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Burning Shed CDRs are burnt to order and packaged in a stylish rubber stamped cardboard sleeve with card inlay.
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andrew keeling - reclaiming eros (cdr)
Written between 2000 - 2004 and including performances by highly respected ensembles and musicians such as Gothic Voices, Yukimi Kambe Viol Consort, Stor Quartet, Jacob Heringman, Catherine King, Susanna Pell and Abigail James, 'Reclaiming Eros' represents the second recorded collection of chamber, solo instrumental and vocal works by composer Andrew Keeling.
Perhaps more direct and evocative than his previous work, Andrew has said of 'Reclaiming Eros' that, "The music on the album represents a return to working intuitively. The pieces were written so fast, all I could do was write down what came to me...usually out of the blue. Hearing the music performed by these excellent musicians gave me the confidence to think that, perhaps, something more musically sensuous has at last emerged in my writing."
Recent commissions from Fretwork and the Yukimi Kambe Viol Consort have seen Andrew's music performed in Russia and Japan, and his acclaimed orchestral re-workings of Robert Fripp and King Crimson material were performed and broadcast worldwide by the Metropole Orchestra of Amsterdam in 2003.
Tracks
01 Piano Quartet - Reclaiming Eros (2000) 16:25
Commissioned by the Deal Festival and the Newbold Piano Quartet
Stor Quartet - Olga Wojciechowska (violin),
Ricardo Odriozola (viola), Sebastien Dörfler (cello),
Torlief Torgersen (piano). Greig Academy, Bergen, Norway.
February, 2005. Engineer - Steinar Bakkemo
02 Scarlet Letters (2003) for guitar 15:04
Commissioned by Abigail James
Abigail James (guitar). London. November, 2004.
Engineer - Dill Katz
03 Powered by Joy (2003) for mezzo-soprano, two tenors and baritone 13:37
Texts by Solage (Joieux de cuer) and Machaut (Il m’est avis)
Commissioned by Gothic Voices
Gothic Voices - Catherine King (mezzo-soprano),
Steven Harrold, Julian Podger, Leigh Nixon (tenors).
Toddington, UK. April, 2005. Engineer - Dill Katz
04 Black Sun for lute (2001) 7:01
Commissioned by Jacob Heringman
Jacob Heringman (lute). London. May, 2005.
Engineer - Dill Katz
Gefunden (2003) for four viols 12:21
05 i) Drammatico!
06 ii) Poco agitato
07 iii) Semplice/Lamentoso e rigoroso
Commissioned by Yukimi Kambe Viol Consort
Yukimi Kambe Viol Consort - Yukimi Kambe (treble),
Eriko Ozawa and Maki Noguchi (tenors), Kaori Hashizume
(bass). Lilis, Sakae Ward Culture Centre, Yokohama, Japan.
February, 2005. Director Tsutomu Mizuno.
Engineers - Masahiro Suzuki, Youhei Ohta and Takahiro Suzuki of Studio Universal Inc.
08 Seule (2001) for mezzo-soprano 7:16
A setting of Nerval’s El Desdichado
Commissioned by Catherine King
Catherine King (mezzo-soprano). Toddington, UK. May, 2005.
Engineer - Dill Katz
09 A Child Divine (2004) for bass viol 3:32
for Edie
Susanna Pell (viol). London. May, 2005. Engineer - Dill Katz
Credits
Production - Andrew Keeling and Jacob Heringman.
Engineer - Dill Katz. London. July 2005
Thank you - Tim Bowness and Burning Shed; the musicians without whom this CD would never have been, especially
Jacob Heringman; my family - Sue, Nicholas, Christopher and Elizabeth; my father, Geoffrey Edward Keeling (d. 2001);
Judee Lynne Sill (d. 1979).
‘Eros is the great healer.’
(Dr. Anne Maguire)
all rights reserved. made in the EEC.
photography by carl glover
design by aleph
Burning Shed CDRs
Burning Shed CDRs are burnt to order and packaged in a stylish rubber stamped cardboard sleeve with card inlay.
Reviews
Reclaiming Eros was Keeling’s first release on Burning Shed, and is a well-filled album of high quality music commissioned and performed by a plethora of excellent musicians. The eponymous Piano Quartet is an exciting and energetic work, with plenty of ostinati and punchy rhythmic writing. There are moments of repose and a valedictory ending, but the nervous energy is maintained through the first half by micro-dialogues between the instruments, and secretive string trills and piano splashes. Keeling’s idiom is recognisably tonal – there are even some moments where Michael Nymanesque textures creep in. Even where more lyrical moments are allowed to develop the music resists easy sentimentality. Andrew Keeling has a penchant for open intervals in some of his other works, and in this one there is an almost oriental feel at times, with open fifths in transposition giving the tonality a pentatonic feel. At about 9:00 into the work, the cello is given an aria accompanied by the piano, and the mood elongates and is allowed more expressive breadth. There is some seriously gorgeous music in this piece, and with responsive playing from the Stor Quartet and pianist Torlief Torgersen this is a good introduction to Keeling’s work.
Scarlet Letters for solo guitar is, at just over 15 minutes, substantial to say the least. Abigail James’s playing is utterly convincing, and is the first thing which demands that you take it seriously and that demonstrates the piece to be worthwhile. Written using the full gamut and colour range of conventional guitar techniques, this has to be a work which should be taken up by serious performers looking to go beyond the usual classical and romantic repertoire; who are looking for something with melodic charm and expressive potential but which clearly demands considerable technical virtuosity. This work is filled with fascinating ideas and nuances, innocence and sophistication. Imagine something by Leo Brouwer, and if anything more so, and you’ll have some inkling as to what I mean.
Gothic Voices are an established ensemble, and have shown considerable imagination in commissioning new works over the years. Powered by Joy uses texts by Solage (Joieux de cuer) and Machaut (Il m’est avis), and plays with the words at an number of levels, using their inherent sounds to create rhythmic and colour contrast, but also at times setting the voices in almost barber-shop closeness of harmony. In this way Keeling and Gothic Voices have taken over the baton somewhat from the Kings Singers, who also ventured forth with new works from an elder generation of composers such as Paul Patterson, Richard Rodney Bennett and Malcolm Williamson. Keeling’s writing pays respect to medieval and renaissance in some aspects of the vocal writing in this piece, but gives it an edge and a sense of danger, crowding the notes into small spaces, inviting them and the words to collide in short, clipped phrases, as well as giving them longer, arching forms by way of contrast.
Powered by Joy sensibly cushions the guitar solo of Scarlet Letters from the ringing lute sounds of Black Sun. Without any notes for reference we are left guessing as to the significance of these titles. Black Sun might suggest some kind of science fiction doom, but is a fairly innocuous, certainly approachable piece of music, which, aside from the difference in sound from the guitar, would also seem appropriate for that instrument.
Gefunden for four viols also inhabits the world of ancient instruments, again bringing them squarely into the 21st century. This piece has been recorded less closely than most of the others on this disc, and the acoustic makes for a more tubby kind of sound. I know one should take into account the lesser brilliance of these instruments when compared to modern strings, but with my experience of Early Music in The Hague I know this ensemble might have been a little more sympathetically recorded. Never mind, the piece gives us some interesting new sonorities, giving the old instruments almost a Beatles-like tune at the beginning of the second movement, and making them pluck like harps and wend their way though unaccustomed melodic patterns and harmonies. The final movement, Semplice/Lamentoso e rigoroso is really gorgeous.
The two final works on this disc are both solo pieces. Seule, a setting of Nerval’s El Desdichado, is given a virtuoso performance by Catherine King, whose voice is sensitive to the breadth of expression given to the words. From virtually inaudible to coloratura display, the lines are beautifully drawn in this piece. The last note of Seule is nicely mirrored in the third of A Child Divine for bass viol. The ringing resonance is more sympathetic here than in Gefunden, though I’m not sure quite so much resonance was really required from the mixing desk – it sounds a little as if Susanna Pell is sitting, amplified, in the middle of an empty football stadium. There is also a little surprise at the end, in case you were about to fall asleep.
Dominy Clements, Musicweb International
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Comments
I really like 'Reclaiming Eros'. It is really beautiful and the musical language is wonderfully straightforward and transparent. I find myself thinking more about your excellent tracks on the Virelai album and the whole idea behind them. The idea of deliberate and transparent collisions of culture seems a very productive field.
David Cross - ex-King Crimson
Thank you for the fabulous CD. I am listening to it now and enjoying it greatly. The music is great as is the audio quality.
David Fideler - author/poet
Having just spent a while ignoring the cold rainy weather listening to 'Reclaiming Eros', I particularly liked 'Black Sun' and 'Scarlet Letters', so very calming and gentle and of course the child's chuckle at the end of 'A Child Divine' made me smile. The whole of the music was soothing. I couldn't always follow all the music technically but I could feel that each part fitted elegantly into the whole.
Judy Dyble
Many thanks for your superb CD. What a marvellous composer you are! I shall listen and relisten to it.
Prof. Michael Talbot
I have a copy of the Reclaiming Eros CD. It's great! I was especially interested to see the work with quite a lot of 'early' music instruments. Having said that I really liked the Piano Quartet, too.
Kirsty Whatley (harpist)
It all seems hugely moved on since the things of yours I heard a number of years ago.
Prof. David Fanning
Am loving your C.D. It's one of my top-five car C.D's now. Thanks!
Student composer
I have just listened carefully to Reclaiming Eros, which reminded me how well written and imaginative your pieces were. You can always see where they are going formally, and they are a sheer delight for someone with perfect pitch who can see how carefully focal pitches are used in a work like Black Sun, which I particularly admired. I also much enjoyed A Child Divine as I have a particular fondness for the sounds made by lutes, bass viols etc in a modern context. There is so much that one can do with the past, if one knows about it! Reclaiming Eros kept me spellbound too with its mixture of new sounds with an underlying tonal background, and its textural inventiveness. The melismatic vocal pieces were extremely striking and individual too, especially the knock-out start of Powered by Joy.
Prof. Robert Orledge
It's comforting, although rare, to hear a contemporary music conceived by the inner ear. Andrew Keeling is one such composer. He has taken the time and trouble to create psychological depth in his music, a path which allows him to speak with an authentic voice. He is not afraid of conventional expressive gestures and even reminiscences of popular music, but avoids any hint of cliche by transforming them with his musical imagination. His aesthetic approach demonstrates considerable courage, something which ordinary concert-goers should both appreciate and admire.
Peter Davison, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester
On my returning from a day passed in Rome...Reclaiming Eros was waiting at home. Burning Shed is perhaps one of my favourites labels. Extremely good , beautiful, music and a sense of honesty, and to no play the market. A sense that the music has a life by itself. These feelings are related to both the cd and the label. Needless to say that I enjoy very much the work made by Peter Chilvers and the great Tim Bowness. Reclaiming Eros found a home with them.
Carlos Romeo
This is marvelous work! I can only say that my intuition tells me that this is right. The music is communicating powerfully. Every piece is strong, the performances are all outstanding and the engineering on all is extraordinarily good. Wonderful title - Reclaiming Eros. There is an an assurance and confidence that seems to have grown since the last album. (Of course, I could be imagining this - maybe it's always been there.) Congratulations on releasing an excellent album!
Robin Frederick
Such variety in style and such excellent performances...I was particularly impressed with the Scarlet Letters and Black Sun... These stood out immediately at the first spin. I am sure I will be listening to this album many times because it has a very accessible quality to it. In itself, that's quite an achievement for an album of contemporary music!
G.J.Blom (Leidjes van Ordelijke Ellende - Basta Records)
Andrew's CD arrived today. I listened to it once through. Once again, it was good to be reminded...what a lovely piece Reclaming Eros is. The music on the CD appears, on the first hearing, to be one of the introspective kind. A few more listenings will unveil more of its secrets. It is, in any case, very genuine music. And unashamedly beautiful!
Ricardo Odriozola - FraKctured Zone
I found Reclaiming Eros to be a rich and inspiring collection of musicks that defy categorisation beyond 'serious'. There is an asperity that at first shocks the palette but gradually reveals a very beautiful structural aesthetic just outside diatonicism and bound by inner logic...It does draw me in and take me places I would never have visited otherwise.
Mark Graham - FraKctured Zone