Home
Mozart Variations: A Windham Hill Collection
Barnes and Noble
Mozart Variations: A Windham Hill Collection
Current price: $16.99
Barnes and Noble
Mozart Variations: A Windham Hill Collection
Current price: $16.99
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Originally released in 1999, this album consists of performances by various artists from the stable of the
label. They were recorded in different places and are entirely different in style, but the album was apparently an original release, not a compilation of selections from other albums. If your experience with
is restricted to the label's 1980s new age piano albums (a category
performers now strenuously reject), you may be surprised by the variety here, although the contribution by pianist
evokes that era. You may also feel that the program is a bit of a grab bag, but the album isn't dull. Despite the presence of vocal melodies, all the music is instrumental. Some of the selections, such as the mandolin group led by bluegrass mandolinist
on
, present
's music straightforwardly, whereas in the smooth jazz treatment of the Incarnatus from the
, you might be hard pressed to pick it out if you didn't already know it was coming. That's one of several tracks using a small vocalise choir, an extremely odd effect. The solo guitar selections, such as the unidentified Adagio (it is the
) on track 9, are of a kind familiar from many guitar recitals, while the chamber arrangement of the
opening movement, accompanied with a djembe (track 3), arranged by guitarist
, is entirely novel. Most of the music has the characteristic mellow flavor associated with
, but the texture curveballs keep on coming, and the sheer simple originality of some of the pieces will break through to even the skeptical listener. Try not to smile at the flute-and-panpipe arrangement of "Der Vogelfaenger bin ich ja" from
(track 10). It's all an odd mixture, but one that may appeal to an audience beyond the label's existing circle of fans.~James Manheim