INNOVA
757.130.jpg
Andrew Violette UltraViolette
New Classical,    Innova 757    2 CD Set   22.5

At the end of the spectrum See One Sheet
BUY NOW! @ http://www.baskweb.com/site/store/template_nav_1.asp?category_expand=&menu=expand&contentPage=product.asp&mscid=10917037700000000000000101&idcategory=0&idproduct=49314
Composers Performers Related Links
Andrew Violette Andrew Violette Liner Notes
  Elizabeth Farnum Andrew's Home
  Ensemble Pi Also by Andrew on Innova
  Janice Weber  
  John Rojak  
  Kaitilin Mahoney  
  Maggie Lauer  
  Raemond Martin  
  Sherry Zannoth  

Track Listing Header
Title Composer(s) Performer(s) Length
Pistis Sophias Andrew Violette
Elizabeth Farnum
5:43
Flute Sonata Andrew Violette
Maggie Lauer
18:00
Trio Andrew Violette
Andrew Violette
Kaitilin Mahoney
John Rojak
19:32
Six Performances Andrew Violette
Ensemble Pi
9:10
Five Sonatinas Andrew Violette
Andrew Violette
22:37
Amor Dammi Quel Fazzolettino Andrew Violette
Andrew Violette
Janice Weber
4:45
American Song Set Andrew Violette
Andrew Violette
Sherry Zannoth
36:59
Two Spanish Arias Andrew Violette
Andrew Violette
Sherry Zannoth
Raemond Martin
18:57
Death Be Not Proud Andrew Violette
Andrew Violette
Raemond Martin
3:25
Fantasy Andrew Violette
Andrew Violette
4:29
Fugamericana Andrew Violette
Andrew Violette
1:25
One Sheet Text

Andrew Violette offers a music festival's worth of new pieces on a 2 CD set aptly titled UltraViolette. The obsessive virtuosity, big emotions and lush Lisztian harmonies are still there but the pioneering use of large scale forms is not. Instead we get the smaller works, from 1970 to 1994, still mystical and ecstatic but more easily digestible.

The program opens with Pistis Sophias, a chant sung by New York based, Grammy nominated soprano, Elizabeth Farnum. Her beautiful lyric soprano makes a direct emotional connection in this first experiment with modality (written in 1970 when the composer was 16).

A flute sonata, played by Maggie Lauer, who nails the drop-dead hard licks, follows. Two of the four movements are transcriptions of the Five Sonatinas, also on the CD, played by the composer.

These Sonatinas (1994) explore episodic use of color, akin to late Debussy. Violette plays the big splashes of luminosity--with its crashing octaves, daring trills, extravagant gestures--with a thoroughly committed and spectacular musical scholarship.

Next is Six Performances, almost a jazz piece, played by Ensemble-Pi with the composer as guest pianist. Six pieces, six different tempos, six different moods--all played together!

A trio--played by Kaitilin Mahony, a horn player with American Composers Orchestra and Broadway; John Rojak, a member of the American Brass Quintet and Broadway shows, and the composer on keyboard--rounds out the first CD. This music is energetic and fiercely physical. There's a winding staccato bass trombone etude played to perfection as well as an expressive high-horn solo of considerable breath-control difficulty that has to be heard to be believed.

A trifle for piano four-hands about love transformed is zipped off by the composer and Janice Weber (she recorded the notoriously difficult 1838 version of the Liszt Etudes on IMP). You can hear the fun they had recording this new-complexity bonbon.

The rest of the second CD is art songs sung by Raemond Martin (soloist in the Met's Porgy and Bess; Scarpia with New York Grand Opera) and Sherry Zannoth (Met debut in Weill's Mahagonny).

Sherry, with her secure top, solid bottom and a penetrating high register, sings with a warmly vibrant, clear-eyed honesty.You have to hear her expressive pianissimos coupled with those powerful, Wagnerian high notes.

Raemond sings the soaring melodies with acute musical intuition, direct in his emotional connection, with great clarity of diction.

The mastering leans toward the wet, sounding a bit like a pop and there's that gorgeous peek-a-boo violet cover.

A must-have for new-music-philes!

Reviews

Violinist.com

Canadian violinist Robert Uchida plays this brand-new music: haunting, well-spun, well-played on his Italian violin. This piece is dedicated to Uchida, who is concertmaster of Symphony Nova Scotia. Violin geeks will appreciate the second disc, in which the opening "Aria" movement is taken through a set of variations: an "Ysaye Variation," a "Kreisler Variation," "Bartok Variation"... and more, even a "Verdi Variation"!
by Laura Niles