AURORA - Michael Atherton & James Ashley Franklin

Price: £13.98 inc. VAT (£11.90 ex. VAT)

Stock: In Stock

Format: CD

Release Date: 09-03-2004

Label: Celestial Harmonies

Catalog Number: 13236-2

Barcode: 13711323627

Musical Style: World Fusion

Track Listing:

Disc 1
1Caverns [09:41]6Blue Globe Saltarello - IV The Joyous Round 2 [05:57]
2Calliope [05:12]7V. Distant Flares [03:53]
3Blue Globe Saltarello - I Forgotten Skies [03:10]8At the Rising of the Dawn [12:03]
4Blue Globe Saltarello - II The Joyous Round 1 [07:23]9Again the Stars [08:45]
5Blue Globe Saltarello - III Dancers of the Fourth Sphere [06:30]

Description:

The music of Aurora is, in a number of respects, a piece of sonic research, an experiment, the outcomes of which are tested in sound. One aspect of the experiment is that of space and spatiality. Apart from the usual technical process whereby instruments recorded in a relatively lifeless studio are artificially placed in a reverberant space, an attempt has here been made to explore the placement of sounds in somewhat unusual spaces. In addition to pieces such as Blue Globe Saltarello, which use a relatively conventional approach to panoramic placement of the instruments, we find At the Rising of the Dawn, in which the listener is presented with the instruments from a possibly unfamiliar position: that of the performer. Caverns and Again the Stars are, at one level, spatial fantasies. Within the framework of the stereo recording medium, these pieces construct spaces by analogy with their sound sources. The ruined piano, which forms a major textural layer of Caverns, becomes a space through which the shakuhachi travels. The music of Aurora is also an experiment in cultural interaction. Two of the instruments employed, the shakuhachi and koto, derive from traditional Japanese musical culture. They interact here with instruments from western cultures: piano (albeit in a ruined state), guitars, marimba, double bass. In summary and as a totality, Celestial Harmonies offer the results of these researches in sound, in their various facets, as an enrichment of the source traditions on which Atherton and Franklin have drawn - Eastern and Western.

Biography:

Mult-instrumentalist Michael Atherton was born in the U.K. in 1950 and grew up in Australia. He composes in a variety of genres and styles including chamber music, screen, radio and theatre. He is founding Professor of Music and Head of Contemporary Arts at the University of Western Sydney, Nepean. Also active in the field of higher education is composer and shakuhachi Master (shihan), James Ashley Franklin, with whom Atherton collaborates on this recording. Since 1994, Franklin has been a lecturer and subsequently senior lecturer in Music Technology at the University of Western Sydney. James Ashley Franklin was born in Australia in 1959 and started playing piano at the age of nine. Later, he studied Western art music together with ethnomusicology at the University of Sydney and trained as a composer. He has developed a musical career bridging a wide range of styles, from classical Western music to electronic and to traditional and modern music for the shakuhachi winning numerous awards in Australia and overseas.


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