GoodSound! "Music" Archives Published May 1, 2005 |
David Chesky: Violin
Concerto, Flute Concerto, The Girl from Guatemala
Tom Chiu, violin; Jeffrey
Khaner, flute; Wonjung Kim, soprano; Area 31 Orchestra; Anthony Aibel, conductor.
Chesky SACD288
Format: Hybrid Multichannel SACD
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As a jazz artist, record-label owner, and composer, David Chesky
stands out as the decades musical Everyman. This scintillating hybrid SACD focuses
on Chesky the composer, but Chesky the producer of great-sounding recordings is also
present. The compositions mix Brazilian jazz with concert music, and harmonic with 12-tone
compositional elements, into a very appealing whole. The Violin Concerto is the
more energetic piece, the Flute Concerto the more lyrical work. Both bubble over
with good spirits and positive energy and will be very appealing additions to the
repertory. The soloists are first-rate, as is the Area 31 Orchestra. The 4.0-channel
recording (Chesky doesnt believe in a center channel) is bright and clean as the
proverbial whistle -- had Chesky scored a cue for dropped pin, youd be able to hear
it. The rear channels contribute just the right amount of ambience. If youre looking
for some significant new concert music to add to your collection, try this disc. I cannot
imagine it disappointing anyone
.Rad Bennett |
Chopin: Nocturnes; Impromptus
Angela Hewitt, piano.
Hyperion SACDA67371/2
Format: Hybrid Multichannel SACD
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It makes sense that Angela Hewitt, revered for her piano
performances of the music of J.S. Bach, should play Chopin so well. Bach and Mozart were
like gods to Chopin, who was primarily a classicist who overlaid clean-cut forms with
lovely romantic melodies. Hewitt has the chops to play in any manner she chooses, so it is
good to report that she lets her virtuoso technique serve the music. Her playing is
lyrical, her control assured. The C-minor Nocturne moves so slowly as to seem suspended in
space, yet has more tragic meaning than any other performance I have heard. Only a player
with ultimate control could pull off this approach. Hewitt can and does. She can also fly
like the wind. The Fantasie-Impromptu in C-sharp Minor is a case in point, the rapid
right-hand figures fleet and evenly articulated. Yet the middle section, with its familiar
tune, practically defines lyricism. This track is one of the best performances of anything
by Chopin that I have heard. The 4.0-channel sound is wonderful in the way it never calls
attention to itself, but just reproduces the piano faithfully. The recording is not quite
as close-up as many, yet has ample presence
.Rad Bennett |
The Reverend Al Green: Everythings
OK
Blue Note 8 7584 2
Format: CD
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The delightful surprise of Al
Greens first disc for Blue Note, 2003s I Cant Stop, was its
neoclassicism -- its refusal to play by the rules of current pop music. Green had reunited
with Willie Mitchell, his producer through his peak years in the 1970s with Hi Records,
and they made the kind of deep-soul record that major labels dont bother with
anymore. Everythings OK is even more confident. Green wrote or cowrote (with
Mitchell) all the tunes but one, a beautifully effective cover of "You Are So
Beautiful." Mitchells production is a little cleaner and more open than in the
old Hi days, but the horn and string arrangements will sound warmly familiar to
Greens fans. Green sounds as if hes working a bit harder to hit the high
notes, but his voice has a lived-in quality that underscores the feeling in his singing.
Hes kept his songwriting chops, too -- in a perfect world, a couple of these tunes
would be hits. The Reverend Al Green doesnt sing any gospel music on Everythings
OK, but itll feed your soul
.Joseph Taylor |
Cassandra Wilson: Traveling
Miles
EMI/DTS 54123
Format: DVD-Audio
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Cassandra Wilsons sultry tribute to Miles Davis,
first released in 1999, here receives the 5.1-channel treatment as the first disc in the
DTS Signature Series. The series titles will be drawn from various EMI labels, then
remastered, remixed, and augmented with extra video features. I like this discs
totally immersive sound mix, which seems to suit Wilsons laid-back singing. She is
one of the few singers who can sound calculated and spontaneous in the same instant, and
the sound exhibits those same qualities. I think the vocals could have been better served
by being in the center channel, however, instead of in the left and right front and
surround channels. To balance this complaint, there is good, well-focused bass on all
tracks, and all of the instruments have presence without any audio glare. I have yet to
see a DVD-A that has the visual quality of a good DVD-V disc, and the video featurette
here is way below average, grainy and indistinct. The EMI/DTS partnership in multichannel
DVD-Audio is to be applauded, but there are still some rough edges to smooth out
.Rad
Bennett |
The Rolling Stones: The
Singles, 1968-1971
ABKCO 12212
Format: CD
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It is by no coincidence that ABKCO Records has saved
the best collection of Rolling Stones singles for last. Like the preceding two sets, The
Singles, 1963-1965 and The Singles, 1965-1967, this one duplicates Stones 45s
on CDs, down to the vinyl look of the discs and the printing of the sleeves. Here
youll find "Jumpin Jack Flash," "Honky Tonk Woman,"
"You Cant Always Get What You Want," and "Brown Sugar," all
staples of classic-rock radio. "Sympathy for the Devil" is also here, along with
the three remixes that ABKCO released on a hybrid SACD in late 2003. Rounding out the
package are a bonus DVD that includes a performance of "Time Is On My Side" from
The Ed Sullivan Show, a booklet with an original essay by Stones authority Nigel
Williamson, a poster, and three period photos -- extras that have more in common with a
deluxe DVD collection than a normal music release. The sound crackles with detail but
lacks richness, which is a fault of the source recordings. If you have the other
collections of The Singles, youll definitely want this one; if you plan to
buy only one, this should be it
.Marc Mickelson |
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