Free Music Notes for Ades: Catch/Darknesse Visible/Still Sorrowing/Under Hamelin Hill/Five Eliot Landscapes/Traced OVerhead/Life Story

Ades: Catch/Darknesse Visible/Still Sorrowing/Under Hamelin Hill/Five Eliot Landscapes/Traced OVerhead/Life Story

Ades: Catch/Darknesse Visible/Still Sorrowing/Under Hamelin Hill/Five Eliot Landscapes/Traced OVerhead/Life Story Our Price: $7.98
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Free Music Notes for Ades: Catch/Darknesse Visible/Still Sorrowing/Under Hamelin Hill/Five Eliot Landscapes/Traced OVerhead/Life Story

Free Music Review: getting better and better
Hit: 5 Stars

This is my favorite Ades so far. Because of the solo piano pieces.

Free Music Review: making justice
Hit: 5 Stars

Some people just don't like contemporary music. I mean, just listen, this guy, Mr. Ades is a very talented composer. His music is so fresh and original.Besides he is very young which makes him even more talented.I totaly desagree with those who underestimated Mr. Ades. Just because you don't like his music doesn't makes his music bad. You should listen to Brittney Spears instead.

Free Music Review: Indeed! What IS all the fuss about?
Hit: 1 Stars

I decided to check in and see what sort of reviews this CD has received and now I must put in my two cents' worth in echoing the negative comments. I read about Ades in the New Yorker about two years ago and then picked up this CD to check out his music. What a disappointment! To sum it all up very quickly and be done with it: the music is TOTALLY derivative. Anyone who has a fair knowledge of 20th century composition will not be in the least surprised or inspired. What was amusing about the New Yorker article was Ades' rather callow criticism of Brahms as being a bit tired or something along that line. Please, Tom! Don't be silly!

Free Music Review: Shoot him with your bop gun
Hit: 1 Stars

Absolutely soulless "uptown" music, self-absorbed, incredibly white, lacking in humor (except for the liner notes, which are a scream). If you like to hear all that's wrong with classical music coming out of academia today, this one's for you: this stuff makes Milton Babbitt sound funky.

Free Music Review: What's all the fuss about?
Hit: 3 Stars

I'm sorry, but I can't help thinking that this CD has been somewhat overrated. When this was first released, I can understand that those reviewing it were really excited at the thought of an exceptionally talented composer's music already coming out on CD for the first time (and Ades was still only in his mid-twenties!) Those such reviewers were naturally compelled to bestow mountains of praise out of all proportion to the music's intrinsic merits. This CD was released in 1997, the same year Ades wrote Concerto Conciso and Asyla, but consists of mostly early music of his, apart from Traced Overhead (the best on the set). Inevitably he's written far better stuff since, with the possible exceptions of Catch and Under Hamelin Hill, which, without being exactly profound, show a striking gift for instrumental sonorites within a limited chamber compass and kaleidoscopic mood changes. But I have distinct reservations about most of the other pieces. I alluded above to the quality of Traced Overhead; this is the work most evident of a very promising talent, with Ades showing a keen awareness of the work of the French impressionists from Debussy to Messiaen, but transforming that knowledge into a very personal and pianistically conceived piece of music. (I have seen the score in Foyles recently, and am amazed by the array of complex instructions it contains; e.g time signatures like 5/12, 3/4 pedalling, but obviously Ades knew what he was about!) Darkness Visible is for me too much a study in ambient effects, with Dowland's song obviously compromising his normally much more astringent harmonic idiom; but it is concise and effective as such. Five Eliot Landscapes are indeed remarkable achievements for an eighteen-year-old, but they are at times a bit too reminiscent of late Britten in his songs and lack variety of mood or overall purpose. Life Story, ironically the title track, is easily the weakest of the set. The idea of employing a singer to sing in the style of Billie Holiday may seem novel and ingenious in itself, but against the backdrop of disjointed and overly dissonant piano chords, it ultimately becomes inane and pointless. Maybe this work would make more sense in its instrumental version; but somehow I doubt it. I cannot what the writer of the CD sleeve notes got so worked up about when he heard Still Sorrowing; like Traced Overhead, it reveals a very individual mind when it comes to ingenious pianistic sounds (especially in the use of Blu-Tac on the strings), but unlike the former, it lacks real emotion, and in essence consists of a series of strikingly original but superficial effects. In sum: a compilation showing abundant evidence of a fertile and very original talent, but very uneven on the whole. To appreciate the very essence of Ade's genius and what he has achieved so far, I would recommend buying the later compilations such as Living Toys and Asyla instead.
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