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Daniel Lentz: Los Tigres De Marte
Swirling music with wildly branching roots that touch everything from Debussy and Delius to bop to techno. Sometimes lush and enveloping, sometimes brittle and percussive; sometimes suspended and motionless, sometimes agitated. This 16-minute CD EP features clarinetist Marty Walker with string quartet and electronic keyboards. âWhen it comes to attempts at musical seduction, Daniel Lentzâs music is way out front.â [Kyle Gann, Village Voice] âWith its slow, interlocking suspensions and white-note harmonies, Tigres brings to mind Sibelius, of all thingsâparticularly the twilight pages of the Sixth and Seventh symphoniesâwith the exception of a contrasting section about six minutes in where the rhythmic intensity gets cranked up and the piece breaks into a manic Michael Nymanesque jitterbugâŠ. But the jitterbug ends just a quickly as it began, ceding to a much more lyrical style that gives a prominent, concerto-like roll to the clarinet. If Lentz talked about some of his earlier cascading echo pieces as âspiralling forms of becoming,â Tigres tracesâwith its expressive grand pausesâa more improvisational line of fragmentationâŠ. By intriguing his listeners at the same time he wreathes them in smiles, Lentz always comes up with something listenable and worthwhile. Thatâs certainly true of this new release.â [Gramophone magazine]
Swirling music with wildly branching roots that touch everything from Debussy and Delius to bop to techno. Sometimes lush and enveloping, sometimes brittle and percussive; sometimes suspended and motionless, sometimes agitated. This 16-minute CD EP features clarinetist Marty Walker with string quartet and electronic keyboards. âWhen it comes to attempts at musical seduction, Daniel Lentzâs music is way out front.â [Kyle Gann, Village Voice] âWith its slow, interlocking suspensions and white-note harmonies, Tigres brings to mind Sibelius, of all thingsâparticularly the twilight pages of the Sixth and Seventh symphoniesâwith the exception of a contrasting section about six minutes in where the rhythmic intensity gets cranked up and the piece breaks into a manic Michael Nymanesque jitterbugâŠ. But the jitterbug ends just a quickly as it began, ceding to a much more lyrical style that gives a prominent, concerto-like roll to the clarinet. If Lentz talked about some of his earlier cascading echo pieces as âspiralling forms of becoming,â Tigres tracesâwith its expressive grand pausesâa more improvisational line of fragmentationâŠ. By intriguing his listeners at the same time he wreathes them in smiles, Lentz always comes up with something listenable and worthwhile. Thatâs certainly true of this new release.â [Gramophone magazine]
$10.99
Daniel Lentz: Los Tigres De Marteâ
$10.99
Description
Swirling music with wildly branching roots that touch everything from Debussy and Delius to bop to techno. Sometimes lush and enveloping, sometimes brittle and percussive; sometimes suspended and motionless, sometimes agitated. This 16-minute CD EP features clarinetist Marty Walker with string quartet and electronic keyboards. âWhen it comes to attempts at musical seduction, Daniel Lentzâs music is way out front.â [Kyle Gann, Village Voice] âWith its slow, interlocking suspensions and white-note harmonies, Tigres brings to mind Sibelius, of all thingsâparticularly the twilight pages of the Sixth and Seventh symphoniesâwith the exception of a contrasting section about six minutes in where the rhythmic intensity gets cranked up and the piece breaks into a manic Michael Nymanesque jitterbugâŠ. But the jitterbug ends just a quickly as it began, ceding to a much more lyrical style that gives a prominent, concerto-like roll to the clarinet. If Lentz talked about some of his earlier cascading echo pieces as âspiralling forms of becoming,â Tigres tracesâwith its expressive grand pausesâa more improvisational line of fragmentationâŠ. By intriguing his listeners at the same time he wreathes them in smiles, Lentz always comes up with something listenable and worthwhile. Thatâs certainly true of this new release.â [Gramophone magazine]
