrangements from Scottish Lute Manuscripts Anonymous, Composer
Anonymous, Composer
Sean Shibe, Guitars
Killer David Lang, Composer
David Lang, Composer
Sean Shibe, Guitars
From Galloway James MacMillan, Composer
James MacMillan, Composer
Motet I James MacMillan, Composer
James MacMillan, Composer
Sean Shibe, Guitars
(12) Divertimenti, Movement: I James Oswald, Composer
James Oswald, Composer
Sean Shibe, Guitars
Electric Counterpoint Steve Reich, Composer
Steve Reich, Composer
LAD Julia Wolfe, Composer
Julia Wolfe, Composer
Sean Shibe, Guitars
Following live festival performances last year, the talented young Scottish guitarist Sean Shibe brings this bracingly original concert programme featuring music for acoustic and electric guitars into the recording studio. The results, like the performances themselves, are spectacular.

‘softLOUD’ is certainly a departure from Shibe’s last recording, the Julian Bream-inspired ‘Dreams & Fancies’ (9/17). But listening to these disparate pieces I thought of a work on the earlier album, Britten’s Nocturnal. Something about cumulative effect. About taking the music of the past and transforming it. Or deconstructing it. Or dissolving into it. Or just plain smashing it.

Shibe’s motivations are as much political as musical. ‘It’s a pointed and urgent probing of the question of national identity for Scotland in the age of the rise of the new right, nativist politics, Trump and Brexit’, he writes in a note. Listening to ‘softLOUD’ halfway across the globe – not that Australia is immune to extremist politics or brittle notions of national identity – one feels freer to pick up on purely musical effects and universal concepts such as anger, grief and nostalgia.

Shibe imbues the early Scottish lute pieces with a profoundly moving intensity that carries them far beyond their modest frames, through to the MacMillan arrangements, themselves as much transitions from the old to the new as Reich’s Electric Counterpoint, which seems to gather the previous works in a boppy afterparty. Then they are torn apart in Julia Wolfe’s LAD, a searing siren song of lamentation originally for nine bagpipes. And Lang’s explosive Killer, originally for electric violin. But try listening to ‘softLOUD’ in reverse order, and remember Britten’s Nocturnal.

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