Show results for

Explore

In Stock

Artists

Actors

Authors

Format

Condition

Theme

Genre

Rated

Label

Specialty

Decades

Size

Color

Deals

Empty image
Summer's Distillation
  • Label: Navona
  • UPC: 896931005630
  • Item #: 2252322X
  • Genre: Classical
  • Release Date: 1/24/2020
CD 
List Price: $16.99
Price: $15.29
You Save: $1.70 (10%)
loading image
Get it between Thu. Apr 24 - Fri. May 9
Deliver to

You May Also Like

Description

Summer's Distillation on CD

With SUMMER'S DISTILLATION, Joseph Summer, as composer, offers a new look at the timeless texts credited to William Shakespeare. As artistic director, Summer presents settings by Brahms, R. Schumann, and Benjamin Pesetsky, curating an overall impressive collection of works for voice, harp, and horns. Sonnets V and VI for voice, horns, and harp is raw and unfiltered-in a complex tonal language which illuminates stark text is the foreground. Sonnet CIV is an art song for mezzo soprano wherein the harp accompaniment plays the role of a lute or acoustic guitar. It is simultaneously heavy and graceful. Sonnet XCI for voice and horns, on the other hand, is regal and declamatory. Sonnet LXXIII for vocal ensemble, harp, and horns paints a dark forest scene-a cacophony of textures as soloists take turns, yet no voice or instrument is background. Finally, Sonnet CXXXIII, a duet for tenor and soprano against the scene painting of harp and horns, is a complaint about the interminably long delay between Summer's proclamation of adoration for his (eventual) wife, Lisa Summer, and her prorogued agreement to accept his offer of love. If by Your Art from The Tempest is a through-composed soprano aria with atmospheric harp accompaniment. The harp's echoed scale fragments guide the thoughts of the actress-starting in pain and finishing in sweet respite. O God, That I Were a Man from All's Well That Ends Well is a monologue running the gamut of emotions, from "I would eat his heart in the marketplace" to "she is undone." This is balanced by music of centuries later, with Robert Schumann's Drei Gesänge (Three Songs), Op.95, for soloist and harp, presenting settings of texts by Karl Julius Körner and three of the Hebrew Melodies by Lord Byron. Some of the highest inspiration for this album is Brahms' Vier Gesänge, Op.17.