Andrew Keeling andrew.keeling@btopenworld.com began composing when he was ten years of age but
only began formal composition lessons when he was thirty one, studying with
Nicola LeFanu, Anthony Gilbert and John Casken. Since then his music has been
performed and broadcast throughout the world and has been released on the DGM,
Metier, Burning Shed, UHR and Spaceward record labels. It has been published by
Faber, Fretwork, Staunch and PRB Editions.
He is equally at home in both contemporary classical and
rock music and has written for Dame Evelyn Glennie, Fretwork, the Hilliard
Ensemble, the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Jacob Heringman, Gemini, Steve
Bingham, the Bingham Quartet, Ensemble Epomeo and countless others. He holds a
PhD from the University of Manchester.
The latest release of
his music from Spaceward Records www.spaceward.co.uk
is entitled Spiritus and brings together a
collection of four pieces taken from Andrew Keeling's recorded classical output
stretching from 1993 to 2006.
SRS 109 |
The disc opens with Keeling’s Unquiet Earth: Piano Trio (2005-06) which is dedicated to the
performers here, the Valen Trio www.einarrottingen.com/english/valentrio.html
and was inspired by the last paragraph of Emily Brontë’s novel Wuthering Heights with its powerful
sense of grief.
In two movements, the strings of the Valen Trio draw some
lovely textures in the opening of Alla
Fantasia. The piano joins with a delicate, ripping idea over the strings, slowly
developing through ever changing ideas. Soon there is a pause after which the
trio pick up a fast moving tempo to race forward with some incisive string
phrases gaining a terrific rhythm. The piano rises higher and higher over
staccato strings before alone bringing gentle tentative, rippling phrases. The
violin adds a lovely melody over the piano to which the cello brings staccato
phrases before the strings draw fine textures and harmonies over a slow piano
accompaniment, growing quieter all the time, finding a real inward intensity.
The music leaps out in a sparkling opening of Alla Danza dancing ahead through some
finely played passages with pizzicato strings and staccato piano phrases. There
are occasional quieter moments before finding a more sustained tranquillity where
hushed string chords are drawn. The piano enters as the cello brings a quite
lovely melody, full of fine textures. Together the trio weave some rather fine
moments with quite distinctive harmonies and textures, continuing through the
most lovely passages, finding again a quite thoughtful nature. Gentle string
chords lead to a piano motif as the music picks up in tempo to race ahead with
some brilliantly played passages from this trio before the coda arrives more
quietly.
This is a very distinctive and attractive work brilliantly
played by the Valen Trio.
O Ignis Spiritus
(1993) was written for and performed here by the Hilliard Ensemble www.hilliardensemble.demon.co.uk
and is a setting of mystical texts by the German composer, abbess and mystic
Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179). The Hilliard Ensemble rise out of silence with
a solo tenor appearing over a vocal drone from the ensemble in a wonderfully
fine theme, soon leaving the soloist alone who fades into a section for the
whole choir as they weave the text. There are some striking intervals and
harmonies that nevertheless seem to reach back to antiquity. The music moves through
a finely wrought slow, hushed section where the Hilliards bring quite superb
control. The music rises in strength to an ecstatic, glowing passage before finding
a sudden more direct quality that still brings fine harmonies. The music falls
again with wordless voices over which the rest of the choir lead forward. There
are some wonderful individual voices appearing as the music progresses before
arriving at a gentle coda.
This is a most impressive work sung absolutely brilliantly
by the Hilliard Ensemble.
Peter Davison tells us in the interesting and informative
booklet notes that Reclaiming Eros:
Piano Quartet (2000) concerns contacting the spirit through communion with
nature, moving ‘in single arch from rage to fragmentation to wholeness and
lyrical ecstasy’. There is a sudden vibrant opening from the Stor Quartet as a motif
is introduced and developed through the opening bars before a repeated rhythmic
theme is overlaid by vibrant staccato piano phrases. Soon a quiet, slower
passage with rather quixotic fleeting phrases arrives. The music occasionally
works up some passionate rhythmic ideas, between which the more gentle moments
lie. There are passages of more complex writing before a mournful tune appears
in the strings around which there are gentle piano phrases.
When a hushed section of twittering strings appears there
are little bird like piano phrases. Moments of fleeting, rather playful music
is heard before a desperate intense, forward moving passage arrives. Eventually
the music brings some lovely harmonies and delicate piano notes as the cello
brings a solo section soon added to with violin textures. At times there is an almost
schizophrenic character to this music. Towards the end the cello leads a sad
melody over a piano line; a violin joins the melody before rising through some
intense and deeply felt textures, weaving through some absolutely exquisite passages
before finding a settled coda with hushed gentle piano phrases.
We are told that in Blue
Dawn: Suite for Piano (2005) the composer explores the meaning of a dream
in which the god, Wotan led him to a newly dug grave while dawn was breaking.
Here Steven Wray www.stevenwray.com plays
six of the original seven movements. Tentative piano phrases open Lullaby leading to a simple little theme.
The music slowly gains a greater focus, finding little rhythmic sequences and
moving through some finely conceived passages of sparkling luminosity. The House of Eros opens gently and
slowly, developing a theme with the sparest of textures, subtly increasing in
strength before tailing off to a hush. From the opening phrases Kindertotenlied brings a sense of
brooding tragedy as it develops through some remarkably fine passages before a
broader conclusion.
A gentle motif alternates with a contrasting theme of more
strength in Mana, with bell like
sprung notes before a little rising motif is quietly developed in Hymn: Blue Dawn, finding a gentle
little melody that slowly rises in strength, finding a confidence before
falling back to a calm, hushed coda. Forget-me-not
brings a two note rising and falling motif out of which a simple, quite lovely
melody appears. It gains in texture and breadth, finding a sense of peace and
settled contentment though with an unresolved chord at the end.
There are some very impressive works here that show a great
emotional depth. The performances are all excellent and they are well recorded
at a number of venues.
There are informative notes but no texts are provided for O Ignis Spiritus that is sung in Latin
and English. This is a fine showcase for Keeling’s compositional output.
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