German-born musician and composer Carolina Eyck www.carolinaeyck.com
is one of the world’s foremost theremin virtuosi. After her debut in the Berlin
Philharmonic, she has been invited to the Bohuslav Martinu International Music
Festival in Basel, the Davos Festival (Switzerland), the Konzerthaus Berlin,
the Großes Festspielhaus Salzburg (Austria), the Teatro Nacional Lisbon
(Portugal) and the Palace of Arts Budapest (Hungary). She has given concerts in
Poland, the Czech Republic, Luxembourg, Sweden, Finland, Great Britain, Italy,
Switzerland, Austria, Japan, Mexico, Portugal, Hungary, Pakistan, Turkey and
the United States.
She has collaborated with Heinz Holliger, Robert Kolinsky,
Gerhard Oppitz, Andrey Boreyko, Michael Sanderling, Gürer Aykal, John
Storgårds, the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Bern Symphony Orchestra,
the Essen Philharmonic Orchestra, the Brandenburg State Orchestra, the
Stuttgart Philharmonic Orchestra, the Lapland Chamber Orchestra, the Heidelberg
Symphonic Orchestra and the Mozarteum Orchestra Salzburg.
In 2012, Carolina Eyck played the theremin solo at the world
premiere of the two symphonies by Fazil Say,
Mesopotamia and Universe. Finnish
composer Kalevi Aho dedicated his Theremin
Concerto to her which she premiered in 2012 and since recorded on BIS
Records.
Besides her
engagements in the area of classical and contemporary music, Carolina Eyck loves
composing and improvising, something that features on her new recording for Butterscotch
Records http://butterscotchrecords.net
entitled Improvisations for Theremin and Piano, where she is joined by
pianist and composer Christopher Tarnow http://christophertarnow.com
CD, Vinyl, Digital, HiRes BSR010 |
The piano opens A
Somber Waking with a rolling theme to which the theremin adds deep resonant
sounds creating a forward moving atmospheric pulse. The theremin varies its
theme much during the course of the improvisation with little sighing phrases and
a rising and falling motif. There are some extremely fine passages as the piece
draws to a conclusion.
The piano provides languid chords to open 10,000 Bells with a delicate bell like
rhythm and resonance. The theremin subtly adds its sound, a distant, spacious
sound high up. The combination of the piano and resonating theremin is quite beautiful
and mesmerising with Christopher Tarnow providing some lovely rippling piano
phrases before the piece draws to its gentle close.
With A Whale in love
the whale appears in the guise of the theremin that brings deep rising and
falling sounds before the piano enters providing a gentle accompaniment. Slowly
and subtly the theremin moves into a theme that follows the piano chords,
rising up and becoming more intense. Towards the end the theremin falls lower
and fades at the end.
A flourish from the piano opens Dancing Fairy with a series of spread chords developing a theme. The
piano falls lower and the theremin can be heard, sounding quietly at first,
with a little motif consisting of whistling and pulsating sounds, strange
little points of sound. The piano maintains an overall structural theme before
the pulsating sound of the theremin begins to dominate with a rising and
falling motif over lovely rippling chords from the piano. Soon strange wild sounds emanate from the theremin
against a sustained piano theme before the theremin develops a deeper more
resonant, rather mournful theme against the sustained piano theme. Little twittering and calling sounds re-appear
against the insistent piano motif, as if creating the sounds of nature, before
the piece ends.
This is a very creative and intoxicating piece.
Quiet Snowfall opens
with an organ like sonority from the theremin to which the piano adds a little
motif. The theremin sounds rise and fall with rhythmic changes from the piano
as it develops its motif becoming more decorated as the theremin provides an
ever shifting sonority. As the piano rises to its highest register the theremin
fades, concluding gently.
Deep in the Earth brings
deep crackling and resonating theremin sounds that stop and start, punctuated
by a percussive piano contribution. This rises to a thunderous resonance as the
piano slowly and carefully develops a theme creating something of a primeval
sound world, strikingly effective. Slowly
and inexorably the theremin rises up higher, holding a note over piano chords
to conclude.
A rocking piano theme opens Haunted Ballerina as slowly the sound of the theremin appears,
dropping suddenly to deeper resonant sounds. The theremin weaves a grumbling,
low theme around the insistent piano motif creating a sense of a haunted dance.
Soon the piano breaks up the insistent theme, varying it and giving more of a
pulse with a forward drive. The music slows with a pulsating theremin sound before becoming more dynamic with a ghostly louder
theme as the theremin imitates the piano theme, both driving the music forward.
The music becomes ever more frantic with wild theremin sounds that eventually
fade a little as the piano returns to its opening insistent rhythm, the theremin
fading out and the piano becoming more insistent before easing to a sudden
halt.
This is something of a unique and rewarding disc, full of
invention and strange sounds. Both artists provide first rate performances
showing an incredible ability to improvise. Carolina Eyck produces many varied
sonorities and individual sounds from the theremin. I will certainly be
investigating her recording of the Aho concerto.
The recording in my download handles the wide range of
sounds of the theremin, occasionally resonant and deep, extremely well.