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 Location:  Home » Music Instruments » Tangos » Stefan Wolpe: Piano Music - Geoffrey Douglas MadgeSeptember 5, 2008  


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Stefan Wolpe: Piano Music - Geoffrey Douglas Madge
Stefan Wolpe: Piano Music - Geoffrey Douglas Madge
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Creators: Stefan Wolpe, Geoffrey Douglas Madge
Label: Cpo Records
Category: Music

Buy New: $16.99
Buy New/Used from $11.63

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars(1 reviews)
Sales Rank: 473626

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

UPC: 761203905522
EAN: 4010115990550
ASIN: B000001RSK

Release Date: January 25, 1995
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Gesang, Weil Ich Etwas Teures Verlassen Muss
  • Stehende Musik
  • Tango
  • Rag-Caprice
  • Cinq Marches Carateristiques, Op 10 No.1: Energico Ed Animato
  • Passacaglia-Study On An All-Interval Row In Conjuction With Eleven Basic Rows
  • Dance In Form Of A Chaconne
  • Toccata In Three Parts
  • Battle Piece
  • Displaced Spaces, Shocks, Negoations, A New Sort Of Relationship...
  • Form IV: Broken Sequences For Piano

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Inconsistent,and works more as masterfull stepping stones   April 6, 1999
  5 out of 5 found this review helpful

For my money the only good pieces here are the "Passacaglia" and "Battle Piece". In the "Passacgalia" Wolpe's aesthetic strategy was to merely create an incessant unfolding of various intervals collected in each self-contain section or for each comment on the main passacgalia idea. The overwhelming power comes through slowly in an accumulative like argument. As a performer you really need to have a global vision of this unfolding otherwise you will dilute the on-going forward moving momentum. You need to set yourself almost like a slow lugubrious locomotive pulling and puffing itself out of the station. Madge doesn't quite get it, and I found some expressive holes here where the momentum became dissapated. The work has a gruff, unrelenting roaring power, and if you loose this gestural quality you never get it back. I am prejudiced in hearing the early David Tudor recording from the late Fifties. Tudor created a seamless one-dimensional gesture without ever allowing the piece to slow or dilute its impassioned momentum. The "Battle Piece" as well is a work that should literally make you shake. John Cage said this at an early performance of it in New York. Here Madge gets the idea more comprehensively. Wolpe's creativity was inconsistent. He began profoundly,but then saw his work as an odyssey creating sketch-like works.


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