Lumsdaine, David And Lefanu, Nicola / Mandala 3: Music By David Lumsdaine & Nicola Lefanu
Album: | Mandala 3: Music By David Lumsdaine & Nicola Lefanu | Collection: | Classical | |
Artist: | Lumsdaine, David And Lefanu, Nicola | Added: | Mar 2017 | |
Label: | Divine Art Records |
A-File Activity
Add Date: | 2017-03-28 | Pull Date: | 2017-05-30 | Charts: | Classical/Experimental |
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Week Ending: | Apr 23 |
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Airplays: | 1 |
Recent Airplay
1. | Apr 21, 2017: | Cardinal Importance
Lefanu: Trio No. 2: Song For Peter For Soprano, Clarinet, And Cello (18:28). So |
Album Review
Gary Lemco
Reviewed 2017-03-22
Reviewed 2017-03-22
LeFanu’s Invisible Places (1986) for clarinet and string quartet, plays its 16 mvmts or gestures continuously; some are questioning, others angry. Lumsdaine’s short fire in leaf and grass (1991) for soprano and clarinet, is a soaring statement, mildly dissonant, and uses a Denise Levertove text (“The Snow Dance”). LeFanu’s Trio 2: Song for Peter (1983) weaves together lines from Emily Dickinson, Ted Hughes, Sara Teasdale, and Anton Chekhov. The main themes relate to time and mortality, with Teasdale’s words conveying a quiet meditation. Australian David Lumsdaine’s (b. 1931) Mandala 3 (1978) is an extension of his solo piano piece Ruhe sanfte, sanfte ruh’, taken from Bach’s last St. Mathew Passion chorus. In the piece’s three parts, for piano, flute, clarinet, viola and cello, the composer blurs the edges of the structure to create ambiguity and enfolding resonance. LeFanu was inspired by Italo Calvino’s The Great Khan, in which Marco Polo advises the Khan to cherish those who manage to live outside of ‘the inferno.’
Track Listing