Thoma Simaku: Quartets 2 and 3, 3 Soliloquys
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"Following my studies at the Tirana Conservatoire in 1982, I worked for three years as Music Director in a remote town in Southern Albania near the border...
"Following my studies at the Tirana Conservatoire in 1982, I worked for three years as Music Director in a remote town in Southern Albania near the border with Greece. The first-hand experience I had from working with folk musicians and listening to ancient songs seems to have had a lasting effect on my creative conscience. There are no quotations from folk-music here or in any other work of mine, but resonances of that sound-world [...] are now subconsciously becoming part of my own music. These qualities are incorporated in the overall musical idiom and can be clearly heard in these works." - Thomas Simaku
Voci Celesti, "String Quartet No. 3" (more info)
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Voci Celesti, "String Quartet No. 3" - 13:06
Due Sotto, "Voci per Violino Solo" (more info)
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Due Sotto, "Voci per Violino Solo" - 13:34
Soliloquy I (more info)
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Soliloquy I - 10:12
Soliloquy II (more info)
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Soliloquy II - 12:53
Soliloquy III (more info)
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Soliloquy III - 11:25
Radius, "String Quartet No. 2" (more info)
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Radius, "String Quartet No. 2" - 13:19
Reviews
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A tough nut worth cracking (May 26, 2008)
Reviewer:
Jim Shine
This was hard work, but it was worth it. Thomas Simaku, 50 this year, is an Albanian now based in the University of York, U.K., and he writes music in a style that many listeners would not call accessible. If you absolutely must have “tunes” or rhythmic hooks to latch onto, then his music isn't for you. There's a quote from Simaku on the back of the box: “There are no quotations from...
This was hard work, but it was worth it. Thomas Simaku, 50 this year, is an Albanian now based in the University of York, U.K., and he writes music in a style that many listeners would not call accessible. If you absolutely must have “tunes” or rhythmic hooks to latch onto, then his music isn't for you. There's a quote from Simaku on the back of the box: “There are no quotations from folk-music here or in any other work of mine, but resonances of that sound-world are now subconsciously becoming part of my own music”. On reading this one might still have the impression that folk music is somehow to be heard here, but really it isn't - it's like looking for Gregorian chant in Vivaldi. Now, I hope by this stage I've dissuaded the nervous and intrigued the curious, because for anyone prepared to put in the effort this is a really fine disc. But for me, at least, it was an effort. I admit that contemporary music can be hit-or-miss with me, and with some works repeated listening adds nothing to my understanding or enjoyment. The first piece on this album, Voci Celesti, made a good first impression though. It's an atmospheric work, a sound world that you can feel immersed in. With static passages, drones, and shimmering effects it's an intriguing listen, although I haven't yet decided whether the celestial voices are angels, aliens, or atmospheric phenomena.
The other quartet has the title Radius, and Simaku's notes tell us “On a purely musical level, Radius could be described as a textural kaleidoscope with a predominantly heterophonic discourse that unfolds around one single sound-object (ison) possessing the gravitational power”. This may very well be the case but it's not the sort of information that makes me want to listen, as such structural conceits are not always easy for the listener to grasp. In fact a lot of the sounds in the quartet made me think of insects; if Simaku had tried to pass it off as an entomological fantasy I'd be more inclined to believe him.
The three Soliloquies also have somewhat esoteric concepts, and again for the uninitiated they can be tough going. They're for solo violin, cello, and viola, and are similar in design and mood. The notes I took while listening are full of terms like swirling, sawing, long notes, high registers, plucking, and droning. None of them is conventionally lovely, or indeed unconventionally so, but the sense of a journey is present - like (if I may yet again reach for the natural world for a simile) being in a deep-sea trench, where many mysterious and strange things drift or rush past, and occasionally there's something you half-recognise.
Best of all is Due Sotto-Voci, in which a lament-like passage alternates with more vigorous music, the two merging to some extent toward the end. Like the other pieces, this one requires considerable skill from the soloist, though with its more straightforward structure and greater emotional directness I think this one has the best chance of entering the repertoire.
I didn't enjoy much of this album when I first listened, but I'm glad I perserved and I can confidently recommend it to anyone not afraid of modern music.
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