Search - Christopher Roberts :: Last Cicada Singing

Last Cicada Singing
Christopher Roberts
Last Cicada Singing
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (4) - Disc #1

"So Confucius walks into a bar, just in time for Bill Evans's last set, and after closing time pulls out his qin for a few solos ... That's the vibe that Christopher Roberts captures in these intimate nocturnal musings, wh...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Christopher Roberts
Title: Last Cicada Singing
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Cold Blue Label
Original Release Date: 1/1/2009
Re-Release Date: 11/10/2009
Genre: Classical
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 800413003427

Synopsis

Album Description
"So Confucius walks into a bar, just in time for Bill Evans's last set, and after closing time pulls out his qin for a few solos ... That's the vibe that Christopher Roberts captures in these intimate nocturnal musings, where crystalline harmonics dance among gutsy bass slides while elegant harmonies whisper their most private thoughts. A truly haunting recording." -- John Schneider, host, KPFK Global Village Specially priced CD single stickered with Global Village quote. Last Cicada Singing is a unique and beautiful suite of four pieces for solo qin (an ancient Chinese zither). Performed by the composer, this delicate and quietly emotive work bridges the gap between traditional Chinese qin music and the spectrum of contemporary American musical sensibilities without compromising or exploiting either culture. Upon receiving his doctorate from Juilliard, Roberts set off to the jungles of Papua New Guinea to study the "natural prosody of music." Later, as a Fulbright Scholar in Taiwan, he studied and mastered the qin. After years of living in Asia, Roberts returned to the States a most unusual "world" musician and now lives in Bellingham, WA.

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CD Reviews

RAPT
Kerry Leimer | Makawao, Hawaii United States | 12/25/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Forced to look for some not overly disorienting comparison, you might consider some of Leo Kottke's slower, more profoundly timbral pieces, or some of Chris Whitley's late and daunting solo stretches as just a sort of point of reference - each example wrong for different reasons but for the exception of the often stunning presence of the string, its drag, its bow, its ring, its sudden and grainy stop. In the performance of a Qin, a Chinese instrument that slightly resembles the koto and sounds - here at least - somewhat like a dobro, the union of heaven (harmonics), earth (an open sound), and humankind (a stopped sound) is meant to be symbolized. Roberts' study has taken its notational system, and timbral significance, further to convey movements of the animate and the inanimate through a language of refined musical gesture. There are four solo Qin pieces here, each offering a mostly reflective state without sacrificing underlying complexity, moments of conflict or a latent now-and-again glimpse of unrest. The tactile quality of the performances are well-conceived and admirably captured, giving the music an unusually heightened sense of presence. But unlike many examples of reflective and representational music, these original works display remarkably unpredictable and often unexpected harmonic and rhythmic turns. Combined with the non-linear structures, the music of Last Cicada Singing remains solidly in the foreground, and insistent of what will finally be your often rapt attention."