Spectrum - Contemporary Works for Piano

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Customer Review: marvelous bagatelle-like piano album
This is a wonderful collection of piano bagatelle like durational envois, shibboleths,effacacious timbral meanderings,visionary,some ephemera, egregious. Yet all ponder an obsessive elan for the pure rarefied luv of piano timbre.And since modernity has passed out of itself,there is a freedom simply to create unencumbered,eremitical with pure devotion to piano timbre. Some works actually betray their asopted,intended/distended frames. That perhaps is a more interesting feature of postmodernity. Here as in Bedford's 'Toccata', scouring post-electronic tonality. It is a wonderful work diapasonal,diaphanous,orgasmic at times,yet direct and to the point. Also a prolific great piano practicioner-monger is Michael Finnissy with an excerpt from his 'Yvaropera 5', there are more,these are dedication to the marvelous new music pianist Yvar Mikashoff. Finnissy has finely woven threadbare lines. These works engage the challenge of the miniature, and the lyricism present here is like walking in a gallery with a predominance of no one particular musical language. There are also some leftovers from the Tango Projekt.Perhaps the precursor of this Spectrum. Howard Skempton the pre=eminent British miniaturist 'Cantilena' is here,hovering with an air of eridite presence,his voice is rather taciturn like,yet talismanic with a few purely wrought tones. Andrew Toovey's 'Still'I found is not as remarkable as his brilliant chamber works,of dense complexity. Here the upper register clusters seemed overly labored,and unintentional within the context. Jonathan Harvey's 'haiku' is the ultimate effrontery for this miniscule musical parade, a mere single arpeggiated gesture, one press-down of the sustaining pedal, a mere 20 seconds, or as long as the envelope decay dies. I found overall that it is the structural context that harbors the conceptual complexity,even the more pronounced examples as Roger Redgate's 'trace' is not as rhythmically forbidding as a measured particle exhumed from Ferneyhough,who is mirabile dictu absent from the proceedings here. Also the epigones of complexity, as Barrett, Dench,Fox are out of the picture.Why?.If you smite their faces do they not shed a tear,if you cut them, do they not bleed. Neglected imaginative piano creator Dave Smith however is included. Smith has written,contributed greatly to solo literature, and his "tuesday" is included, a wonderfully crafted work with equisite voicings,ephemera.Additional I enjoyed Edward McGuire's "Foglie d'Autunno" a work satisfying the more song/canto,piano album dimensions of its generic frame. There are as well extroverted-like tone poem/paintings, as Edwin Roxburgh "Moonscape", Montague's "Mira",Hoddinott's "Dark March". All these excursions into the finer particles of piano timbre leaves one empty, I found, not in an inferior way, but as Cornelius Cardew once quipped an eudaemonia,a felt perception,of something else,an emotive entity,a creative pathway missed, a wrong turn,a bad egg of structure,or concept,and that some unknowable espousal,some imaginative envoi should have been at the center of the music.
Customer Review: Modern music made easy
This double CD is a recording of "Spectrum" - two volumes of piano music by late twentieth century composers. The works were commissioned by Thalia Myers and the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music from a wide range of figures, well-known and otherwise, with a simple brief: to create short pieces in a contemporary style that could be accessed by pianists of any standard. As a composer myself, I can safely say that such a brief is not as easy to follow as it may seem. Whilst it is true that short works are easier to write than long ones, it is never always easy to think of beginners or amateurs at primary school level when you're used to working with professionals and semi-professionals of more or less the same standard as yourself. In "Spectrum," the various composers have met the challenge impeccably, and the books are now proving to be a useful teaching tool with which to introduce young performers to contemporary music. With this recording, the same material can be made accessible to first-time listeners as well as performers. The first volume is perhaps the harder of the two in terms of both listening and playing the music. Most of the composers featured in it returned to contribute to the second volume and it is clear (from listening) that some lessons were learned: you may find it more pleasant to put Disc Two on first when trying it out. To summarise all the pieces, short though they are, is beyond the scope of this review but among the names appearing are Jonathan Harvey, Diana Burrell, Michael Finnisey, Graham Fitkin, Philip Cashian, John Tavener, Howard Skempton and Stephen Montague. In the books, most of the pieces occupy single or double page spreads only; on disc, this makes each track less than two minutes long. (For the record, the absolute shortest work is Jonathan Harvey's "Haiku" from the second volume, which is two lines long on paper and takes just 30 seconds to play!) Take the music as you will, but in all cases it is well-played: Thalia Myers commands a wonderful expressive range and captures the extreme subtlety of each and every piece. This really is the finest introduction to modern music around!


Electric Scooters

The Boondocks: The Complete First Season

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Based on cartoonist Aaron McGruder's politically charged daily comic strip, The Boondocks brings no-holds-barred social commentary and comedy to the Cartoon Network's Adult Swim programming, and now, all 15 episodes of the 2005-2006 debut season are available in an uncut and uncensored format in this three-disc set. As with McGruder's strip, the animated version of The Boondocks uses a fish-out-of-water format--10-year-old revolutionary-in-training Huey Freeman (voiced by Regina King), his 8-year-old brother Riley (also King), and their salty Granddad (John Witherspoon) relocate to an upscale suburban neighborhood--to take aim at all manner of cultural issues in both the black and white communities. Targets sighted in these episodes include singer R. Kelly's bedroom shenanigans ("The Trial of R. Kelly"); gangsta rap ("The Story of Gangstalicious," which includes a wicked spoof of the documentary Tupac: Resurrection); Oprah Winfrey (who is almost kidnapped by Riley in "Let's Nab Oprah"); and Martin Luther King, who revives from a coma to be branded a terrorist in "Return of the King," which generated plenty of heat from the Rev. Al Sharpton upon its broadcast. All of the above topics are handled in a decidedly less-than-respectful and occasionally offensive manner, though exactly who will find The Boondocks scandalous and who will find its approach fearless and on the money will depend on the viewer. But there's no arguing that the show is frequently as funny as McGruder's comic. Extras include audio and video commentary by McGruder and the production staff (as well as commentaries by the character Uncle Ruckus, Granddad's thoroughly unhinged friend whose fixation on a White Jesus is tackled in the season closer, "The Passion of Ruckus"), as well as deleted scenes, some unaired Adult Swim promo spots, and a behind-the-scenes featurette that addresses the show's conception and production. --Paul Gaita
Customer Review: One of the best!
Love The Boondocks!!! Aaron Mcgruder has a very unique way of presenting issues that deal with our generation, ways that will not sit right with everyone. The Boondocks is a hilarious satirical look at our country and our culture. Not for everyone (especially young kids), but very entertaining if you enjoy this certain type of humor.
Customer Review: Who Doesn't Laugh at this...
This is a GREAT show and an EVEN better cartoon. Not only does the show provide you with a show full of laughs but it is a little intellectual too. My only complaint is the price. WHY so much?!?!


Master Locks
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