Music for Words, Perhaps

Music for Words, Perhaps

Description: 
WB Yeats, W Stevens and D Maroney; poetry and music in a perfect domestic partnership
Composers: 
Denman Maroney
Performers: 
Denman Maroney
Theo Bleckmann
Iota Jot Yod
Shelley Hirsch
Herb Robertson
Arthur Kell
David Simons
Sheila Schonbrun
Catalog Number: 
#717
Genre: 
Jazz
new classical
Collection: 
solo voice
prepared piano
Location: 

Monsey, NY

Price: 
$15.00
Release Date: 
Feb 23, 2010
Liner Notes: 
View
1 CD
One Sheet: 

This is a CD of songs written by Denman Maroney to words by William Butler Yeats, Wallace Stevens and himself, sung by Theo Bleckmann, Shelley Hirsch, Sheila Schonbrun, and himself, accompanied by Herb Robertson (brass), Arthur Kell (bass), David Simons (drums), and himself (piano). They might be jazz, or they might be classical; suit yourself. 

The group known as Iota Jot Yod performs the Stevens and Maroney settings.

Reviews: 

Denman Maroney, besides being a component of the renowned ensemble Gamelan Son of Lion, is also an excellent pianist and composer, in this new cd Innova are presented two song cycles, the first male voice and piano, the second for quartet (piano, trumpet, bass, percussion) and female voices. These songs are for the truth between the classical lieder and the song itself: the first have a formal structure sufficiently developed, that can not be reduced to the schema as verse chorus, and the use of texts by real poets (in this case, WB Yeats and Wallace Stevens), while the second have a direct and immediate enjoyment, due also to use natural and not set the voice. The piano played by Maroney is a prepared piano, whose sound evokes scents and sounds Eastern. Maroney plays it now gently, now with a great sense of swing, which stands out especially in the second cycle of songs, clear jazz flavor, and even more in the final song, so this a real song, accented gerswhiniano, where ability of lead singer singing the greatest display of self-harm, climbing virtuously nonsense phrases on the track and season with impressive improvisational passages.

- Filippo Focosi, Kathodik

...it's clear that Maroney has very specific ideas for these chiseled words.

...Blackmann's dramatic speech-singing and Maroney's manipulation of the piano strings during the first section of "The Second Coming" evoke the sound world of Harry Partch....

- Fred Cisterna, Signal to Noise