1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Haunting, lyrical, minimal music, January 19, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: PART:TABULA RASA (Audio CD)
To be honest, I find the "New simplicity" spearheaded by Part, Gorecki and Taverner somewhat over-rated. Nonetheless, Part's Tabula Rasa is a beautifully conceived CD. Fratres and Tabula Rasa (latin for 'unmarked slate') are evocative, melancholy and wonderfully written. Cantus is based on bell patterns (in his native Estonia) and the simplest of the works. This is not a criticism however as he embellishes the circular melody with a spiralling sense of passionate loss and keening. Fratres is featured twice (I have seen a CD with a dozen or more renditions - an unusual luxury for new music but surely overkill), firstly by Jarrett & Kremer in a thin (and slightly jangling) but oddly moving version, then by a bank of celli in what must be the most sympathetic setting. The piece, Tabula Rasa, is an inspired work, building into a huge web of incredible beauty. The music on this CD does not challenge the listener but does offer a music experience with a deeply felt spiritual dimension.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
haunting; written as if spawned from a concentration camp., December 13, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: PART:TABULA RASA (Audio CD)
The melancholy drips from this music. I don't why I love Part's music so much, and Tabula Rasa was my introduction to the man. Incredible.
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4.0 out of 5 stars
Tabula Rasa/Fratres, etc., August 16, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: PART:TABULA RASA (Audio CD)
I think this recording is one of the best available introductions to Pärt's work. All the pieces are instrumental and are probably more approachable than his immense choral works. The recording centers around "Tabula Rasa", a double-violin concerto, and also includes two of the apparently many versions of "Fratres" and the "Cantus in Memory of Benjamin Britten". The latter, though a moving tribute and a very interesting tour de force, is of minor significance compared to either "Tabula Rasa" or "Fratres". All the performances, though, are superlative.
"Tabula Rasa" achieves the difficult task of keeping us focused on one or two tiny ideas within a large-scale "minimalist" framework. (Most of the "minimal" composers detest the term so I only use it for convenience.) Musically and emotionally Pärt has found a sound world pregnant with mystery and poignancy, and he manages to suspend our attention in this fragile world for an astonishing length of time. Particularly impressive is the placement of the climax just shy of the halfway mark, as opposed to a more typical three-quarters or so. This leaves us with a calm and unchanging denouement section stretched over a huge proportion of the piece. The fact that we need and want the denouement to last that long after the preceding cataclysm is quite an achievement in and of itself. Curiously, the piece's orchestration, two solo violins accompanied by string orchestra and prepared piano, is nearly identical to that of Schnittke's first Concerto Grosso, which though outwardly different from "Tabula Rasa" appears to be oddly cut from the same cloth. I have no idea if there's more than coincidence here.
"Fratres" is much shorter and perhaps more optimistic in mood than "Tabula Rasa", but is just as moving. Whether one hears it as "optimistic", detached or simply bright in tone, there's little denying the raw power within this mostly quiet piece. I am partial to the violin/piano version's variety of color and phrase-setting over the multiple cello version, which seems to be more about dynamic flatness. Especially the piece's recurring "mantra" -- a two-bar tonic statement -- is more striking and memorable in the violin/piano version. And its stellar performance by Gidon Kremer and Keith Jarrett doesn't hurt either. They aren't afraid to be luxurious with every level of pacing; the result, paradoxically, keeps me on the edge of my seat.
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