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VA - Lines & Spaces: The Music of Thad Anderson (2019) [Hi-Res]

VA - Lines & Spaces: The Music of Thad Anderson (2019) [Hi-Res]

BAND/ARTIST: Various Artists

  • Title: Lines & Spaces: The Music of Thad Anderson
  • Year Of Release: 2019
  • Label: Ravello Records
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks, booklet) [44.1kHz/24bit]
  • Total Time: 1:19:33
  • Total Size: 701 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

Thad Anderson (b. 1980)

01. Withheld 08:08
02. Route (Version for Alto Saxophone & Fixed Media) 05:37
03. As We May Think 08:02
04. Five Messages: Message One 01:08
05. Five Messages: Message Two 01:02
06. Five Messages: Message Three 02:08
07. Five Messages: Message Four 02:33
08. Five Messages: Message Five 01:51
09. Withhold (Version for Snare Drum & Fixed Media) 08:04
10. Re-cite (Performed on Baritone Saxophone) 08:12
11. Mechanization 09:30
12. Outside, Looking In 03:19
13. Through-Line (Version for Flute Quintet & Fixed Media) 07:29
14. By-and-By 07:26
15. 5Within 05:06

The 15 tracks on Thad Anderson’s LINES & SPACES are from his Lines series, based on his compositional technique called “duration lines” that create both structure and polyrhythmic interest. Anderson integrates traditional instruments with fixed media, live processing, and tuned metals to create pieces that are infinitely malleable.

For these compositions, Anderson draws inspiration from poetry, paintings, and some early writings that predict many of the technologies now integrated into daily life. His Route is loosely based on the Emily Dickinson poem, “A Route of Evanescence,” which explores the mesmerizing hummingbird during flight. On Route, one might imagine the interaction between saxophone and electronic playback as representing the hummingbird and its surroundings. Re-Cite was inspired by painter Ellsworth Kelly’s 1951 piece Cite, which used chance practices to create a random arrangement of black and white squares.

The quintet for flutes and fixed media, Through-line, refers to a central theme or idea — an invisible thread that runs from the beginning to the end of work. In this instance, the through-line is both the duration lines that are used throughout the piece and a seven-chord progression that is used in the odd numbered sections.

Using a duration line set, Outside, Looking In features layers of single line fragments that segue and weave between one another. On this solo piano piece, the composer effectively positions the piano as a percussion rather than string instrument. Both As We May Think and Mechanization were inspired by an article by engineer and inventor Vannevar Bush (1890 – 1974) that appeared in The Atlantic in 1945. In the former, the spoken component of the electronic playback audio derives from an archived interview with the author.

Bryant Bernal, percussion
Kaley Bonatakis, percussion
Karen Toney, percussion
Matt Roberts, percussion
George Weremchuk, alto saxophone
Nick Stange, percussion
Rose Grace, piano
Kristie Born, piano
Thad Anderson, percussion
Marja Kerney, percussion


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  • enjopi
  •  wrote in 21:36
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gracias....