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David Lang: Love Fail
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David Lang: Love Fail
Current price: $20.99
Barnes and Noble
David Lang: Love Fail
Current price: $20.99
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American composer
David Lang
's works are often conceptually tailored to a particular and unusual ensemble that matches the thematic content of the work. He has composed a piece ("Crowd Out") for 1,000 voices, inspired by the sound of soccer crowds in Britain. Nevertheless,
Love Fail
marks something of a milestone for him: he has never before written for a group with the chops of the medieval-oriented, female vocal quartet
Anonymous 4
. ("Shelter," composed for
Trio Mediaeval
, is a pale comparison.) For
, too, the recording is a milestone: around the time it was released in 2014, the group announced its retirement after the 2015-2016 season, and it perhaps points the way to a future in contemporary music for its supremely talented members. "Love Fail," like many of
Lang
's other compositions, is somewhat unclassifiable, and in this lies its appeal. It's not a cantata, song cycle, or opera, although it was originally presented on-stage. The work is a rumination in 15 short sections on the medieval idea of love, and specifically on the story of Tristan and Isolde.
Wagner
's Liebestod makes an appearance at the end. Mostly the work sets translated fragments (digitally translated, the composer says) of medieval poetry, along with some modern interpolations by poet
Lydia Davis
; the latter are effective riffs on the basic idea, and some are even humorous (try "Forbidden Subjects," track eight).
's music falls in between minimalism and a quasi-medieval style appropriate to the subject, with elements of pastiche and some hair-raising interludes. What sets it apart from the norm is the care with which it is shaped to take advantage of the multiple colors and sharp edges of
's voices, and at times the sounds heard achieve the grail of being simple and uncanny at the same time. Like
's other works, it will get your attention immediately, but it also has a real economy that is new and growing. Highly recommended. ~ James Manheim
David Lang
's works are often conceptually tailored to a particular and unusual ensemble that matches the thematic content of the work. He has composed a piece ("Crowd Out") for 1,000 voices, inspired by the sound of soccer crowds in Britain. Nevertheless,
Love Fail
marks something of a milestone for him: he has never before written for a group with the chops of the medieval-oriented, female vocal quartet
Anonymous 4
. ("Shelter," composed for
Trio Mediaeval
, is a pale comparison.) For
, too, the recording is a milestone: around the time it was released in 2014, the group announced its retirement after the 2015-2016 season, and it perhaps points the way to a future in contemporary music for its supremely talented members. "Love Fail," like many of
Lang
's other compositions, is somewhat unclassifiable, and in this lies its appeal. It's not a cantata, song cycle, or opera, although it was originally presented on-stage. The work is a rumination in 15 short sections on the medieval idea of love, and specifically on the story of Tristan and Isolde.
Wagner
's Liebestod makes an appearance at the end. Mostly the work sets translated fragments (digitally translated, the composer says) of medieval poetry, along with some modern interpolations by poet
Lydia Davis
; the latter are effective riffs on the basic idea, and some are even humorous (try "Forbidden Subjects," track eight).
's music falls in between minimalism and a quasi-medieval style appropriate to the subject, with elements of pastiche and some hair-raising interludes. What sets it apart from the norm is the care with which it is shaped to take advantage of the multiple colors and sharp edges of
's voices, and at times the sounds heard achieve the grail of being simple and uncanny at the same time. Like
's other works, it will get your attention immediately, but it also has a real economy that is new and growing. Highly recommended. ~ James Manheim