INNOVA
311.130.jpg
Robert Martin 9 Stellar Pieces
New Classical,    Innova 311    CD   15

Solo music for winds after the heavens' brightest stars. See One Sheet
BUY NOW! @ http://www.baskweb.com/store/template_nav_1.asp?category_expand=&menu=expand&contentPage=product.asp&mscid=10917037700000000000000101&idcategory=0&idproduct=34357
Composers Performers Related Links
Robert Martin Linda Weatherill Furious Artisans
  Martin Kuuskmann Liner Notes
  Michael Powell  
  Michiyo Suzuki  
  Paul Cohen  
  Raymond Mase  
  Robert Ingliss  
  Stephen Forman  
  William Purvis  

Track Listing Header
Title Composer(s) Performer(s) Length
Spica Robert Martin
Michiyo Suzuki
7:57
Regulus Robert Martin
William Purvis
7:42
Arcturus Robert Martin
Martin Kuuskmann
8:17
Antares Robert Martin
Raymond Mase
7:03
Sirius Robert Martin
Linda Weatherill
10:17
Achernar Robert Martin
Paul Cohen
8:35
Aldebaran Robert Martin
Stephen Forman
7:47
Vega Robert Martin
Robert Ingliss
7:42
Shaula Robert Martin
Michael Powell
7:18
One Sheet Text

Nine Stellar Pieces is a collection of wind solos each named after one of the heavens' brightest stars. Exhilarating and delicate, they are exuberant statements celebrating the wonder of the night sky.

What would a star sound like? As points, they could only be single tones. As unchanging, they would have to be tones going on eternally. But though there are indeed some long, if not eternal, tones here, each of these pieces is essentially an extended melody: not so much the song of a star, perhaps, as a song addressed to a star, a hymn.

Each is, though, in another sense the song of a star: the star performing it. The pieces are virtuoso items, ‘stellar’ for sure, one for each of the common orchestral wind instruments, including saxophone.

Reviews

Fanfare

Nowhere do I detect any particular influences at work, the score coming from a personal musical voice that has an instinctive relationship with each of the instruments used...Do give the disk a try, for these are highly interesting excursions into the capabilities of wind instruments.
by David Denton