Dillon String Quartet No. 2; Parjanya-vata; Traumwerk;Vernal Showers
Evocative‚ inventive‚ carefully crafted music benefits from virtuoso playing and good sound
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: James Dillon
Genre:
Chamber
Label: Montaigne
Magazine Review Date: 11/2001
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 67
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: MO782046

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
String Quartet No. 2 |
James Dillon, Composer
Arditti Quartet James Dillon, Composer |
Parjanya-vata |
James Dillon, Composer
James Dillon, Composer Rohan de Saram, Cello |
Traumwerk |
James Dillon, Composer
Graeme Jennings, Violin Irvine Arditti, Violin James Dillon, Composer |
Vernal Showers |
James Dillon, Composer
Ed Spanjaard, Conductor Irvine Arditti, Violin James Dillon, Composer Nieuw Ensemble |
Author:
For a composer with James Dillon’s avantgarde credentials‚ the title Vernal Showers might lead you to expect a sendup of English pastoralism. In fact‚ there’s nothing the least frivolous or forbidding about this response to Coleridge’s The Nightingale. The music invokes the glittering cascades of sudden downpours while the sun still shines‚ and even the nocturnal song of the nightingale‚ without compromising Dillon’s very personal blend of spontaneous inventiveness and carefully weighted structuring.
Parjanyavata is an appropriate partner for Vernal Showers‚ its title involving two Sanskrit words for rain and wind. This exhilarating essay for solo cello is executed with charismatic brilliance by Rohan de Saram‚ and it’s prophetic of much of Dillon’s later work in its juxapositions of lyrical‚ dancelike and turbulently dramatic materials. That there is far more to his music than mere soundeffects is confirmed by the Second String Quartet‚ a fizzing firework display which is as exuberant as it is poetic‚ and a supremely imaginative rethinking of the traditional quartet principle of dialogue between degrees of unanimity and diversity.
In Traumwerk‚ 12 miniatures for two violins‚ Dillon seizes the opportunity to devise a sequence of sharply drawn character pieces whose variety of mood ranges from sly comedy to unbridled ferocity. As always with this composer‚ nothing about the medium – like the contrast between playing vibrato and non vibrato – is taken for granted. The persuasive technical and interpretative virtuosity of all the performers on this CD should not be taken for granted either‚ and the various recordings (that of the Second Quartet made as long ago as 1993) are all superb.
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