Dawn Upshaw – Caroline Shaw: Narrow Sea (2021) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Dawn Upshaw – Caroline Shaw: Narrow Sea (2021) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Narrow Sea was written for Sō Percussion, Dawn Upshaw, and Gil Kalish in 2017. The piece combines my previous explorations of folk song with a sonic universe that includes ceramic bowls, humming, a piano played like a dulcimer by five people at once, and flower pots (which are the central focus of Taxidermy – my first piece for So Percussion, written in 2012). Gil Kalish’s piano serves as a grounding force, or a familiar memory, that keeps reappearing amid the different textures introduced by Sō Percussion. And Dawn Upshaw’s voice is a brilliant instrument that brings the words to life with warmth and directness.

Caroline Shaw – Let the Soil Play Its Simple Part (2021) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Caroline Shaw – Let the Soil Play Its Simple Part (2021) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Vocalist, violinist, and Pulitzer Prize–winning composer Caroline Shaw returns with a new album “Let the Soil Play Its Simple Part” alongside her frequent partners in music, the trailblazing Sō Percussion.

BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC Singers, John Adams – John Adams: Doctor Atomic (2018) [FLAC 24bit, 48 kHz]

BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC Singers, John Adams – John Adams: Doctor Atomic (2018) [FLAC 24bit, 48 kHz]

His most visionary and ambitious stage work to date … Adams’s conducting, second to none in his own music, had tremendous conviction and unique authority, with every facet of the score’s terrible beauty laid bare … thrilling playing and choral singing … Gerald Finley conveyed Oppenheimer’s moral agony with singing of great refinement and subtlety.’ — Guardian

Astor Piazzolla – The American Clavé Recordings (2009 Remaster) (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 88,2 kHz]

Astor Piazzolla – The American Clavé Recordings (2009 Remaster) (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 88,2 kHz]

This is the first time Astor Piazzolla’s albums have been available on again in their original versions since they were first issued by American Clavé. The booklet notes include original and new annotations by Kip Hanrahan, the album’s producer and founder of American Clavé, as well as an in-depth essay by journalist Fernando González. He translated and annotated Piazzolla’s memoirs and wrote the accompanying booklet texts for four of his albums. Originally scheduled for release in 2021 to coincide with Piazzolla’s 100th birthday, this reissue marks the beginning of the second century of Piazzolla’s enduring influence

Alarm Will Sound – Donnacha Dennehy: The Hunger (2019) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

Alarm Will Sound – Donnacha Dennehy: The Hunger (2019) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

The Irish potato famine of the late 1840s was a critical event in the history of both Ireland and the U.S., and it is surprising how few works of art have engaged with it. This work by composer Donnacha Dennehy helps address the lack. It is billed as an opera but lies somewhere between opera and cantata: there is no chorus, but no dramatic action, either. The Hunger features two voice parts: an American woman named Asenath Nicholson, who was an actual historical figure who traveled to Ireland and documented what she saw, and a nameless Man who embodies the sufferings of the Irish people. Nicholson is sung by an operatic soprano, Katherine Manley, and the Man by a sean-nós singer, Iarla Ó Lionáird. In Dennehy’s hands, this is a powerful and flexible concept. Nicholson’s lines are in prose, but as the piece develops and her understanding deepens, her musical idiom begins to take on Irish characteristics. (Sample the short but intense fourth section, “The Keening.”) The accompaniment is by the 20-piece ensemble Alarm Will Sound, which has generally specialized in multimedia productions. Indeed, The Hunger started life as one of these, with the music presented concurrently with lectures by the likes of Noam Chomsky shown on screens. It is likely that many listeners will prefer the non-academic version here, created by the composer himself. The sound, from a New Jersey university auditorium, is surprisingly good, and the booklet includes a complete libretto. The piece runs for under an hour and may easily find applications in teaching students about the great famine.