Mnemosyne / Garbarek, Hilliard Ensemble
Facts
| Studio | Ecm Import |
| Release Date | October 5, 1999 |
| UPC Code | 028946512227 |
| Buy this item | $36.98 at Amazon.com As of Jan 3 6:06 EST (details) 2 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Import |
About Mnemosyne / Garbarek, Hilliard Ensemble
It's been six years since these same performers got together to create one of the decade's more unusual experiments in musical alchemy. Beginning with the raw materials of early music and modern jazz, the four male voices of the Hilliard Ensemble joined with jazz saxophonist Jan Garbarek to see what would happen when the proper measure of old music and new style were combined, shaped by the performers' considerable experience and collective aesthetic vision. The success of that recording, titled Officium, and subsequent concert performances paved the way for this second effort, continuing the performers' search for artistically meaningful, musically satisfying combinations of written music and improvisatory elements. The odd title of the new recording comes from a mystical poem by Friedrich Hölderlin, quoted in the liner notes and accompanied by pictures from Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal. Officium aficionados will notice that Mnemosyne is even more adventurous in its explorations, which range farther and farther from the printed page. Musical fragments and a general outline are the starting points for several pieces. Improvisation is more frequently and freely employed, but always adheres to an agreed stylistic framework. Alongside a Tallis hymn or a chant by Hildegard, we hear Iroquois and Peruvian song fragments, an ancient Greek tune, and a beautiful lullaby by Veljo Tormis. Garbarek's tasteful improvisations are appropriate additions, inspired commentaries. The Hilliards are even better than on Officium; their awareness and sensitivity brings everything together into a truly unified expression that shows the timelessness of music and reminds us that where rhythm, melody, and musical imagination join, different styles, centuries, and genres are not necessarily obstacles to compatibility. --David Vernier Amazon.com
Tracks
Disc 1- Quechua Song - Jan Garbarek, Peruvian Folksong
- O Lord in Thee Is All My Trust - Jan Garbarek, Tallis, Thomas
- Estonian Lullaby - Jan Garbarek, Tormis, Veljo
- Remember Me My Dear - Jan Garbarek, 16th Century Scotla
- Gloria - Jan Garbarek, Dufay, Guillaume
- Fayrfax Africanus - Jan Garbarek, St Albans
- Agnus Dei - Jan Garbarek, Brumel, Antoine
- Novus Novus - Jan Garbarek, 13th Century France
- Se Je Fayz Dueil - Jan Garbarek, leRouge, Guillaume
- O Ignis Spiritus - Jan Garbarek, vonBingen, Hildegar
- Alleluia Nativitatis - Jan Garbarek, 13th Century Englan
- Delphic Paean - Jan Garbarek, Athenaeus
- Strophe and Counter-Strophe - Jan Garbarek, Garbarek, Jan
- Mascarades - Jan Garbarek, Basque Folksong
- Loiterando - Jan Garbarek, Garbarek, Jan
- Estonian Lullaby - Jan Garbarek, Tormis, Veljo
- Russian Psalm - Jan Garbarek, 16th Century Russia
- Eagle Dance - Jan Garbarek, Iroquois
- When Jesus Wept - Jan Garbarek, Billings, William
- Hymn to the Sun - Jan Garbarek, Mesomedes
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User Reviews
Average user review:| A winter"s night |
What else can I say?
Just imagine a cold winter's night (and nights are cold these day in the Southern Hemisphere), cudled inside your home, by the fireplace, with the company of a good book, smoking your pipe, sipping some good french brandy and listening this marvelous music.
What else can compare to such an experience?
Tomás Linn July 23, 2005
| horrible |
| Sonorous beauty |
| Lovely indeed |
| Uplifting |
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