Gavin Bryars Archive
GAVIN BRYARS: The Fifth Century; Two Love Songs – Prism Quartet/The Crossing/Donald McNally – ECM New Series
Music that sounds both ancient and modern and beautiful throughout. GAVIN BRYARS: The Fifth Century; Two Love Songs – Prism Quartet/The Crossing/Donald McNally – ECM New Series ECM2405, 50:58 [Distr. by Naxos] (11/18/16) 50:58 ****: I have always found Gavin Bryars’ music to be beautiful, mysterious, unique; sometimes a bit disturbing – but always worth investigating. Known for its often slow-paced and quiet kind of minimalist-inspired sound, his music continues this effect with The Fifth Century, a song cycle after the seventeenth-century English poet and theologian Thomas Traherne. The title is actually also the name of a treatise on the “essence of God” by Traherne. While the texts are steeped with imagery of the infinite, of the heavens and of eternity, the real attention-getting aspect of this piece is Bryars’ rich, yet sparse, chord progressions and voicings and the beauty they produce. The other aspect of this score that cannot be appreciated until heard is the use of a saxophone quartet to accompany the otherwise a capella choir. One would think that saxophone quartets in such a context would drown the vocals or be given some oddly out of place chordal progressions or exposed moments that sound very stereotypically “saxophone-like.” […]
Mercy And Grand – The Music Of Tom Waits And Kathleen Brennan – GB Records
An unusual gypsy take on Tom Waits.
GAVIN BRYARS: At Portage and Main & other works – Percussions Claviers de Lyon/ L’Ens. de Basse-Normandie – GB Records
Any disc by Bryars is somewhat of an event, and this one is no exception.
Gavin Bryars, Petr Nalich, Sergey Taneyev: Season of Mists Soundtrack – GB Records
I guess you have to see the movie.
“Live at Punkt” – Gavin Bryars Ensemble = GAVIN BRYARS: Selections from “Lauda” – Anna Maria Friman, sop./John Potter, tenor/Morgan Goff, viola/Nick Cooper, cello/Gavin Bryars, doublebass – GB Records
Ethereal beauty that comes from two different senses of time.