A Joker's Tales: 21st-century recorder works

A Joker's Tales: 21st-century recorder works cover $37.00 Out of Stock
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DANIEL BORTZ / INGVAR KARKOFF / FREDRIK OSTERLING
A Joker's Tales: 21st-century recorder works
Dan Laurin (recorder) / Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra / Alan Gilbert; Ostgota Symphonic Wind Ensemble / Petter Sundkvist / Trio Paradox

[ BIS / CD ]

Release Date: Thursday 26 January 2006

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

"A new CD of high quality, substantial and original new music has certainly done Bis no disservice"
(MusicWeb March 2006)

The tale-telling joker in the opening work on this disc is surely its dedicatee, Dan Laurin himself. From the very beginning of his career, Laurin has impressed both critics and audiences with his mercurial talents and urge to communicate, to tell stories. In concert and on disc he has made his instrument speak, whether in Renaissance-type works such as Van Eyck's monumental Der Fluyten Lust-hof, in late baroque masterpieces like Handel's sonatas or in music by his own contemporaries. And the reviewers have noted this: 'Laurin makes the music speak incomparably more clearly than one is used to' and 'exploits the recorder's expressive qualities to the full' are only two reactions. In the field of modern music, Laurin has done much to gain true recognition for the recorder as something more than an educational tool. In his foreword to the liner notes, Laurin writes that the aim of the present disc is to display 'the true capacity of what is indeed a real musical instrument, i.e. its ability to adjust to different situations and expressions.' Three works, all composed for Laurin, show the instrument in a diversity of settings: with large orchestra, with wind band and in a trio of its peers. In the liner notes, the three composers involved describe how preconceived ideas about the instrument are put to shame: one single recorder can actually 'turn the full sonic weight of the orchestra upside down' (Börtz) and 'is really audible beneath a massive wind band' (Karkoff), but at the same time, in Voices of Silence – inspired by a sonnet by Petrarch – it can 'evoke the silent voices, and make the unsaid, unwritten words sound.'

Tracks:

Daniel Börtz:
A Joker’s Tales, concerto for recorder and orchestra (1999-2000)

Ingvar Karkoff:
Concerto for Recorder and Wind Orchestra (2000)

Fredrik Österling:
Les voix du silence, Six movements for recorder trio (2003)