Archive for Coming Soon – Page 4

Divine Art Announces Two New Albums by Helen Habershon

Divine Art is delighted to announce two new albums from clarinettist Helen Habershon with pianist John Lenehan, both due for release in the first quarter of 2022.

Helen Habershon
Helen Habershon © Graham Halford

Found in Dreams

For Found in Dreams, Helen has once again collaborated with John Lenehan and they offer a wonderfully diverse collection of repertoire. This includes beautiful arrangements of some of their favourite pieces; a couple of short movements of outstanding clarinet repertoire by Brahms and Finzi and some delightful new compositions of their own. As well as his beautifully crafted arrangements John has also written two lovely pieces to add to Helen’s.

Throughout history, mankind has been intrigued by the idea of dreams and Helen is no exception. As she says: “It’s interesting that all happenings begin as an idea and in order to get an idea one has to be in a receptive place. When creating I find myself in a kind of timeless space, rather like a daydream. I love the freedom of dreams, anything can happen. There are no boundaries and we are free to explore with no limits. The theme of ‘dreams’ came quite naturally and many of the pieces in the album reflect this.”

Finzi & Brahms: Music for Clarinet and Piano

John Lenehan
John Lenehan © Kaupo Kikkas

Helen and John have also recorded a second album of clarinet works by Brahms and Finzi, including Brahms’ F minor sonata and Finzi’s 5 Bagatelles (extracts from which appear on Found in Dreams) as well as four of Brahms’ glorious songs arranged for clarinet and piano.  

Pianist John Lenehan has performed all around the world and has more than 70 recordings to his credit, with much critical acclaim including a Gramophone award. He was praised by The New York Times for his ‘great flair and virtuosity’. One of the most versatile pianists on the concert circuit today, playing major concertos, chamber music, solo recitals and jazz, he is also an accomplished arranger and composer with two songs and several arrangements on these new albums.

Album Details

Found in Dreams DDA 25225

Artists: Helen Habershon (clarinet), John Lenehan (piano)

Works

  1. Après un rêve (Gabriel Fauré, arranged by John Lenehan)
  2. Yesterday’s Dreams (Helen Habershon)
  3. Dreaming of Summer (John Lenehan)
  4. Kinderszenen, Op. 15 – No. 7 Träumerei (Robert Schumann)
  5. Whisperings of Love (Helen Habershon)
  6. Deep River (traditional, arranged by John Lenehan)
  7. Beau Soir (Claude Debussy)
  8. Contentment at Dusk (Helen Habershon)
  9. I’ll Love You Forever (Helen Habershon)
  10. Canto Popolare (Edward Elgar)
  11. Deep Reflections (John Lenehan)
  12. Five Bagatelles – Nos 3 ‘Carol’ and 5 ‘Forlana’ (Gerald Finzi)
  13. Intermezzo in A major, Op. 118 No. 2 (Johannes Brahms)
  14. Clarinet Sonata in F minor, Op, 120 No. 1 – III, Allegretto Grazioso (Johannes Brahms)
  15. Love Never Ends (Helen Habershon)
  16. Goin’ Home (Largo from Dvorak’s New World Symphony, arranged by John Lenehan)
  17. Sonatina for Clarinet and Piano – III, Con Brio (Joseph Horowitz)
  18. Found in a Dream (Helen Habershon)

Recorded by Michael Ponder at St. George’s Headstone, Harrow, in 2021

Finzi & Brahms: Music for Clarinet and Piano DDA 25226

Artists: Helen Habershon (clarinet), John Lenehan (piano)

Works

  1. Five Bagatelles for Clarinet and Piano (Gerald FInzi)
  2. Meine Lieder, Op. 106 No 4 (Johannes Brahms, arranged by John Lenehan)
  3. Intermezzo in B minor, Op. 119 No. 1 (Johannes Brahms)
  4. Intermezzo in A major, Op. 118 No. 2 (Johannes Brahms)
  5. Wie Melodien ziehst es mir, Op. 105 No. 1 (Johannes Brahms, arranged by John Lenehan)
  6. Clarinet Sonata in F minor, Op. 120 No. 1 (Johannes Brahms)

Recorded by Michael Ponder at St. George’s Headstone, Harrow, in 2021

Divine Art Signs Greek Pianist Zoe Samsarelou for Double Album

Zoe Samsarelou
Zoe Samsarelou © Zoe Samsarelou/Divine Art

Zoe Samsarelou is a well-known Greek pianist and currently a Professor at the State Conservatory of Thessaloniki. She is also the Artistic Director of the International Pelion Festival. She studied the piano in Greece and Germany (Berlin and Hamburg). Having also studied archaeology and then pursuing a career as a pianist, she has been closely connected to mythology, history and the Arts her entire life.

This has led her to present in a new double album recording a unique series of compositions, under the title “Ekstasis – Dionysus, Nymphs and Satyrs”, which will be scheduled for release in the first quarter of 2022.

The god Dionysus (also known as Bacchus) had ardent supporters throughout the ancient Greek world, making his cult the most popular in classical Greece. He is primarily the god of fertility and vegetation and his worship was identified with mystical religious ecstasy. It is believed that ancient drama, the tradition of tragic and comic performance – one of the most complete forms of expression that combined poetry, music and dance – originated in Athens from the cult of Dionysus in the 6th century B.C.E. 

The two discs (and digital programmes) include pieces (some of them recorded for the first time) by the following three groups of composers:

  • by the French clavecinists, such as Couperin, Rameau, Dandrieu and Daquin
  • by international composers of the 19th-20th century, such as Debussy, Séverac, Dukas, Schmitt, Bortkiewicz, Levitzki, Farjeon, and Juón, and 
  • by many eminent Greek composers of the 20th-21st century, including Koumentakis, Marangopoulos, Nasopoulou, Skalkottas, Taylor, Terzakis and Tonia. 

All pieces chosen have a strong and direct relation to the myth of Dionysus and its symbolism. This unique programme highlights the creativity and ingenuity of the Greek spirit and its influence on humanity for over 2,500 years.

The recording was made in the Dimitris Mitropoulos Hall, Megaron, Athens, on June 24 and 25, 2021.

The album was produced by Zoe Samsarelou, engineered by Nikos Espialidis, and mastered by Konstantin Kontos.

Ekstasis: Dionysus, Nymphs and Satyrs

Label: Divine Art

Catalogue no.: DDA 21237

Availability: CD, download in HD and SD formats, and streaming

Artist: Zoe Samsarelou (piano)

Works:

  • La Sirène  (Jean-Francois Dandrieu,  1682-1738)
  • Les Naïades et le Faune indiscret (Déodat de Severac, 1872-1921)
  • Prelude of Naïades (Lina Tonia, b. 1985)
  • Satyr und Naïdaen (Dimitri Terzakis, b.1938)
  • La Ronde Bachique (Louis-Claude Daquin, 1694-1772)
  • La plainte, au loin, du faune (Paul Dukas, 1865-1935)
  • From Tethys to the Mediterranean (Giorgos Koumendakis)  **
  • Les Satires (François Couperin, 1668-1733)
  • 3 Morceaux, Op. 24 – No. 2  Valse grotesque (Satyr) (Sergei Bortkiewicz, 1877-1952)
  • Ein Satyrspiel  (Dimitri Terzakis, b.1938)
  • Les bacchanales (François Couperin, 1668-1733)
  • The enchanted nymph (Mischa Levitzki, 1898-1941)
  • Echoe (Nikos Skalkottas, 1904-1049)
  • Et Pan, au fond des blés lunaires, s’accouda (Florent Schmitt, 1870-1958)
  • Procession to Acheron (Nikos Skalkottas, 1904-1049)
  • 6 Epigraphes antiques :  No. 1 Pour invoquer Pan, dieu du vent d’été 
  •       And No. 4 Pour la danseuse aux crotales (Claude Debussy, 1862-1918)
  • Huis Clos – Erinyes (Nestor Taylor, b.1963)
  • Les Cyclopes (Jean-Philippe Rameau, 1683-1764)
  • Pictures from Greece, Op. 13 (Harry Farjeon, 1878-1948)
  • Dionysus and the Pirates: the Voyage from Ikaria to Naxos (Dimitris Marangopoulos, b.1949)
  • La Bacante (Jean-Francois Dandrieu, 1682-1738)
  • 9 Miniaturen für klavier “Satyre und Nymphen“ (Paul Juón, 1872-1940)
  • Krokeatis Lithos-Lakonia (Apasia Nasopoulou, b. 1972)

**  From the collection ‘Mediterranean Desert’.  Koumendakis rose to fame as the musical director and creator of the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2004 Athens Olympics.

Métier Records to release fashion-opera, ROBE, by Alastair White

A posthuman fantasia about cities, virtual reality and the A.I. singularity: ROBE is an award-nominated opera inspired by fashion and machines. This new (world premiere) recording will be released by Métier Records in late 2020/early 2021. (MÉTIER  MSV 28609). An audio recording which will be available on CD and Hi-Res digital download and streaming, it will be supported by promotional video shorts – the label hopes for a full staged video version in the future. An opera in form, it is also beautifully choreographed and is visually stunning.

Story

Descending into the mind of the superintelligence EDINBURGH, a young cartographer is tasked with mapping this creature so as to grant its desire: to become a living city, teeming with human life and activity. But they grow close, and she weaves into the map those things that cannot be known or spoken: the hidden histories of joy and longing each privately our own. As these rifts in the structure undo causality itself, she must answer the question: what exactly has she created?

About

Alastair White headshot
Alastair White © Alastair White

“Music is an ancient, powerful technology,” says composer-librettist Alastair White. “In ROBE we’re trying to explore the idea that virtual reality has existed since the dawn of time: in the way that books, theatres – even the clothes we wear –  transform and augment our perception of the world. And, how music has this astonishing power to contain and combine its participants – audiences, performers, writers – into a type of artificial superintelligence. “

This first full studio recording features the original cast from the 2019 UU Studios production at Tête-à-Tête festival, where the opera was shortlisted for a Creative Edinburgh Award and won praise for the ways in which it “successfully evoked the strange abstract world of cyberspace, creating a real sense of non-reality…The performances from all concerned were excellent.” (Planet Hugill).

People

Alastair White is a Scottish composer and writer whose work is characterised by a lyrical complexity that draws influence from materialism, fashion, cosmology and computers. Previous work includes 2018’s WEAR, shortlisted for a Scottish Award for New Music: “an opera of rare imagination and success” (Mark Berry, Boulezian). Produced at Goldsmiths Music Studios by Henri Växby (French For Cartridge), this release features a cast of rising stars from the new music scene: virtuosic pianist and music director Ben Smith (ROH, Wigmore Hall, Barbican), experimental flautist Jenni Hogan (Barbican, Radio 3, Queen Elizabeth Hall), Clara Kanter (Wigmore Hall, St Martin-in-the-Fields, BBC), the “theatrically and vocally excellent” (Opera Magazine) Kelly Poukens, “staggeringly good” (New Statesman) Rosie Middleton and Sarah Parkin, described as “a joy to watch” (The Times). 

This recording has been supported by Help Musicians UK, the Hinrichsen Foundation and the Goldsmiths Graduate Fund and Music Research Committee.

RECORDED IN JANUARY 2020.

ROBE Stage Photo
© Alastair White

ROBE Synopsis (duration c. 80 minutes)

In a society where difference between the real and the virtual is no longer meaningful, a powerful new being threatens the stability which holds these worlds together. Two elders, Neachneohain and Beira, convince the young cartographer Rowan to complete a terrible task: descend into the mind of the superintelligence EDINBURGH and map this creature so as to grant its desire – to become a living city, teeming with human life and activity. Witnessing visions of the awful realness of life beyond cyberspace, Rowan agrees – plunging into its depths: a strange, abstractworld of data and dream.

30 years later, Rowan and EDINBURGH have fallen in love, have lived their lives together. Though every morning she awakes with no memory of the past, Rowan has almost completed the map that EDINBURGH desires. But into this map Rowan has woven something else: something hidden, silent, unsaid. As these rifts in the structure undo causality itself, she must answer the question: what exactly has she created? And what does it have to do with this strange, otherworldly figure who sings the red song of a forgotten city – of an ancient, poisoned ROBE…

Moon Marked – New album from Chris Gekker Coming May 2020

Chris Gekker
Chris Gekker (Photo credit: Divine Art Records)

Acclaimed American trumpet player Chris Gekker has just made his second album for Métier, the new-music division of Divine Art Recordings.  This collection of new and recent works (all but one are world premiere recordings) by a range of American composers including Richard Auldon Clark, Carson Cooman and Lance Hulme, demonstrates the mellow and lyrical aspect of the trumpet. Chris Gekker uses descriptions such as “warmly expressive” and “hauntingly beautiful”.  However even though the album is largely ‘laid-back’ it’s never lacking in depth, meaning and ‘soul’. 

Adding to the richness of the sound world Chris Gekker is joined by pianist Rita Sloan (who also featured strongly in the previous Gekker album) , violist Katherine Murdock and oboist Mark Hill, and several members of the musically talented Gekker family:  Suzanne (clarinet), Jason (double bass) and Lianna (piano). 

The works here are wonderfully sonorous, harmonically conservative and will appeal to classical music lovers and also fans of soft lounge jazz.

The album is titled ‘Moon Marked’ and will be released in May 2020 on Métier (MSV 28605).

Moon Marked

Recorded at Dekelboum Concert Hall, University of Maryland on various dates in late 2019 except:

  • Variations and Fugue on a theme by Brahms (same venue, recorded 2011)
  • Moon Marked, recorded at Spencerville Seventh Day Adventist Church 2019

Works

  • … and justice for all?   (Richard Auldon Clark) for trumpet, viola and double bass
  • Elegy for a Sultry Summer Afternoon (Lance Hulme) for trumpet and piano
  • Moon Marked (Carson Cooman) for trumpet and clarinet
  • Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Brahms (Eric Ewazen) for flugelhorn and piano
  • Divertimento (Richard Auldon Clark) for trumpet, oboe and viola
  • Acquainted with the Night (Alistair Coleman) for trumpet and piano
  • Peace on Earth (Franklin Kiermyer) for trumpet, clarinet, double bass and piano

Performers

  • Chris Gekker (trumpet and flugelhorn)
  • Katherine Murdock (viola)
  • Mark Hill (oboe)
  • Suzanne Gekker (clarinet)
  • Jason Gekker (double bass)
  • Lianna Gekker (piano)
  • Rita Sloan (piano)

Previously on Divine Art: Ghost Dialogues (MSV 28572)

Chris Gekker is a master of his instrument. His technique is impeccable: The Metier recording is so clear one can hear every detail of attack. In addition, there is a real musical intelligence at work, here coupled with a fervent belief in the music he plays. This is a most varied recital, then, caught in superb sound. The combination of technique, taste, and musicianship is remarkable.”

—Colin Clarke, Fanfare

Cor Cantiamo To Perform at America Choral Directors Convention in March 2020

Illinois-based choir Cor Cantiamo has been selected to perform at the American Choral Directors’ Central/North Central Division convention next March. Also, the choir has been invited to be the group that premieres the ACDA Raymond Brock Commission Award winner. That is a singular honor for the choir and its conductor, Eric A. Johnson. The convention serves the ten Midwest states of Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska and both Dakotas.

Cor Cantiamo, which is choir-in-residence at Northern Illinois University, is one of America’s finest chamber choirs. It is signed to the Anglo-American label Divine Art, which released its last album ‘Psallite’ in 2017 (a co-production with Soli Deo Gloria). March will see the release of its new album of music by British composer James Whitbourn (“The Seven Heavens”, Divine Art DDA 25192) label CEO Stephen Sutton is delighted to welcome Whitbourn to Divine Art’s roster of over 900 composers: “We have been privileged to work with relatively little known choral composers of utter genius, such as Lydia Kakabadse and John Buckley, and this new album by James Whitbourn contains some of the most beautiful and well-written choral music I have heard for decades.”

New Album of Music for Small Orchestra from Composer Ed Hughes

Composer Ed Hughes
Ed Hughes © Katie Vandyck

Metier Records, a division of the Divine Art Recordings Group, will be releasing a new album of music by Sussex (England) based composer Ed Hughes. This will be Hughes’s fourth album for Metier in a series which includes an opera (CD/DVD set), a DVD of silent films with new music by Hughes, and a highly acclaimed double album of chamber works.

The new album contains three works: Sinfonia and Cuckmere: A Portrait for chamber orchestra, and a piano trio – Media Vita.

Ed Hughes writes music which can be very lyrical with long lines, and yet also polyphonic – sometimes dense, and sometimes translucent. Very characteristic is that things go in and out of focus, so you hear different things at different times, flowing in and out. There’s always a sense of forward momentum in that the music is constantly on a journey. A definite sense of momentum and energy. You are left wanting more. It resists definition! Sinfonia explores violent extremes of emotion ranging from anguished and desperate states, to the serene, with hints of early music. Whereas Cuckmere is often really gentle – the beginning of Spring is fleet of foot and light, whereas Summer has this amazing warmth and richness to the textures, which is a big contrast to the brittle shards of Winter. And the windswept Autumnal textures. Overall the album is a portrait, unified stylistically, even though the pieces exhibit many contrasts. (comments by Liz Webb)

Ed Hughes says: “My new CD features the most amazing performances of my music by the New Music Players and the Orchestra of Sound and Light brilliantly recorded and mixed by Simon Weir and the Classical Media Company.

“The CD opens with Cuckmere: A Portrait. A four movement piece evoking the journey of the Cuckmere river, this is also a journey through the seasons. So it is an exploration of time and space. It has a changing texture, even though the work is a continuous play, because there are a prelude and three interludes introducing and connecting the four main movements. Using the resources of a small orchestra and electronics I try to create a sense of spaciousness, cold, warmth, beauty, scale, and the drama of the environment conjured in Cesca Eaton’s film, for which this piece was originally conceived as part of a major 2018 Brighton Festival immersive commission.* I did this through searching melodies, changing harmonies, shifting string colours, blocks of wind and brass, and the strangeness you get when the landscape is transformed through snow and ice conveyed through ‘on the bridge’ string effects, and the occasional addition of electronics in the interludes.

Media Vita is the piano trio which goes back to my first professional compositions. I am fond of it because it freely explores the intense harmonies of an early motet – John Sheppard’s Media Vita (c. 1550) with its exquisite harmonic progressions and expressive melodies. I transform this into quite a bold and searching piece for piano trio.

“The final piece is called Sinfonia (2018) – it links to Media Vita (1991) because more than 25 years on from Media Vita it’s a return to the idea of trying to get under the skin of early English music. But this time in a sort of chronological survey of music composed between 1415 and c. 1600 using pieces originally concerned with war, passion, the human spirit, death, environmental disaster and the sounds of the city… all these different mixed elements from an early period. I’m trying to transform them into a statement that’s more about today than yesterday, through this large scale ensemble piece, Sinfonia.”

Ed Hughes: Sinfonia (Métier MSV 28597)

Coming Spring 2020

Recorded by Simon Weir (Classical Media) in 2018.

Works & Performers:

  • Sinfonia – Featuring the New Music Players conducted by Ed Hughes
  • Cuckmere: A Portrait – Featuring the Orchestra of Sound and Light conducted by Nicholas Smith
  • Media Vita – Featuring Susanne Stanzeleit (violin), Joe Giddey (cello), Richard Casey (piano)

Ed Hughes Recordings on Métier

Divine Art Signs American Pianist Justin Badgerow for Debut Album

Justin Badgerow
Pianist Justin Badgerow

The American branch of Divine Art Recordings has announced the signing of American pianist Justin Badgerow, whose debut album ‘Reminiscences of Brazil’ is to be recorded this autumn for release in 2020.

Justin Badgerow is a pianist based in Lancaster, PA and is an Associate Professor of Music at Elizabethtown College. Dr. Badgerow holds degrees from University of Central Florida, University of Texas, and the University of Colorado. Justin has performed across the USA as well as in Mexico, Brazil, South Africa, and Ireland and he holds a special interest in music of Latin America. This particular recording project, his first, began after a visit to the state of Bahia, Brazil. After performing and lecturing in the city of Salvador, Badgerow met local composer Paulo Gondim and began to study his works as well as other historically significant Brazilian composers such as Heitor Villa-Lobos and Francisco Mignone. While reminiscing on his travels, he discovered also the Brazilian-inspired works of Frenchman Darius Milhaud. These composers’ pieces all fit together as an ideal recording opportunity which attempts to capture the essence of the Brazilian people and artistic culture through the lens of an American traveller.  Dr Badgerow also intends to undertake a concert tour to promote the new album; further details will be published on the Divine Art website when available.

Reminiscences of Brazil

DDA 25201 – Coming Early Summer 2020 from Pianist Justin Badgerow

Works

  • Sies Preludios (Francisco Mignone) 
  • Bachianas Brasileiras No. 4 (Heitor Villa-Lobos) 
  • Ciclo Brasileiro (Heitor Villa-Lobos) 
  • Saudades do Brasil (Darius Milhaud) 
  • Valse Elegante (Francisco Mignone) 
  • Serenata Humoristica (Francisco Mignone)
  • Gingado de Bibi (Paulo Gondim) 
  • Sonhando (Paulo Gondim) 
  • Sapeca (Paulo Gondim) 
  • Teimosia (Paulo Gondim) 
  • Dansa Brasileira (Mozart Camargo Guarnieri) 
  • Congada (Francisco Mignone)

Divine Art Announces First Complete Recording of All 18 Geoffrey Allen Piano Sonatas

Divine Art Records is delighted to announce the forthcoming recording of the 18 Piano Sonatas by British-born Australian composer Geoffrey Allen, who has just celebrated his 92nd birthday with the completion of his most recent sonata. Allen has had a great deal of influence in the Australian music world since retiring from his career as a librarian in 1992, when he founded The Keys Press, which functioned to promote and publish Australian music until 2014. Among other activities he has proved to be a very accomplished composer indeed. Stephen Sutton, CEO of the Divine Art group, says “It’s wonderful to anticipate the recording of Geoff’s complete sonatas. We recorded his 4th sonata along with the delightful Three Piano Pieces back in 2001 (Divine Art DDA 25007 ‘Blue Wrens’ – pianist Trevor Barnard), so I was really pleased that the opportunity came along to produce a complete set.”

The pianist on the new set is Murray McLachlan, Head of Keyboard at Chetham’s School of Music and one of Britain’s most brilliant and busy pianists.  Please see below for an appraisal of the Allen Sonatas by McLachlan.

The recordings will take place at the Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester on five dates commencing on September 25, 2019, with engineer Stephen Guy.  The set will be issued on two 2-CD sets and two double albums;  the exact make up of each disc/set is not yet finalised but will include the 17 numbered Piano Sonatas and a rhapsodic piece from 2003 titled ‘Rhapzonata’. The sonatas stretch from the first composed in 1959 (later revised) to no. 17, completed only a few weeks ago (April 2019).

The two sets will be released in the first half of 2020 on the Métier label, Divine Art’s primary new-music imprint, as MSV 77209 and MSV 77210

Murray McLachlan on Geoffrey Allen:

I’m extremely excited and eager to get started with the extraordinary project of recording for Divine Art the complete 17 sonatas of the 90-year-old Australian based British born composer Geoffrey Allen. Geoffrey’s story is unique: He was born in 1927 in Essex and went to Oxford before emigrating in 1952 to Sydney, Australia. After a brief period as a geography teacher he had much success as a librarian, working first in Sydney then in Perth and travelling internationally for his work. His musical talent and facility was first apparent in 1950 when three of his four songs were performed at an Oxford University Music Society concert. Clearly composing has continued and grown apace over nearly seventy years of serious endeavour.

Geoffrey is characteristically modest about his work, but he feels that the year 1989 was especially crucial for his artistic development. A visit to Spain with his second wife had a huge impact on his piano Sonata No. 2 and after this work a great momentum – a great rush of energy and creativity – unquestionably occurred. This momentum has continued right up to 2019 with final touches to sonata 17 only appearing a few weeks back!

Geoffrey has mentioned many pieces and composers who have influenced him – with the notable exception of Beethoven! Performances heard as a student of Brahms horn trio and Sibelius 4th Symphony made a strong impression, but he also was influenced by performances early on that he heard on the radio from figures including Bax, Milhaud, Khatchaturian, Bliss, Ireland and Walton.

From the 1950s in Australia Geoffrey was a fervent supporter of new music from his adopted homeland. He helped found and organise Brolga Records, a pioneering venture that enabled contemporary Australian music to be available as commercial LPs for the first time. After his retirement as a librarian in 1992 he established The Keys Press, a one-man publishing activity concentrating on Australian classical music that continued functioning until 2014.

How can one describe Geoffrey’s music? It is all too easy to start classifying and referring to new or unfamiliar music via references to music that is familiar. What is really interesting and special about Geoffrey’s music is the fact that it looks orthodox on the page initially, but is in fact extremely thought-provoking. He has a unique way of combining the familiar with the unfamiliar: Geoffrey’s music is always extremely well crafted and looks deceptively simple on the page, but as soon as you begin to play any phrase from his works you discover that he is always subtly reinventing the wheel! There is a unique special voice. The textures and structure will appeal to diverse audiences. If you enjoy Prokofiev, Tcherepnin, Barber and even Tippett, you will admire the Allen aesthetic too – diverse though these famous names are!

There is unquestionably subtle originality, extraordinary variety and colourful fascination in Geoffrey Allen’s prolific output for the instrument. The collection of recordings we are about to make will unquestionably amount to a significant contribution in the ongoing development of the 20th/21st century piano sonata.

Divine Art/Métier Announces new Japanese-Inspired Album from Cross-Cultural Ensemble Shonorities

A new album of Japanese-inspired music from the cross-cultural ensemble Shonorities will be released by Métier Records later this year. Shonorities, created by Greek composer Basil Athanasiadis, is a diverse group of performers and composers committed to promoting a range of repertoire that encompasses a wide spectrum of musical styles including old, contemporary and traditional pieces. By blending a variety of musical cultures, Shonorities aims to show the potential for cross-cultural collaboration in contemporary music.

Shonorities’ past projects feature works for a variety of instrumental combinations including female voice and traditional Japanese instruments supported by organisations such as the Japan Foundation, Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS), Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation, Sawakawa Foundation, Japanese Embassy in Greece, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, British Council and the Greek-Japanese Association.

Greek composer Basil Athanasiadis moved to London to complete his studies. He is the only composer to date to twice receive the prestigious JSPS Postdoctoral Fellowship Award (2010-11 and 2011-13). During that period Basil was based at the Tokyo University of the Arts as a Special Foreign Researcher, where he composed new works for Western and Japanese instruments with a particular interest on the shō (mouth organ) and the 20-stringed koto.

The group’s first album of music by Athanasiadis (‘Soft Light’ Métier MSV 28584) appeared in April 2018: “Music that hues closely to a Japanese aesthetic based on simplicity of utterance and purity of expression… absolutely intriguing and immensely satisfying.”  (Music Notes)

The new album includes a fascinating mix of sounds including a rare appearance in art music of a solo Rhodes piano – an instrument normally found in jazz ensembles – as well as traditional western and Japanese instruments.

Book of Dreams (Métier MSV 28596)

Composer: Basil Athanasiadis

Artists: Shonorities: Shie Shoji (voice), Keiko Hisamoto (koto), Naomi Sato (shō), Lin Lin (alto flute), Nao Tohara (violin), Basil Athanasiadis (piano, Rhodes, percussion)
Guest artists: Noah Max (conductor), Elena Abad Martinez (violin 1), Chloë Meade (violin 2), Daichi Yoshimura (viola), Henry Hargreaves (cello)

Recording dates:  31 October 2017 (Orpington, Kent); 29 September 2018 (Goldsmiths Studio, London); 23-24 February 2019 (Studio A, Tokyo University of the Arts)

Works

  • Book of Dreams II (for alto flute and string quartet)
  • Five Pieces (for female voice and prepared piano)
  • Interlude (for solo piano)
  • Dream of a Butterfly II (for solo Rhodes)
  • Eyes are now Dim (female voice, violin, shō, koto)

Technicals

Microphones: Neuman U87, KM 83, AKG 414, DPA4006, DPA4011, CMC68, CMC64, CMC621, C414, R121
Mixing console: Calrec S2, adt SRC51
Monitor speakers: ATC SCM 20, musikelectronic geithain RL901K, Genelec 8050B
Microphone pre-amplifiers, A/D converters: Millennia HV-35/Avid HD interface, DAD AX32

Divine Art/Métier Records Announces New Digital Percussion Album

In 2015 Métier released a DVD of solo percussion music performed by Danish virtuoso Mathias Reumert. “Solo – Contemporary percussion meets Art Cinema” (Métier MSVDX102) was presented in the highest artistic quality with the visuals in the hands top movie director Christian Holten Bonke. The use of special lighting and other techniques makes the DVD (also available digitally from Amazon Prime) a visual and audible treat. Mathias Reumert was awarded the Danish Critics’ Prize in 2015, a rare accolade indeed for a percussionist.

Métier are now about to issue an audio-only album based on the DVD but adding new tracks in place of the more ‘theatrical ‘ ones which require visual input. The new album will be issued only in digital download and streaming formats (including HD) and will appear on July 19 in dealers worldwide (and on the Divine Art website for pre-order by early June).

20th Century Solo Percussion Masterworks

Métier (ZME 50802)
Total duration approx 108 minutes
All items recorded between 2005-2014 except Zyklus (June 25, 2018)

Works

  1. Karlheinz Stockhausen: Zyklus No. 9
  2. Franco Donatoni: Omar
  3. Iannis Xenakis: Psappha
  4. Iannis Xenakis: Rebonds
  5. Karsten Fundal: Moebius #1
  6. Brian Ferneyhough: Bone Alphabet
  7. Hans Werner Henze: Five Scenes from The Snow Country
  8. Roger Reynolds: Watershed I

Scarlatti and Clementi from John McCabe Coming Fall 2019

John McCabe - photo taken some time in the 1980s
John McCabe in the 1980s

John McCabe’s death in 2015 robbed us of both a brilliant and innovative composer and also an outstanding pianist whose particular love of Haydn and also a deep commitment to contemporary composers made him one of Britain’s most venerated musicians.

Following the release in January 2019 of a recording made by McCabe of recent American and Australian music, long thought to be lost (“Mountains”, Metier Records MSV 28585), Divine Art are now working with engineer Paul Arden-Taylor and McCabe’s widow Monica as producer, in the reissue of two fine recordings which McCabe made for Hyperion in 1981. Originally on two LPs, McCabe plays sonatas by Scarlatti and Clementi. Remastering from the analog originals will be to modern hi-definition audio formats and a double CD. It is expected that the release date will be around September or October.

Album Details

Catalog number: Divine Art DDA 21231 (available as Double-CD, HD, lossless, and MP3 digital)
Performer: John McCabe
Original analog LP releases: Hyperion A66025 (Scarlatti); A66057 (Clementi)

Works

Disc A (Domenico Scarlatti)
  • Sonatas  K. 105 in G major;  K. 426 in G minor; K. 517 in D minor; K, 490 in D major; K, 69 in F minor;
  • K. 518 in F major;  K. 28 in E major; K. 215 in E major; K. 133 in C major; K. 259 in G major; K. 43 in G minor; K. 460 in C major
Disc B (Muzio Clementi)
  • Piano Sonata in G minor, Op. 50 No. 3 (“Didone Abbandonata”)
  • Piano Sonata in D major, Op. 40 No. 3
  • Piano Sonata in F major, Op. 33 No. 2
  • Monferrines, Op. 49: No. 3 in E major,  no. 4 in C major & No. 12 in C major
Both recorded in 1981

New Music from Michael Alec Rose

In early 2018, Metier will release an album of music by Michael Alec Rose for solo violin and violin/viola duo, featuring violinist Peter Sheppard Skærved (pictured) and Diana Mathews (viola). Titled ‘Il Ritorno’, for one of the main pieces, the album will be on MSV 28574.

Rose has received 30 annual awards in composition from ASCAP and has been commissioned by the Walter W. Naumburg Foundation, the Blair and Mendelssohn String Quartets, the Nashville Symphony, and others. His music has been performed widely in the United States, as well as in Europe and South America. He is Associate Professor of Composition at Vanderbilt University’s Blair School of Music in Tennessee.

Coming in 2018 From Trio Anima Mundi

Following their wonderful disc of Romantic Trios (DDA 25102) Australian ensemble Trio Anima Mundi are now preparing a luscious album of English trios to be released on Divine Art (DDA 25158) next year; this will include the Piano Trios of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and Henry Waldo Warner, the First Trio of Rosalind Elliott, and the Folk-Song Fantasy by Cliffe Forrester.

New Music from David Braid

Métier will release a fascinating new album (currently scheduled for November) with a new set of works by English composer David Braid whose most recent album on Toccata was highly praised. ‘Songs, solos and duos’ features the velvet tone of the electric archtop guitar in a chamber, solo and vocal setting; also includes Braid’s evocative duos for flute/classical guitar and clarinet/piano – plus his 1st Piano Sonata: an eclectic range of recent works from the one of the UK’s most original yet approachable composers, performed by a dynamic set of world-class players. (MSV 28575)