Archive for Coming Soon – Page 2

New Album of Recorder Rarities from John Turner on Divine Art

Coming May 2024 and featuring: John Turner (recorder), Stephen Bettany (piano), Laura Robinson (recorder), Catherine Yates (viola), Alex Mitchell (viola)

John Turner
John Turner © Divine Art

A new double album of chamber music featuring the leading recorder player John Turner will be released on Divine Art around May 2024 with the title ‘Highways and Byways’.  It’s a set full of surprises. There are recorder pieces by well known and admired composers: Lennox Berkeley, John McCabe and Thomas Pitfield. Other rare recorder music by well known composers includes pieces by Igor Stravinsky (probably the only mature Stravinsky piece which has never before been commercially recorded), Alexander Gretchaninov (a pupil of Rimsky-Korsakov), and a remarkable work for recorder and two violas by the distinguished American composer William Bergsma.  In addition there are two previously unknown pieces written for John Turner by the late Christopher Ball, and two pieces by John himself, one in homage to Ukraine. A veritable feast of rare music!

John Turner is one of the leading recorder players of today. Born in Stockport, he was Senior Scholar in Law at Fitzwilliam College Cambridge before pursuing a legal career, acting for many distinguished musicians and musical organisations (including the Hallé Orchestra, the Royal Northern College of Music and the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain), alongside his many musical activities. These included numerous appearances and recordings with David Munrow’s Early Music Consort of London, the Academy of Ancient Music, the English Chamber Orchestra, the Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields and the English Baroque Soloists. 

John Turner’s recordings include no less than five sets of the Brandenburg Concertos, as well as the F Major version of Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 with Menuhin and George Malcolm, but lately he has made numerous acclaimed recordings of the recorder’s contemporary concerto and chamber music repertoire, including four solo concerto discs, all of which have received critical acclaim. Some of the most recent (all on the Divine Art and Métier labels) are a recording of music by the novelist and composer (and fellow Mancunian) Anthony Burgess, a disc in memory of Alfred Deller (a good friend) with James Bowman and Robin Blaze, including music by Blow, Handel, Tippett and Fricker, and programmes of music by Roy Heaton Smith, Peter Hope and Jim Parker. In 2020 and 2022 he also produced and performed on two Divine Art albums issued to commemorate and honour the late Sir John Manduell.

In the last few years he has played in Germany, Switzerland, Poland, France, New Zealand, Japan and the USA, and given many recitals on Radio 3 with pianist Peter Lawson. In all, he has given the first performances of over 600 works for the recorder, including works by many non-British composers, including Leonard Bernstein, Ned Rorem, Peter Sculthorpe, Douglas Lilburn, Petr Eben and Ruth Zechlin. Many of the works he has premiered have now entered the standard repertoire, and these and his own recorder compositions are regularly set for festivals and examinations.  Two new works recently published are Three Salutes and A Short Sprint, the latter for the young Japanese recorder player Hidehiro Nakamura.

Highways and Byways (DDX 21245)

Works:

  • Sonatina (Lennox Berkeley)
  • Little Suite (Wilfred Heaton)
  • Sonatina No. 2 (Peter Pope)
  • The Summer Triangle (David Butler)
  • Lullaby (Igor Stravinsky)
  • Sonatina (John Locke)
  • Dancery (Thomas Pitfield)
  • A Sad Pavane (John Turner)
  • Hopscotch (John Turner)
  • Domestic Life (John McCabe)
  • Sam’s Tune (John McCabe)
  • A Cheerful Little Piece (Christopher Ball)
  • Homage to Dvořák (Christopher Ball)
  • The Edgeley Tram (Peter Hope)
  • Edgeley Road (David Jepson)
  • Concertino (Alexander Gretchaninov)
  • Pastorale and Scherzo (William Bergsma)
  • Conversation Piece (Dorothy Pilling)
  • Mount Street Blues (David Ellis)
  • Fipple Baguette (David Ellis)
  • A Little Caribbean (Thomas Pitfield)

John Turner Divine Art Recordings Group Discography

Athene Announces Volume Four of Johann Jakob Froberger’s Harpsichord Suites

English harpsichordist Gilbert Rowland is preparing the fourth volume in his ongoing series presenting the complete Suites for Harpsichord by Johann Jakob Froberger.  The album is to be recorded at Holy Trinity Church, Weston, Hertfordshire in  July 2024, with engineer John Taylor who produced all of Gilbert’s previous Divine Art and Athene recordings. Earlier  volumes have attracted much praise:

Gilbert Rowland
Gilbert Rowland © Andrew Cockrell

“A glorious sound and enjoyable music recorded in a resonant acoustic, giving a truly luscious sound. Rowland plays with energy and a good forward drive.” —David Griffel (Harpsichord & Fortepiano) on volume. 1

“One of the finest recordings of Froberger’s harpsichord music I have heard, with a wonderful-sounding instrument and magnificent playing from Rowland.” —Stuart Sillitoe (MusicWeb International) on volume 1

“Froberger’s music is individual in nature and ground-breaking – he was one of the first composers to settle the ‘dance-movement’ style. These are thrilling and authoritative recordings by Gilbert Rowland of wonderful music.” —John Pitt (New Classics) on volume 2

“Froberger’s music – in this splendid rendition by Gilbert Rowland – reveals huge variety and baroque beauty. Clever, ingenious and melodious engaging and attractive works.” —Stuart Millson (Quarterly Review) on volume 2

“Impeccably noble performance… first-class engineering… an indispensible addition to fine recordings of early music.” – Rafael de Acha (All about the Arts)

Johann Jakob Froberger (1616-1667) was a highly accomplished composer of the middle baroque and is usually credited with inventing the ‘baroque suite’ used with variations by Bach, Handel and countless other composers; certainly it was his idea to set the ‘backbone’ of the Suite as the four dance movements of allemandecourantesarabande and gigue. He was extremely prolific and indeed several works (including Harpsichord Suites) have been discovered only recently.

Gilbert Rowland first studied the harpsichord with Millicent Silver. Whilst still a student at the Royal College of Music, he made his debut at Fenton House 1970 and first appeared at the Wigmore Hall in 1973.

His mentors have included Kenneth Gilbert and Fernando Valenti. Recitals at the Wigmore Hall and Purcell Room, appearances at major festivals in this country and abroad, together with broadcasts for Capital Radio and Radio 3 have helped to establish his reputation as one of Britain’s leading harpsichordists.

His numerous records of works by Scarlatti, Soler, Rameau and Fischer have received considerable acclaim from the national press. The recording of the 13-CD set of Soler sonatas with Naxos was completed in 2006. He also recorded a CD of Sonatas by Albero for London Independent Records, which was released in 2009. He joined Divine Art in 2010 to record the harpsichord suites by Handel, followed by those of Froberger and Mattheson.  Gilbert Rowland is assigned to Divine Art’s specialist early music label, Athene.

Froberger: Suites for Harpsichord, volume 4

Performer: Gilbert Rowland (harpsichord)

Label: ATHENE

Catalogue number: ATH 23215 (2CD set, double digital album)

Works: Harpsichord Suites by Johann Jakob Froberger 

  • Suite in G minor, FbVW 614
  • Suite in E minor, FbWV 622
  • Suite in F major, FbWV 621
  • Suite in D minor, FbWV 613
  • Suite in B flat major, FbWV Anh. IV/02
  • Suite in D minor, FbWV 639
  • Suite in G minor, FbWV 649
  • Suite in D major, FbWV 611
  • Suite in A minor, FbWV 628
  • Suite in E minor, FbWV 648
  • Suite in C minor, FbWV 644
  • Suite in F major, FbWV Anh. IV/08

Previous Divine Art group albums by Gilbert Rowland:

Coming to Divine Art: Tales of the Glens – Piano Works by Irish Composer Philip Hammond

Divine Art Records is delighted to welcome to its roster the fine pianist Anthony Capparelli, who has recorded Tales of the Glens – a collection of piano works by Irish composer Philip Hammond. The works recorded, through thematic reference, musical inspiration, and use of traditional melody, centre in focus on the Glens of Antrim, one of Ireland’s most beautiful regions. They delve into the history, people, landscape, and folklore, taking the listener on a journey to this magical place.  With his extensive oeuvre for the instrument and prominence as a composer in Ireland, Hammond’s rich colour palette and deeply pianistic writing delights the ear with a lush world of textures befitting this theme. The album contains three premiere recordings of Hammond’s solo repertoire which include works based on traditional harp melodies originally collected and transcribed by Edward Bunting (the Bunting versions are also included here).  Finally, the centrepiece of the album is an innovative multi-movement work for pianist and storyteller titled Tales from the Sea of Moyle.  A collaboration between Anthony Capparelli, Philip Hammond, and two of Ireland’s most renowned bearers of the storytelling tradition, Liz Weir MBE and Colin Urwin, this work tests the boundaries of collaboration between art forms.  Each story is set along the Antrim coast and delivered by the commanding voices of Weir and Urwin, offering the listener guidance, and sometimes warning, on their journey. 

Anthony Capparelli © Rudy Carlier
Anthony Capparelli © Rudy Carlier

Anthony Capparelli is a pianist originally from Wisconsin, USA.  He has performed as soloist and chamber musician in six countries, and has an extensive background in teaching and collaborative piano. He has a wide range of musical interests, and as a soloist currently works with modern repertoire that ties in his upbringing in folk and Irish traditional music. As a chamber musician, he has toured across the Midwestern area of the USA and also in Ireland and the UK.  Anthony has worked and performed in masterclasses with prominent ensembles such as the Elias String Quartet, Kronos Quartet, the JACK quartet, and with pianists Orion Weiss and Emanuel Ax.  In his work with vocalists, Anthony has performed in masterclass for Dietrich Henschel, Dale Duesing, Lawrence Brownlee, Eric Owens, Charlotte Margiono, Martin Wölfel, and with members of the Lorelei Ensemble.  He has a deep love for the operatic and art song repertoire and has trained for a year at the International Opera Academy (BE) in 2021/22 as a pianist-repetiteur where he worked on multiple productions.

As a soloist, Anthony has performed in six countries, and in concert with the Kenwood Symphony Orchestra, the St. Croix Valley Symphony Orchestra, and the Minnesota Orchestra. He is passionate about bringing music to audiences that have limited access to it, and has taught piano and performed recitals in small rural pubs, hospitals, senior care homes, and prisons. He holds a Doctorate of Musical Arts from the University of Iowa under the tutelage of Dr. Ksenia Nosikova and received his Postgraduate Soloist Diploma at KASK/Conservatorium (BE) studying with Daan Vandewalle.  He now lives in Gent, Belgium. 

Tales of the Glens (DDX 2115)

Composer: Philip Hammond

Artists:  Anthony Capparelli (piano); Liz Weir (reader*), Colin Urwin (reader*)

Works

  • If to a Foreign Clime you Go (Bunting and Hammond versions)
  • An Irish Lullaby (Bunting and Hammond versions)
  • Old Truagh (Bunting and Hammond versions)
  • The Little and Great Mountain (Bunting and Hammond versions)
  • The Fair Woman (Bunting and Hammond versions)
  • The Lamentation of Owen O’Neill (Bunting and Hammond versions)
  • Open The Door Softly (Bunting) / Modulation (Hammond)
  • Aoife Og (Hammond)
  • Forgotten Longing (Hammond)
  • Tales from the Sea of Moyle (Hammond) *
  • Album duration 79:47
  • Recorded in Iowa, USA 2023

Release date:  early 2024 (exact date to be confirmed)

Coming Soon from Métier: Chamber and Vocal Music by Samuel Andreyev

Samuel Andreyev’s chamber, orchestral, vocal and solo works have been performed, recorded and broadcast throughout the world.  He is now working with Métier Records, Divine Art’s new music division, for a new album of chamber and vocal works titled ‘In Glow of Like Seclusion’ – also the title track, a setting of texts by J H Prynne. 

Samuel Andreyev © Samuel Andreyev

The CD and digital album is to be released worldwide on November 10, with a double-LP vinyl version to follow in the New Year.   The music is incredibly varied, from the sparse resonance of the Sonata da Camera, the ‘cartoon music’ (as the composer puts it) of Vérifications, characterized by primary colours and strong instrumental timbres; the Sextet in Two Parts which in contrast focuses on minute timbral shadings; and of course the cantata for solo voice and ensemble which is the title track of the album.

Born in Canada, Samuel Andreyev settled in France in 2003. After completing his studies in composition, electronic music, analysis and orchestration at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique et de Danse de Paris and at IRCAM, he was awarded a 1-year residency at the Casa de Velázquez in Madrid, Spain. Upon returning from Spain, he settled in Strasbourg, on the border between France and Germany.

Nearly all of Samuel Andreyev’s works are available on CD, including three portrait CDs on Kairos Records (Vienna) and Klarthe (Paris), with two more currently in preparation (as of 2023).

With his YouTube channel and Podcast, Samuel Andreyev presents lectures on musical topics, as well as long-form interviews with prominent musicians as varied as Brian Ferneyhough, every member of Captain Beefheart’s Magic Band, Linda Catlin Smith, Hugues Dufourt, Adam Neely and countless others. He has twice been a featured guest on the Jordan Peterson Podcast, in addition to appearances on Vox, The Symbolic World, Classical Chats and many others.

Samuel Andreyev’s music has been featured in portrait concerts in Bern, Geneva, Toronto, Paris, Kyiv, Strasbourg, Montréal, Tours, and many other cities. Andreyev is a laureat of the Henri Dutilleux Prize (2012, for ‘Night Division’), and the Grand Prix Lycéen des Compositeurs (2020, for ‘Vérifications’). He is also Vice President of the music council of the Fondation Prince Pierre (Monaco).

His works are exclusively published by Edition Impronta (Mannheim).

In Glow of Like Seclusion

MEX 77119 & MEL 12402 (double audiophile vinyl)

Release dates: CD/Digital – 10 November 2023; LP – Jan/Feb 2024

Works:

  • Sonata da Camera
  • Sextet in Two Parts
  • Vérificatons
  • In Glow of Like Seclusion*

Artists:

  • Peyee Chen (Soprano) *
  • Ensemble Proton Bern
  • Luigi Gaggero (conductor)

Divine Art Announces Sixth Album from Swedish Impressionist Composer Jonathan Östlund

Jonathan Östlund
Jonathan Östlund © Jonathan Östlund/Divine Art

Following four previously released and highly praised albums for Jonathan Östlund, and the fifth, “Elysian” appearing on July 14 this year, Divine Art is now preparing his sixth, to be titled ‘Rêverie’. This album, unlike the previous ones, is more focussed in terms of genre, featuring only chamber works, but all demonstrating the composer’s highly developed gift for Impressionist sound-painting.  Acclaimed for his imaginative and accessible music, he has been championed by some of Europe’s best musicians. Among the plaudits for his previous albums, he was described as ‘the 21st Century’s Debussy’ (Jan Hocek, His Voice); “this is music of filigree beauty” (Colin Clarke, Fanfare). The new album, which is to be recorded in late June, will be no less magical and will be scheduled for release in the winter, between November and February.

Rêverie (DDX 21120)

Works

  • Rêveries
  • Empyrean Nocturne
  • Fantaisie Chatoyant sur deux ‘Clair de Lune’
  • Fantaisie sur un cantique Français
  • Sognando l’al di là
  • Waiting for Pierrot
  • Winds’ Wander and Vigil (suite in 9 movements)
  • Zaubernacht

Artists

  • Myriam Hidber-Dickinson (flute)
  • Lisa Brakhman (violin)
  • [to be confirmed] (viola)
  • Mariona Tuset (cello)
  • Evgeny Brakhman (piano)
  • Eva Simó (piano)

Jonathan Östlund received his BA and MA in Composition at LTU, in Sweden, and has so far completed more than 150 works, including several orchestral works, and two concertos for violin.

His achievements include CD-releases, publications and performances with the London Schubert Players in the U.K., France and Romania throughout 2010 and 2011, as part of the ‘Invitation to Composers’ project. In 2012 he won the Public Choice Award for his Cello Sonata, premiered by A. Zagorinsky and E. Steen-Nokleberg, and was awarded 1st Prize in the Leicester Symphony Orchestra’s Composers’ Composition for his ‘Celebration Fanfare’, which was premiered during the Orchestra’s 90th Season Gala. Various premieres followed in 2013, in the U.K. and France.

The year 2014 brought Jonathan’s music to the Cadogan Hall stage with ‘Lumières’, a programme presenting ten of his chamber works, in various constellations, performed by E. Pameijer, B. Waldmann and the Cellini Quartet. That same year, his Cello Sonata received a Russian premiere, and he was a Winner in the 2015 IBLA Grand Prize, with one of his orchestral works [the extended version of which became ‘Nocturnia’, and is featured on his third album, ‘Mistral’].

His first double CD, ‘Lunaris’, was released in 2016 to critical acclaim, a year in which further premieres took place in the U.K. and in Switzerland. In 2017 Östlund’s Piano Concertino was premiered in Athens, Greece, and Y. Revich together with M. Esnult premiered a violin and piano piece in Vienna, Austria.

His second double CD, ‘Voyages’, was released in 2019, featuring (among others) Walter Gatti, Evgeny Brakhman, Sasha Grynyuk, and Alicja Smietana. His third album release, ‘Mistral’, released in 2020, includes the recording of his Concerto No. 1 for Violin & Symphony Orchestra among other mesmerising works in varied instrumentation, and was followed by the release of his fourth album, ‘Imago’, a tour-de-force double album, in February 2022 and a further superb double album, ‘Elysian’ to be released in July 2023.

Jonathan Östlund on Divine Art

Autumn 2023 Release from Divine Art: Burkard Schliessmann plays Schumann Fantasies

German pianist Burkard Schliessmann has been receiving glowing accolades everywhere for his concert performances and recordings, for his virtuosity and also for his individual and highly thought interpretation of the great music from the late Baroque and Romantic eras particularly. Following five previous albums all of which have been exceptionally well received, he is about to embark on a recording of Fantasies by Robert Schumann,  a composer with whom his affinity has been well marked, for example these comments on his album ‘At the Heart of the Piano’ – 

“A collection of dynamite recordings… his Schumann recordings call for special recognition. An inspiring triumph of faith and art. For yours truly, a nice revelation.”

– Phil Muse (Audio-Video Club of Atlanta)

“To my sustained delight, Schliessmann reveals himself as a Romantic temperament deeply motivated by both intimacy and intuition, sustained by a wholesome and astonishing technical resource… let me assure possible auditors of the miraculous power of spontaneity that permeates these realizations.”

– Gary Lemco (Fanfare)

“… Schliessmann is the best pianist I know at entering the world and expressing the awareness of the German romantics. …”

— Donald Vroon (American Record Guide)
Burkard Schliessmann
Burkard Schliessmann © Mathias Heyde, Berlin

As well as exceptional performances we can expect phenomenal sound.  The recording is to be made in June at Teldex Studios in Berlin in 5-channel Dolby Atmos high-definition audio and will be offered in a rage of digital formats as well as hybrid multichannel SACD.

Burkard Schliessmann is an official Steinway Artist and is regarded as one of the most influential pianists of the modern era. He has received numerous prizes and awards of merits for his piano interpretations, as well as being an esteemed teacher, with classes all over the world, principally in the USA.  He is also a professional scuba diver and an Ambassador for “Protecting our Ocean Planet” – a program of Project AWARE Foundation. Learn more on his website.

Burkard Schliessmann on Divine Art

American Choral Classics album on the way from Divine Art Records

British conductor Robin White has brought his hand-picked choral ensemble Alban Voices to the studio to record an album of American Choral Classics including major serious works and iconic folksy ditties!  This will be White’s third outing with Divine Art following his album ‘From Russia’ (Divine Art DDA 25223) with clarinettist Ian Scott and the Royal Ballet Sinfonia, and the Christmas digital single ‘Light of the World’,  which featured both the Sinfonia and Alban Voices.

The new recording, which also spotlights mezzo-soprano Barbara Naylor in Copland’s ‘In the Beginning’, was made in September 2022 and is to be released worldwide in June.

American Choral Classics

Label: Divine Art

Catalogue number: DDX 21106

Performers

  • Alban Voices
  • Barbara Naylor (mezzo-soprano) *
  • Robin White (conductor)
  • Peter Jaekel (piano)

Works

  • Alleluia (Randall Thompson)
  • Agnus Dei (Samuel Barber)
  • Lux Aurumque (Eric Whitacre)
  • Simple Gifts (Aaron Copland) **
  • In the Beginning (Aaron Copland) *
  • Sure on this Shining Night (Samuel Barber)**
  • Psalm 67 (Charles Ives)
  • Summertime (George Gershwin)
  • Shenandoah (traditional)
  • I Bought me a Cat (Aaron Copland) **

New Divine Art Chopin album from English pianist Jonathan Phillips

Jonathan Phillips
Jonathan Phillips © Jonathan Phillips/Divine Art

“The extraordinary sonority of Chopin”

English pianist Jonathan Phillips has recorded a new album of works by Chopin to follow his “J.S. Bach: Tranquillity” (Divine Art DDX 21102, to be released on May 12).  Bach was one of Chopin’s principal influences, especially in the chromaticism and harmonic elements of the inner parts –  influences which later informed the styles of Mahler and Wagner among so many others.  For this album, Phillips presents the four Ballades together with five of the glorious Nocturnes; he explains his choice of repertoire:

So, to the four Ballades. Why? Why play them and why record them? Well, these four unique compositions capture the essence of Chopin’s output for me. Op 23, Op 38, Op 47 and Op 52, span his lifetime and represent a distillation of the evolution of his musical language. Crucially, I have been aware of them since I was a teenager, when as a 13-year-old I bought a wonderful Classics for Pleasure LP recording of all four Ballades played by Valentina Kaminikova (which I still have somewhere!)  I think it fair to say that record together with another record of the Chopin Etudes (played by Samson François) lit the blue touch paper and ignited the rocket fuel required to convert my desire to learn, understand, possess, and recreate Chopin’s extraordinary virile, powerful, muscular, and explosive music. Ultimately, they are a huge challenge, as anyone who has tackled them will know. The motivation for preparing them all to create my own recording of them can be traced back to those adolescent years!

Once again, and critically for me, this recording rather like the Bach Tranquillity CD was made in such a way as to replicate a “live“ performance. Two consecutive live performances were given, and that was it!  There is no point in endless editing, as for me, the sanitised performance of a highly edited recording no longer communicates that which takes place in live performance.

Chopin: Ballades and Nocturnes (Divine Art DDX 21111)

Jonathan Phillips (piano)

Works

  • Ballade No. 1 in G minor, Op. 23
  • Ballade No. 2 in F major, Op. 38
  • Ballade No. 3 in A flat major, Op. 47
  • Ballade No. 4 in F minor, Op. 52
  • Nocturne in E flat major, Op. 9 No. 2
  • Nocturne in B major, Op. 31 No. 1
  • Nocturne in F major, Op. 15 no. 1
  • Nocturne in F minor, Op. 55 No. 1
  • Nocturne in B major, Op. 61 No. 1

Total duration approx 64 minutes

Ballades:  recorded  8 July 2020 at Wyastone Leys, Monmouth, recording engineer Oscar Torres
Nocturnes: recorded on 24 September 2021 at St John the Evangelist, Oxford, recording engineer David Wright
Release date:  autumn 2023, exact date to be confirmed.

An important new premiere recording from Métier: Michael Finnissy’s complete organ works

The team at Métier Records is delighted to announce a double-disc album of the complete organ works of the luminary British composer Michael Finnissy performed by  23-year-old  American organist Forrest Eimold.

Made up entirely of world première recordings, the release will include one of Finnissy’s longest and most ambitious compositional cycles: his nearly 90-minute set of four Organ Symphonies. These fiendishly virtuosic and varied pieces amount to one of the most significant and sustained contributions to the organ repertoire by any living composer.

Alongside the Symphonies, Eimold presents Finnissy’s colourful set of Hymn-Tune Preludes, as well as various shorter pieces, including the recent “Blackburn,” a piece written specifically to mark the 50th birthday of the Blackburn Cathedral Organ.

Representing the sheer diversity of material included in Finnissy’s output, the recording was made on an international array of organs: from several works recorded on the inimitable instrument at Blackburn, with the remainder to be recorded at the Memorial Church of Harvard University in the USA.  This album marks one of the organ world’s most ambitious recording projects in recent memory.

Forrest Eimold

Composer-keyboardist Forrest Eimold, 23, has been hailed as “incredible” and “fearless” by The Boston Musical Intelligencer, “extremely impressive” by Harmonie, and having “ably responded to the many virtuosic demands” of today’s compositional vanguard by The Washington Post.

Equally at ease when working at the cutting edge of new music as when seeking newfound insight into older music, Forrest first gained notice for having performed all five hours’ worth of Olivier Messiaen’s post-1945 organ music by age 16. Forrest’s committed engagement with the music of living composers has since led to collaborations with composers like Gerald Barry, Molly Joyce, Paola Prestini, Sarah Kirkland Snider, and Judith Weir. Furthermore, as répétiteur, Forrest has helped bring world première projects to life by the likes of Du Yun, Nico Muhly, Emma O’Halloran, Arvo Pärt, and Tyshawn Sorey. A passionate advocate for historically-informed performance practice, too, Forrest regularly plays continuo for the GRAMMY®-nominated Trinity Baroque Orchestra—including for what The New York Times has described as “the best Messiah in New York.”

As a composer, Forrest’s music has been performed by ensembles including the Choir of Trinity Wall Street, Ensemble Dal Niente, Mivos Quartet, National Sawdust Ensemble, and Wet Ink Ensemble. Compositional honors include two National YoungArts Awards, as well as the Boris and Eda Rapoport Prize (from Columbia University) and the Blueprint Fellowship (from National Sawdust and the Juilliard School). Having recently graduated from the dual undergraduate program between Columbia University and the Juilliard School with the Louis Sudler Prize in the Arts, Forrest currently studies music composition with Martin Bresnick at the Yale School of Music.

Michael Finnissy

Michael Finnissy © Michael Finnissy/Divine Art

Michael Finnissy needs little introduction as he is without doubt among the most pre-eminent of composers, usually linked (not always accurately) to the ‘new complexity’ movement.
Michael Finnissy was born on 17th March 1946, at roughly 2 in the morning, at 77 Claverdale Road, Tulse Hill, London SW2. His parents were Rita Isolene(nee Parsonson) and George Norman Finnissy. At that time his father worked for the London County Council, assisting through his photographic documentation the assessment of damage to and re-building of London after the war.

Michael started to write music almost as soon as he could play the piano, aged about four and a half, and was tutored in both by his great aunt, Rose Louise Hopwood (Rosie). He attended Hawes Down Infant and Junior schools, Bromley Technical High, and Beckenham and Penge Grammar schools. Music was not taught in any formal or examinable way, though not discouraged either. His best subjects were graphic art, mathematics and English literature.

He received the William Yeats Hurlstone composition-prize at the Croydon Music Festival, a factor which assisted his parents’ decision to let him apply to music college. He was awarded a Foundation Scholarship to study at the Royal College of Music. Michael’s composition teachers at the Royal College were Bernard Stevens and Humphrey Searle. He was subsequently awarded an Octavia travelling scholarship to study in Italy with Roman Vlad.

Michael earned money for his studies by playing the piano for dance-classes: Russian-style classical ballet with Maria Zybina, John O’Brien and Kathleen Crofton; and jazz with Matt Mattox. After his studies in Italy, and with no formal qualifications, he continued to work in dance, freelancing, and at the London School of Contemporary Dance – where, with the encouragement of its course-director Pat Hutchinson, he founded a music department. During these years he worked with the choreographers Jane Dudley and Anna Sokolow from the pioneering era of modern dance, and in more experimental work by Richard Alston, Siobhan Davies, Jackie Lansley and Fergus Early.

Michael Finnissy’s concert debut as a solo pianist was at the Galerie Schwartzes Kloster in Freiburg, playing a concert mostly of first performances, Howard Skempton and Oliver Knussen as well as his own. In the meantime he had started to appear in Europe, firstly at the Gaudeamus Music Week in 1969 and thereafter until 1973, at Royan Festival (1974-6) and Donaueschingen.In many of these events he was twinned with Brian Ferneyhough, a friend since student days. His initial attempts at serious composition teaching, at Darlington Summer School in the mid-seventies, were also partnered by Ferneyhough.

In England, Michael’s early work had received encouragement from Ian Lake, Colin Mason and Martin Dalby. Two pieces had been published by International Music Publishers (Ascherberg), some others by edition modern in Munich and two by Suvini Zerboni in Milan. With the support of Bill Colleran he signed a contract with Universal Edition (London) in 1978, and subsequently with United Music Publishers and (in 1988) with his principal publisher Oxford University Press. Other works are available from Tre Media Verlag (Friederike Zimmermann) in Karlsruhe.

Michael had been a member of the ensemble Suoraan (founded by James Clarke and Richard Emsley) and then its artistic director since the early 1970s. He joined Ixion (founded and still directed by Andrew Toovey) in 1987 – in both of these groups he not only played the piano but also conducted concerts. In the late 1980s he was invited by Justin Connolly to join the British section of the ISCM, and from 1990 until 1996 he served as its President, travelling widely to Europe, Asia and Latin America. He has since been elected to Honorary Membership of the Society.

Michael has been attached to C.O.M.A. (initially known as the East London Late Starters Orchestra) since its inception, and has been in residence as composer to the Victorian College of the Arts (in Melbourne, Australia) and to the Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras in Sydney. His principal teaching has been at the Royal Academy of Music (London), Winchester College, the Katholieke Universiteit of Leuven (Belgium), and at the Universities of Sussex and (currently) Southampton.

His work has been recorded for CD by Metier, NMC, and Metronome in the UK, and Etcetera and BVHaast (Holland), CRI (USA), Artifact Music (Canada), and ABC Classics (Australia).

A book on the music of Michael Finnissy – Uncommon Ground – edited by Henrietta Brougham, Christopher Fox and Ian Pace, is published by Ashgate.

Michael Finnissy: The Complete Organ Works (Métier MEX 77208 Double-Disc Album)

Artist: Forrest Eimold

Works:

  • Organ Symphony No. 1
  • Organ Symphony No. 2
  • Organ Symphony No. 3
  • Organ Symphony No. 4
  • Hymn-Tune Preludes
  • Blackburn
  • Xunthaeresis
  • …ere the set of sun…

Total duration approx 120 minutes

Part recorded in Blackburn November 2022
Remainder to be recorded at Harvard in July 2023

Michael Finnissy on Métier

Métier Announces A New Album of Music by Nicola LeFanu

One of Britain’s most accomplished ensembles specialising in new music, Gemini, return to the studio in July to record a new album of music by Nicola LeFanu for Métier.  The album is tentatively titled ‘A Wild Garden’ – it contains vocal and chamber works and will be scheduled for release in the late autumn.

Nicola LeFanu © Nicola LeFanu

Nicola LeFanu has had a long association with Gemini stretching back to the 1970s when the ensemble recorded The Same Day Dawns with the composer conducting (released by Chandos on LP).  These ‘Fragments from a book of songs’ are scored for soprano and five instruments with words from poems in Tamil, Chinese, Japanese, Kannada and Akkadian. The work was written in 1974.

Along with this new recording of the work there are three other substantial compositions, all premiere recordings. The composer says of the Sextet Fasach – A Wild Garden, written in 1996: ‘I had in my mind images of some of my favourite wild places in Ireland: Roundstone bog and the Connemara coast, for example. To the outsider they must seem bare and empty, but if you explore them, they are teeming with luxuriant growth. In particular, the wild flowers on the cliffs at Kilbaha in Co. Clare were in my thoughts: my cousin Rachel Burrows spoke of her ‘’wild garden’’ there, and it became the subtitle of the piece’.

The Piano Trio (2003) ‘…is a lyric work written in a single movement. … The music is created through transformations—of melodic and rhythmic shapes, textures, characteristic harmonies. … These transformations are sometimes close, sometimes remote, but the harmonies underlying the piece create a unifying resonance so that the disparate ideas cohere’.

The Moth-Ghost (2020) is a dramatic scena for soprano and piano, setting a poem by James Harpur. It tells the story of Thetis, ‘…a sea-goddess of Greek mythology, who knew that her son Achilles must die. In the poem, she is a grief-stricken mother, mourning his death in the Trojan war. The imagery of the poem and the music is of the sea: the sonority of its turbulence, the rhythm of its tides’.

Nicola LeFanu was born in England in 1947, the daughter of Irish parents: her father William LeFanu was from an Irish literary family, and her mother was the composer Elizabeth Maconchy. LeFanu studied at Oxford, Royal College of Music and, as a Harkness Fellow, at Harvard. She has honorary doctorates from the universities of Durham, Aberdeen, and The Open University, is an Honorary Fellow of St Hilda’s College Oxford, and is FRCM and FTCL. She has composed around one hundred works which have been played and broadcast all over the world; her music is published by Novello and by Edition Peters. She has been commissioned by the BBC, by festivals in UK and beyond, and by leading orchestras, ensembles and soloists.

Since its formation in 1974 Gemini has presented a richly varied repertoire, incorporating standard eighteenth and nineteenth century chamber music, twentieth century music, new music, music theatre, music and dance and improvisation, plus much music by women and other neglected composers, and works inspired by, or influenced by, music outside the Western European tradition. Community and school concerts feature music from the eleventh to the twenty-first century; folk music from around the world, music by children and young people as well as more standard fare. An ongoing series of commissions is developing the use of the bass clarinet in small chamber ensembles. The ensemble is directed by clarinettist Ian Mitchell.

A Wild Garden (Métier MEX 7712)

Artists

  • Clara Barbier Serrano (soprano)
  • Gemini (Director : Ian Mitchell)
  • Composer (all works) : Nicola LeFanu

Works

  • The Same day Dawns
  • Sextet: Fasach – A Wild Garden
  • Piano Trio
  • The Moth-Ghost

Gemini on Métier

Métier Announces James Iman Album II

James Iman
James Iman © Divine Art

Divine Art’s new-music imprint, Métier, signed up American pianist James W. Iman in 2021 for a three-album deal, the first of which, featuring Schoenberg, Webern, Boulez and Amy, appeared in the spring of 2022 (MSV 28637) to high praise: “The pianism, is top-notch” (Infodad);  “Outstanding and imaginative” (Art Music Lounge).  Post-production work on the second recording is well underway and the album is likely to see release in the summer.

The pianist explains the ethos of the disc:

“This album has been nearly four years in the making. The repertoire was chosen in the summer of 2019, with the first performance of the program taking place in January of 2020, with plans to record in April of that year. 

I first discovered the music of Donald Martino in graduate school through his infamous Pianississimo–a monstrous work expressly requested by Easley Blackwood to be as difficult as possible. As ferocious as it is, Martino still manages to craft a remarkably beautiful work. Indeed, beauty and lyricism are the hallmarks of Martino’s mature compositions, which are as romantic as they are modern. While Pianississimo is something of a spectacle, his masterwork for the piano is his Fantasies and Impromptus from 1981.

The title immediately evokes the work of Schumann, Chopin, and Brahms–composers who were important influences on Martino’s aesthetic ideology, and their fingerprints can be seen throughout the work. The work is not, it should be noted, in a Neo-romantic style. Instead, Martino retains the melody-driven, emotional intensity of Romanticism through his unique approach to twelve-tone composition. 

When I first started learning Martino’s Fantasies and Impromptus, I knew immediately that Debussy would be the perfect contrast. I knew I wanted something that would have a similar stature, to balance the intensity and fire of Martino’s work, which naturally led to selecting Debussy’s two books of Images

Debussy had been absent from my repertoire since 2009, when I performed his Estampes. It was important to me, in taking up these pieces, to rediscover what Debussy means to me and what I wanted to say through his music. My interpretations grew out of a study of Debussy’s letters and his own recordings. 

I have played Stand Still Here more times than any other work in my repertoire. Each of the five pieces that comprise the work are brief–the longest is four minutes–but Jenny Beck achieves a depth of introspection and emotional sweep that is absolutely magnetic. How she achieves this is nothing short of miraculous–the pieces are collections of terse motives and static harmonies that hover rather than move. In some ways, these pieces feel like a painting by Mark Rothko–where color alone elicits the emotional response.

This program, and this album, are deeply personal to me, not just because of my connection to the music, but also because it was the last program my mother heard me perform before her passing in 2021.”

Pianist James W. Iman plays the usual and the unusual, by composers known and unknown. As a specialist in music written since 1900—with an emphasis on music written since 1945—his repertoire spans many stylistic developments since Debussy. 

Iman: Album II (Métier)

  • Fantasies and Impromptus (by Donald Martino)
  • Images, Books 1 and 2 (by Claude Debussy)
  • Stand Still Here (by Jenny Beck)

New Album of Contemporary Solo Violin Music from Romania on Métier

Divine Art’s new-music division, Métier, will add to its already strong 2023 release schedule with a fascinating new album featuring works for solo violin by the Romanian composer Violeta Dinescu, performed by Irina Mureşanu. While these pieces are thoroughly new and complex they also have a magical approachability – a sound world in which one can be immersed even with a single sound source.

Violeta Dinescu
Violeta Dinescu © Nicolae Manolache

“These pieces for solo violin are structurally different, yet they have a common denominator, which is highlighted in Irina Mureşanu’s creative interpretation. Each work’s structure is determined by compositional methods and materializes in different types of notation, alongside a rhythmic-melodic precision which allows fluidity and elasticity.
 
In each piece, it is the initial impulse, the incipit, that triggers a continuous process of ‘becoming’ and transformation. This process lasts as long as the formational material can define the overall musical form.
 
The violin is a melodic instrument, with the ability to create homophonic and polyphonic textures, elements of musical construction that appear in various contexts and create spatial dramaturgy. The repeated appearance of sounds in different registers is meant to suggest their permanence in space.
 
The basic elements of a narrative text are thus created, from the simplest form of accompaniment, as the presence of an imaginary “music carpet”, which accompanies the fluidity of a musical discourse with different expressions to the interweaving of coexisting melodic lines.”

—Violeta Dinescu

Violeta Dinescu (b.1953) began music studies at the Ciprian Porumbescu Conservatory in Bucharest, receiving her master’s degree with distinction in 1978.  In 1982 she moved to Germany where she has taught at several major music academies. She is a prolific composer of orchestral, chamber vocal and choral music, and several of her operas have been premiered successfully in recent years.  She is an executive board member of the International Alliance of Women in Music.  This album of solo violin works (all world premieres) marks her debut as a Divine Art group composer.

Irina Mureşanu
Irina Mureşanu

Irina Mureşanu, Romanian violinist now living in the USA, has been widely praised for her exciting, elegant, and heartfelt performances of classical, Romantic and modern repertoire. The Boston Globe said “Irresistible… not just a virtuoso but an artist’. A champion of contemporary music, Irina has a substantial discography on several labels including Avie, Albany, BMOP and Centaur. She made her debut as a ‘Divine Artist’ with her Métier album of music by fellow Romanian Dan Dediu (MSV 28621 “Hybrids, Hints & Hooks”)

Album Details

Irina Mureşanu plays Violeta Dinescu (Métier, MEX 77106)

Composer: Violeta Dinescu
Artist: Irina Mureşanu (violin)

Works

  • À chaque epée de lumière
  • Aretusa
  • De-ale Lupului
  • Für Uli
  • Il faudrait d’abord désespérer
  • Pour triompher du soleil
  • Satya
  • Vistas I-V

Métier Records announces new album for composer Gwyn Pritchard

2023 will see the release by Métier Records of an album of music by long established British composer Gwyn Pritchard.

Gwyn Pritchard
Gwyn Pritchard © Gwyn Pritchard/Divine Art

The album Formations will include five of Gwyn Pritchard’s ensemble works (a quintet, two quartets and a trio) and three for solo piano, all performed by the distinguished Swiss contemporary music group Ensemble ö! conducted by Francesc Prat and their pianist Asia Ahmetjanova. All the ensemble works were composed between 2011 and 2018, and the piano pieces between 1999 and 2022. The recording is to be released to coincide with Pritchard’s 75th birthday in 2023.

All the ensemble pieces are all based around strings, with flute, clarinet and piano in differing combinations. Two of the pieces explore the role of a soloist in a chamber music context: a violin in Features and Formations, and clarinet in Realms Apart. The choice of pieces reflects the international focus of Pritchard’s career, having been originally composed for and premiered by performers in Austria, Germany, Italy, Switzerland and the UK; most of the pieces have received several performances in many European counties and beyond.

In character, the music ranges between the energetic and rhythmic complex writing of Realms Apart, and the transparent, darkly suppressed quality of the piano trio Res (a title taken from photographer Antonio Biassiucci’s work). In essence, however, all the music on this album reflects Pritchard’s persistent engagement with the relationship between instability and ambiguity on the one hand, and definition and gestural clarity on the other.

Gwyn Pritchard (b.1948) studied cello and composition at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music.  His compositions include works for orchestra, ensembles, solo instruments, vocal works and pieces employing electronics.  Much of his compositional activity has been based outside the UK, in particular in Germany, Poland, Switzerland and Italy. Other performances have been given in America, Australia, Canada, China, Hong Kong, Mexico, S Korea and New Zealand. They have been performed and broadcast on many radio and television networks, often by major orchestras, ensembles and soloists, and at international festivals. In 1982 Pritchard founded Uroboros Ensemble which includes some of Britain‘s leading instrumentalists. He is Professor of Composition at Trinity Laban Conservatoire, London, and has given lectures and masterclasses in Europe, America and Asia.

Formations (MSV 28633)

Works

  • Features and Formations
  • Nightfall
  • Evolution
  • Res
  • Realms Apart
    • (Ensemble ö!)
  • Tide
  • Calling
  • From Time to Time
    • (Aisa Ahmetjanova, piano)

Recorded November/December 2022
Release date summer 2023 (exact date to be confirmed)

Divine Art announces fifth album for Swedish impressionist composer Jonathan Östlund: ‘Elysían’

Jonathan Östlund
Jonathan Östlund © Jonathan Östlund/Divine Art

Following four previous and highly praised albums for Jonathan Östlund, Divine Art is now preparing his fifth, to be titled ‘Elysían’. The double album, like the previous ones, contains a wealth of impressionist works ranging from pieces for chamber orchestra, to instrumental and vocal compositions, performed by a large group of hand-picked performers from around Europe.  Jonathan Östlund’s primary inspiration is nature which is brought out fully in beautiful Impressionist works; acclaimed for his imaginative and accessible music, he has been championed by some of Europe’s best musicians. Among the plaudits for his previous albums, he was described as ‘the 21st Century’s Debussy’ (Jan Hocek, His Voice); “this is music of filigree beauty” (Colin Clarke, Fanfare). The new album will be no less magical and will be scheduled for release in the summer of 2023.

Artists include: Patrik Jablonski (piano), Edward Cohen (piano), Serene Yu (piano), Alexander Zagorinsky (cello), Evgeny Brakhman (piano), Peter Sheppard Skærved (violin), Myriam Hidber-Dickinson (flute), Natalie Anston-Vermorel (soprano), Inga Feter (piano), Martina Bortolotti von Haderburg (soprano), Luca Schinai (piano), Laura Kimmel (mezzo-soprano), Nikita Stepanenko (piano), Nizhny Novgorod SoloistsMaria Zagorinskaya (soprano), and more to be confirmed.

Album Details

Title: Elysían
Label: Divine Art
Catalogue number: DDA 21242
Composer: Jonathan Östlund

Works

Elysían Dreamscape I | Elysían Theme | Along a Sun-ray | Aeolus |Air on the Heart-strings | Hey – Dance as Long as We Live! | Yonderlands | Azure Ablaze | Symphonie à Cordes | La Lune Blanche |
Poesís | Danse Fantastique | The Fairy-flute | Nuages Fatigués |Elysían Dreamscape II |Titania |
Elegie | The Humblebee | Ghost Waltz | Trold Halla | Suite Singulière | Star-eye

The album has been recorded in various locations around Europe, and is being mastered by Paul Baily (ReSound UK).

Jonathan Östlund received his BA and MA in Composition at LTU, in Sweden, and has so far completed more than 150 works, including several orchestral works, and two concertos for violin. His achievements include CD-releases, publications and performances with the London Schubert Players in the U.K., France and Romania throughout 2010 and 2011, as part of the ‘Invitation to Composers’ project. In 2012 he won the Public Choice Award for his Cello Sonata, premiered by A. Zagorinsky and E. Steen-Nokleberg, and was awarded 1st Prize in the Leicester Symphony Orchestra’s Composers’ Composition for his ‘Celebration Fanfare’, which was premiered during the Orchestra’s 90th Season Gala. Various premieres followed in 2013, in the U.K. and France.

The year 2014 brought Jonathan’s music to the Cadogan Hall stage with ‘Lumières’, a programme presenting ten of his chamber works, in various constellations, performed by E. Pameijer, B. Waldmann and the Cellini Quartet. That same year, his Cello Sonata received a Russian premiere, and he was a Winner in the 2015 IBLA Grand Prize, with one of his orchestral works [the extended version of which became ‘Nocturnia’, and is featured on his third album, ‘Mistral’].

His first double CD, ‘Lunaris’, was released in 2016 to critical acclaim, a year in which further premieres took place in the U.K. and in Switzerland. In 2017 Östlund’s Piano Concertino was premiered in Athens, Greece, and Y. Revich together with M. Esnult premiered a violin and piano piece in Vienna, Austria.
His second double CD, ‘Voyages’, was released in 2019, featuring (among others) Walter Gatti, Evgeny Brakhman, Sasha Grynyuk, and Alicja Smietana.

His third album release, ‘Mistral’, released in 2020, includes the recording of his Concerto No. 1 for Violin & Symphony Orchestra among other mesmerising works in varied instrumentation, and was followed by the release of his fourth album, ‘Imago’, a tour-de-force double album, in February 2022.

Coming to Divine Art in Summer 2023: Scriabin Piano Music from Alfonso Soldano

Divine Art Recordings will be releasing a new album by the accomplished virtuoso pianist Alfonso Soldano, containing a program of piano works by Alexander Scriabin. The collection includes one sonata and many of the composer’s more popular Études and other shorter works and is intended to be the first instalment in a Complete Piano Works edition.  Scriabin (1872-1915) was in his early career highly influenced by Chopin, composing in a late Romantic idiom but later developed his own very distinctive advanced tonality, becoming one of the most controversial composers of the early 20th century, inspired by synesthesia (association of colours with sound), sensualism and theosophy.  Since the 1970s his works have become very well-established and appreciated.

Alfonso Soldano
Alfonso Soldano © Benny Quinto

Alfonso Soldano (b, 1986) was one of the most favoured pupils of Aldo Ciccolini.  He has won many piano competitions, sits as juror in others and gives masterclasses throughout Italy. He is recognised for his breathtaking virtuosity coupled with a deep sense of the musical spirit of each piece he performs. He is currently Professor of Piano Performance at the Conservatorio U. Giordano in Foggia, Italy and Artistic Director of the Aldo Ciccolini European Arts Academy Foundation in Trani, Italy.  (A more extensive biography can be supplied).   His previous recordings for Divine Art – of Rachmaninoff, Bortkiewicz and Castlnuovo-Tedesco – have been met with much acclaim.

The album is due to be recorded in Trani soon and is likely to be scheduled for release in the late summer of 2023.

Album details

Title: ‘Enigma’ – Scriabin Piano Works (vol. 1)
Label: Divine Art
Catalog number: DDA 25243
Artist: Alfonso Soldano 
Composer: Alexander Scriabin

Works:

  • Poème, Op. 41
  • Fantasia, Op. 28
  • Étude, Op. 8 No. 9
  • Prélude, Op. 22 No. 1
  • Prélude, Op. 16 No. 1
  • Nocturne, Op. 5 No. 2
  • Sonata No. 3, Op. 23
  • Étude, Op. 42 No. 5
  • 3 Morceaux, op. 52
  • Prélude, Op. 17 no. 5
  • Étude, Op. 8 No. 12
  • Prélude, Op. 37 No. 1
  • Guirlandes, Op. 73 No. 1
  • Prélude, Op. 11 No. 11
  • Nuances, Op. 56 No. 3

Coming to Métier: Music for Quarter-Tone Accordion

The Métier New-Music label of Divine Art Recordings Group is to issue an album of music for a unique and amazing instrument! Basque accordionist Lore Amenabar Larrañaga has signed to the label for her debut album which will comprise eight works for the Quarter-Tone Accordion.  She explains the concept:

Lore Amenabar Larrañaga
Lore Amenabar Larrañaga © Loreamenabar.com

I am engaged in a detailed investigation of a self-designed quarter-tone accordion as well as exploring its technical and sonic boundaries through the commissioning of a new body of collaborative works. These works have been written between 2020 and 2022, during my PhD studies at the Royal Academy of Music.

The design of my instrument allows the production of quarter tones in both the right and left-hand manuals. The range and timbral possibilities of this instrument are expanded through the use of fifteen registers on the right manual and seven on the left manual, resulting in a sounding range of E-2 to B-quarter-sharp-6 in the right hand and E-1 to D-quarter-sharp-6 in the left. From Electra Perivolaris to Christopher Fox, Michael Finnissy to Mioko Yokoyama, this album will accommodate diverse textures, voices, and ideas; all gravitating around the Quarter-Tone Accordion”.

Lore Amenabar Larrañaga completed both her Bachelor’s and Master’s studies at the Sibelius Academy, University of the Arts Helsinki, with Prof Matti Rantanen, Dr Mika Väyrynen and Dr Veli Kujala, having graduated with first-class honours. At present, she is pursuing a PhD at the Royal Academy of Music in London and is generously supported by ‘La Caixa Foundation’. An accomplished performer across styles – from folk music to the classical canon – Lore is especially passionate about artistic collaboration and performing new music. In addition to the premières of the featured works in this album, she has recently given the first performances of ‘She Keeps Walking Over Paper’ by Claudia Molitor (London 2020) and ‘Unbroken’ by Howard Skempton (London 2021), and while studying in Helsinki premièred ‘Finnish Suite’ by Matti Murto (Ikaalinen 2017). Having won the 2018 edition of ‘Juventudes Musicales de España’, she gave a series of nine solo concerts as part of a Spanish tour.

Recording dates: Autumn 2022 – Spring 2023 (London)
Release date: Summer 2023 (exact date to be confirmed)

Album details:

Label:  Métier
Title:  to be decided
Catalogue number:  MSV 28631
Artist: Lore Amenabar Larrañaga

Composers/works:

  • Die Stimme der Stadt (Christopher Fox)
  • Barafostus‘ Dreame (David Gorton)
  • Permissible Self-Expression (Michael Finnissy)
  • My Time is Your Time (Donald Bousted)
  • And new works (titles not yet to hand) by:
  • Mioko Yokoyama
  • Electra Perivolaris
  • Veli Kujala
  • Claudia Molitor

Announcing a New Release from Organist Carson Cooman!

Carson Cooman, composer
Carson Cooman, composer

The New Year will see the release of a new album by esteemed American composer and organist Carson Cooman, from Divine Art. The label has issued a number of Cooman’s recordings and is also producing the series of Cooman’s own compositions played by Erik Simmons (currently at volume 15). The Divine Art catalog currently includes 199 of Cooman’s compositions.

On Cooman’s new album ‘Companions’ he presents a program of contemporary music for organ recorded on the remarkable post-romantic Thomas Gaida organ of the Pauluskirche in Ulm, Germany. The album features ten works by nine composers representing six countries. The music varies widely in character and scope, from smaller character pieces and meditations to several dramatic, large-scale works. The final piece is the grand 15th organ symphony of English composer Bernard Heyes.

Carson Cooman (b. 1982) is an American composer with a catalog of hundreds of works in many forms—ranging from solo instrumental pieces to operas, and from orchestral works to hymn tunes. His music has been performed on all six inhabited continents in venues that range from the stage of Carnegie Hall to the basket of a hot air balloon. Cooman’s work appears on over forty recordings, including more than twenty-five complete CDs on the Naxos, Albany, Artek, Gothic, Divine Art, Métier, Diversions, Altarus, Convivium, MSR Classics, Raven, and Zimbel labels. Cooman’s primary composition studies were with Bernard Rands, Judith Weir, Alan Fletcher, and James Willey.

As an active concert organist, Cooman specializes in the performance of contemporary music. Over 300 new compositions by more than 100 international composers have been written for him, and his organ performances can be heard on a number of CD releases and more than 3,000 recordings available online. Cooman is also a writer on musical subjects, producing articles and reviews frequently for a number of international publications. He serves as an active consultant on music business matters to composers and performing organizations, specializing particularly in the area of composer estates and archives.

Companions (DDA 25241) – Coming January/February 2023

Recording date: May 8, 2022
Artist: Carson Cooman (organ of Pauluskirche, Ulm, Germany)

Works:

  • Prismatic, Op. 24 (Carol Williams, b. 1962)
  • Companions (Carlotta Ferrari, b. 1975)
  • Three Short Fantasy Pieces (Thomas Åberg, b. 1952)
  • Recitative (Carson Cooman, b. 1982)
  • The Grave of Keats (Carlotta Ferrari, b. 1975)
  • Peace Prayer No. 1 (David Lasky, b. 1957)
  • Sursum Corda (Tate Pumfrey, b. 1998)
  • Voluntary in F major (Phil Lehenbauer, b. 1960)
  • Canzona  (Michael Calabris, b. 1984)
  • Organ Symphony No. 15 (Bernard Heyes, b. 1951)

Announcing a forthcoming Christmas Single

Divine Art Records will step out of its usual classical-contemporary genres to release a special Christmas digital single. Light of the World is a beautiful new carol with words and music by Robin White, a well-known name in English light music circles, whose recent album From Russia (Divine Art DDA 25223) is proving successful  – and well–received by critics.  The carol is performed by Alban Voices, with the Royal Ballet Sinfonia, conducted by the composer.

Light of the World will be available for download and streaming from all main platforms, and as download only, direct from Divine Art

New organ recording by Robert Sholl from Métier

Robert Sholl
Robert Sholl © Robert Sholl

Métier Records, the new-music label of Divine Art Recordings, will be releasing many new titles in 2023, among them an organ recording of a rather unique nature!

Les ombres du Fantôme is a set of fourteen improvisations created by Robert Sholl and Justin Paterson that act as thematic shadows of Gaston Leroux’s novel Le Fantôme de l’Opéra (1910). They shadow the narrative, themes, characters and events of the book. The improvisations were recorded using the organs of Coventry and Arundel Cathedrals in July 2021, some with soprano and saxophone/bass clarinet. They use an invented musical language, and explore the acoustics of those buildings, the gesture and the materiality of the instruments in physical, spiritual and sonic space that is enhanced and extended (by Justin Paterson) through recording technology and electronic augmentations. 

Robert Sholl is a lecturer at the Royal Academy of Music which is supporting this project, and both he and Justin Paterson also teach at the University of West London. The album will be scheduled for release in the first half of 2023 ((exact date to be advised).

Also find more information at https://www.phantomopera.co.uk/

Album Details

Title:  Les ombres du Fantôme  (Shadows of the Phantom)
Label : Métier
Catalogue number : MEX 77105
Tracks (all composed/improvised by Robert Sholl and Justin Paterson
with additional material by Anna McCready and Andy Visser):

  1. The Ghost with the Death’s Head
  2. You must love me’
  3. The angels wept tonight
  4. At the graveyard at Perros-Guirec
  5. The enchanted violin: the resurrection of Lazarus
  6. The Chandelier
  7. Masked ball
  8. Souterrain: ‘Everything that is underground belongs to him’
  9. ‘I am Don Juan Triumphant’
  10. Christine! Christine!
  11. From the cellars to the house on the lake
  12. In the torture chamber
  13. La mort du Fantôme
  14. Epilogue

Performers:

Robert Sholl (organ)
Anna McCready (soprano)
Andrew Visser (saxophone/bass clarinet)
Justin Paterson (electronic wizardry)

Recorded at Coventry and Arundel Cathedrals July 2021.
Producer: Justin Paterson
Recording Engineers Mike Exarchos (aka Stereo Mike) and Justin Paterson

Announcing A Second Release from Composer Rodney Lister

Métier Records (the new-music arm of Divine Art Recordings) is delighted to announce the forthcoming release of an album of choral music by New England composer Rodney Lister, following a recording of chamber and vocal works (‘Faith-Based Initiatives’, Métier MSV 28618) which will hit the streets and online stores on September 9.

Rodney Lister
Rodney Lister © Credit Jesse Weiner

The new album (title not yet decided) will be performed by the members of the Church of the Advent, Boston, Massachusetts conducted by Mark Dwyer with pianist Julia Carty, and recording is due to take place in September, with a release date of early spring 2023.

Rodney Lister has been teaching at Greenwood Music Camp in western Massachusetts for around 30 years. The facility, described by Rebecca Fischer as “an intensive musical experience for teenagers in a natural environment, fertile for personal and artistic growth and development.”, has been the springboard for the development of countless musical careers.  While the program is primarily focused on chamber music, all students also participate in the camp choir, and almost every year Rodney Lister has composed new choral works – which although intended to be ‘tried-out’ by the campers, are in no way less than first class compositions of distinction. Partly inspired by his teachers Peter Maxwell Davies, who wrote stunning works for ‘less experienced performers’, and Virgil Thomson, with his innate gift for brilliant settings, Lister began setting texts by leading poets in a fairly transparent tonal language. After a while he began to expand into a more complex and fluid tonality, inspired by Virgil Thomson’s Wheat Fields at Noon and perhaps surprisingly, also by Gesualdo’s modal motet Morro Lasso.

Rodney Lister was co-founder and director of “Music Here and Now”, a concert series for new music by New England composers, has received a great number of commissions and fellowships and has had his music performed by leading artists at Tanglewood, Edinburgh Fringe, the Library of Congress and many other venues from New York to London. He has also been a busy and sought-after pianist.  Rodney is currently on the faculties of Boston School of Music and the preparatory school of the New England Conservatory, as well as teaching at Harvard University and playing a leading role at Greenwood Music Camp.  Stephen Sutton, CEO at Divine Art Recordings’ USA office, said, “It was very good news to hear that Rodney wished to present a recording of his choral work; having recently put together his first album for Métier, I was aware that we have here a very fine composer deserving of even greater international recognition, who creates superb works which seem to be mainstream, individualistic and inventive all at the same time.”

Choral music by Rodney Lister

Label: Métier
Catalog number: MSV 28630
Performers: Choir of the church of the Advent, Boston, Mass
Conductor: Mark Dwyer
Piano: Julia Carty
Works – this is a working program and final tracks will be most but not all of these. Author of text named in parentheses:

  • Of Mere Being – five poems (Wallace Stevens)
  • Stanzas in Meditation – Stanzas XV, XVI and XXXVIII (Gertrude Stein)
  • Three Poems of Richard Wilbur (Richard Wilbur)
  • The Bees (David Feny)
  • A Downward Look (James Merrill)
  • On the Road Home (Wallace Stevens)
  • To the Harbormaster (Frank O’Hara)
  • The Lost Feed (Kenneth Koch)
  • Once by the Pacific (Robert Frost)
  • Our Revels are now Ended (William Shakespeare)
  • A Supermarket in California (Alan Ginsberg)
  • This is the Garden (e.e. cummings)
  • To the Republic (Frank Bidart)
  • Vanishing Point (Lawrence Raab)
  • To a Waterfowl (William Cullen Bryant)
  • Carol (Donald Hall)
  • The Awakening (Willam Carlos Williams)
  • Never Give all the Heart (William Butler Yeats)
  • The Choirmaster’s Burial (Thomas Hardy)
  • The Mockingbird (Randall Jarrell)
  • The Gift (William Carlos Williams)
  • The Annunciation (Wystan Hugh Auden)