Adiemus IV: The Eternal Knot
Facts
| Studio | Higher Octave |
| Release Date | January 23, 2001 |
| UPC Code | 724384996529 |
| Buy this item | $10.97 at Amazon.com As of Jan 9 7:17 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
About Adiemus IV: The Eternal Knot
The Eternal Knot is drawn from Jenkins's soundtrack to a BBC documentary called The Celts. You might recall that Enya also evolved her sound in the late 1980s doing a soundtrack for another documentary called The Celts. Taking his titles from the Celtic legends that populate the documentary, Jenkins orchestrates cinematic landscapes full of swelling crescendos and dynamic cadences. Less oppressive than the heavily orchestrated Adiemus II, The Eternal Knot still wears thin. He casts Miriam Stockley's voice into a boys-choir register, turning her staccato phonemes into incessant prattle. But when she's in her warmer middle range, her layered voice is enveloping. Despite the theme of the album, Celtic music is only used as an occasional touchstone, with uilleann piper Davy Spillane, a few bodhran-style percussion grooves, and harpist Catrin Finch providing some relief from Jenkins's string-laden classical pretensions. --John Diliberto Amazon.com
Tracks
- Cú Chullain
- The Eternal Knot
- Palace of the Crystal Bridge
- The Wooing of Étaín
- King of the Sacred Grove
- Saint Declan's Drone
- Salm O "Dewi Sant"
- Connla's Well
- The Dagda
- Children of Dannu
- Ceridwen's Curse
- Hermit of the Sea Rock
- Isle of the Mystic Lake
- Math Was a Wizard
Similar CDs
| Adiemus II: Cantata Mundi | Adiemus III: Dances of Time | Songs of Sanctuary | Vocalise | The Journey: The Best of Adiemus |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Adiemus IV |
| whaaaaaat????? |
| Good...Although two of the Songs are on my Ipod... |
By the way, I own these two songs on my Ipod!
Meghan :) January 23, 2006
| New Age with an eclectic blend of styles from across the musical map! |
For me this recording evinced a blend of emotional responses - quiet contemplation, relaxation, toe-tapping, a satisfied smile, that whole body moving response to a driving rhythm and a joyful sense of participation in an all-encompassing musical experience. The recording is an eclectic blend of styles that cover an enormous range - Celtic rhythms and fiddling tunes in the style of River Dance; hard rock and steady beats that took a page out of Enigma's play book; a beautifully blended chorus of female voices that might well have included Enya, Diane Arkenstone and Loreena McKennitt; orchestral backgrounds that ranged from lush full orchestral accompaniment to pizzicato violin arpeggios that would have done Tchaikovsky proud in The Nutcracker; simple but effective, pleasing blues style acoustic guitar; full-bodied high speed choral sections that might have been penned by Karl Orff as part of the unforgettable Carmina Burana; and, a very effective seven beat piece that reminded me of the rhythms of Dave Brubeck's Unsquare Square Dance or Moe Kaufman's Swingin' Shepherd Blues!
Well, to each their own I suppose. It's certainly possible that this CD suffered by comparison to the quality of his other works but as a first time listener, I've got nothing but praise for it!
Paul Weiss
November 22, 2005
| Unimaginative |
Cu Chulain is a reasonable start but even there the urgent contribution by the violins comes too early, and by the end of the 'song', the concept becomes tiresome. The title track seems to be depicting something monumental in its climatic outbursts but if so, the effect is more visual (the documentary itself) than aural. It's odd how there is apparently no language used here yet 'Palace of the Crystal Bridge' manages to sound like some clueless surfer-girl taking herself way too seriously.
'The Wooing of Etain' is a beautiful instrumental and one of the very few pieces on the album that is thought-provoking, as is 'King of the Sacred Grove' (which is mellow and sounds suitably regal)....this is more of what I've come to expect/appreciate in Jenkins. Even so, he could have done more to build a climax towards the end of this, the third longest piece on the album.
'Songs' such as 'The Dagda' would be interesting diversions/fillers for the album if it wasn't for the synthesized, mass-product result of the album overall. Less 'ethnic-sounding' and more towards 'tacky' (e.g., the duo separated by 1 octave sung in unison at the end of 'Hermit of the Sea Rock'), this isn't as moving an experience as some would laud it to be. June 14, 2004
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