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In Common
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In Common
Current price: $18.99
Barnes and Noble
In Common
Current price: $18.99
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In Common
gathers duets composed by
David Macbride
between 1993 and 1998. The approach varies from one work to the other. Three of the six pieces are for two similar instruments; on two of these,
"Madrigal"
(for two classical guitars [electric]) and
"Shadow"
(for baroque flutes), both parts develop in the same direction. One instrument takes the lead, the other follows behind or accompanies. But on
"A Round,"
the two saxophone parts work in opposition: soft/loud, near/far, composed/improvised, etc. The remaining three pieces pair odd couples of instruments. On
"In Common,"
after a solo part by each musician, the violin takes the lead accompanied by the temple bowls in a very lyrical piece. The two
"Conundrum"
compositions epitomize the wide range covered by this album: The first one, written for piano and marimba/xylophone, uses a chromatic scale, while
"From Without (Conundrum 2),"
for prepared piano and timbrack (a group of miscellaneous resounding objects arranged in a scale), blends western and eastern scales into a piece close to
Harry Partch
's most percussive works.
Highlights on
include the inventive use of the low end of the marimba in
"Conundrum,"
the flute playing of
John Solum
and
Richard Wyton
on
"Shadow,"
and the beautiful interplay on
the latter piece alone being worth the trouble to track down this album. ~ Francois Couture
gathers duets composed by
David Macbride
between 1993 and 1998. The approach varies from one work to the other. Three of the six pieces are for two similar instruments; on two of these,
"Madrigal"
(for two classical guitars [electric]) and
"Shadow"
(for baroque flutes), both parts develop in the same direction. One instrument takes the lead, the other follows behind or accompanies. But on
"A Round,"
the two saxophone parts work in opposition: soft/loud, near/far, composed/improvised, etc. The remaining three pieces pair odd couples of instruments. On
"In Common,"
after a solo part by each musician, the violin takes the lead accompanied by the temple bowls in a very lyrical piece. The two
"Conundrum"
compositions epitomize the wide range covered by this album: The first one, written for piano and marimba/xylophone, uses a chromatic scale, while
"From Without (Conundrum 2),"
for prepared piano and timbrack (a group of miscellaneous resounding objects arranged in a scale), blends western and eastern scales into a piece close to
Harry Partch
's most percussive works.
Highlights on
include the inventive use of the low end of the marimba in
"Conundrum,"
the flute playing of
John Solum
and
Richard Wyton
on
"Shadow,"
and the beautiful interplay on
the latter piece alone being worth the trouble to track down this album. ~ Francois Couture