Various Artists - In Lights Starkly Different [COMPACT DISCS] USA import
Artist: Various Artists
Title: In Lights Starkly Different
Condition: New
Format: COMPACT DISCS
Release Date: 2020
Label: Innova Records
UPC: 726708603229
Genre: Classical
A champion of new and experimental music, saxophonist Drew Whiting has been described (by Diakcritical. Com) as a virtuoso whose performances are "exquisite and emotive... managing everything with aplomb. " His debut album on Innova Recordings, In Lights Starkly Different, features seven recent compositions for saxophone and electronics. From beginning to end, Whiting's album - as the title implies - has lots of variety. He performs on soprano, alto, tenor, and baritone saxophones, and the electronics are just as varied. The opening track, Random Access by John Mayrose, utilizes live electronics and gradually layers Whiting's alto saxophone (stored in RAM) until there are dozens of him performing by the end of the piece. Whiting also lent a plethora of saxophone sounds to the creation of the electronics for Ed Martin's raucous work Break for baritone saxophone (that explores the harmonics of it's low A), as well as Jeff Herriott's pensive work As brightness is smeared into memory for soprano saxophone. Judith Shatin's For the Fallen juxtaposes the soprano saxophone against the clash of the Capana dei Cauditi (Bell for the Fallen, cast from canons melted after World War 1), similarly to how Alexis Bacon uses the sounds of rocks and metals with the tenor saxophone in her piece Ötzi (after a 5,000 year old mummy of the same name). Letting the listener (and performer) relax a bit, Nathan Edwards creates mellow, ambient electronics for Whiting's tenor saxophone lines to wash over in Saudade Study (titled after the Portuguese for foggy melancholy). Edwards also happens to be the recording engineer for the majority of works on the album. Rounding out the album is the title track written by Robin Julian Heifetz. The computer-generated sounds made by Heifetz range in character from serene to apocalyptic, and Whiting's tenor saxophone responds accordingly to achieve a near-hallucinatory sonic environment.
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