Search - Sellars, Bernetxea, Dupuy :: Piano Works: 6 Sonatas & 1 Sonatina

Piano Works: 6 Sonatas & 1 Sonatina
Sellars, Bernetxea, Dupuy
Piano Works: 6 Sonatas & 1 Sonatina
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (7) - Disc #1


     

CD Details

All Artists: Sellars, Bernetxea, Dupuy, Jacobson, De Mare
Title: Piano Works: 6 Sonatas & 1 Sonatina
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Composers Recordings
Release Date: 1/23/2001
Album Type: Import
Genre: Classical
Styles: Chamber Music, Historical Periods, Classical (c.1770-1830)
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 090438086929
 

CD Reviews

A Rare Treat in American Music
Jost Muxfeldt | Berlin, Germany | 02/28/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"James Sellars deserves to be called one of Americas most talented composers today. This collection of 7 piano pieces not only documents his dedication to respond to and further develop the rapidly changing compositional currents of the last 30 years, but also forms an ensemble of works univocally expressing his devotion to elegance, imagination and meticulous craftsmanship.The atonal Sonatas 1,2,and 3 are masterpieces of rhythmic and melodic elegance, and are so sonorically transparent, that they are frequently easier to understand than the complex labyrinth of modal harmonies in Sonata 4, or than the Sonata Dada, which promiscuously taunts the listener with stylistically multilingual puns and pranks.While the response to the minimalist movement changed Sellars' style and harmonic language, many characteristics of his earlier pieces recur in a translated form in the minimalistically influenced diatonic pieces. The frequently irregular, yet always proportionally perfect rhythmic distribution of the melodic figures in the earlier atonal pieces is reborn in the later sonatas in the shape of figures formed by tonic accents, floating over the more constant pulse of minimalist permutations. Remarkably, Sellars is barely constrained by the algorithmic limitations of minimalist repetition. Rather, he treats permutation as an opportunity to display his exquisite sense of iterative imagination, proportion, melodic elegance, and at times hilarious whit. The results remind me more of a permutationally playful combination of Eric Satie and Gertrude Stein, than of works of the founders of repetitive minimalism.It is Sellars' whit which forms the thread through all of his styles, be it in the guise of terse elegance in the atonal pieces, dadaistic absurdity , combinatorial obsessions, or the carnevalistically extravagant orgy of notes in the Sonata Brasiliera. This CD is a rare treat and each of these pieces is worth careful and frequent listening."
Excellent CD of recent piano works
Anthony Cornicello | West Hartford, CT, USA | 06/24/2001
(4 out of 5 stars)

"This CD comes with high recommendations! There are quite a few special moments on here: the tangled web of the 1st movement of the Sonatina, the "Neo-Classical meets Dada" Sonata V, and the modernist/postmodernist Sonata III. All of these pieces are excellent in their linear flow, pacing, and overall musical shape. Plus, they're a blast to listen to!But, the real gem is "Patterns on a Field (Sonata VI)." The opening pattern is simultaneously haunting and riveting; the repetitions are not only welcome but downright refreshing.All of these works, especially "Patterns" deserve a good, hard listen; frankly, I'm dissapointed that I haven't seen these pieces programmed by more pianists. All of the pieces sound quite "pianistic", alluding to the history of keyboard writing while exploring new (yet expressive) ground.What comes through on the CD is a composer with a strong knowledge of the history of music, along with a healthy sense of humor. The double coding of works such as the Sonatina (which refers to both Clementi and Ligeti[!]) produce a thoroughly post-modern work that can be appreciated on many, many levels. The idea of the 'traditional fast-slow-fast' form juxtaposed with multiple processes (in the cross accents, and harmonic progessions) is yet another example of Sellar's command of the post-modern view of music."