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NEW WALTZES FOR PIANO - THE WALTZ PROJECT REVISITED A revisitation of the mid-1970s Waltz Project done by Robert Helps and Robert Moran. Eric Moe plays waltzes of our time. |
| Eric Moe writes: The waltz traffics in weightlessness. By adding an extra step to the one-two/left-right of pedestrian movement, it forces the waltzer and listener off the ground and into the air (left-right-UP). Some of these waltzes tackle gravity head on (Roger Zahab's Levitation of pianos during a waltz), others are more insinuatingly buoyant, but all share this attribute. These new waltzes are not exclusively American - there are contributions from Poland (Zygmunt Krauze's Music Box Waltz) and Nigeria (Akin Euba's Study in African Jazz 3) - but they are indebted to vernacular American rhythms which add even more bounce. Their distinguished European ancestry is recognizable, but these waltzes are very much of our time - only lighter. I have revisited Robert Helps' and Robert Moran's Waltz Project of the mid-1970s - half of the 22 waltzes on this CD are from the collection published by C.F. Peters. They include works that have become standards of the repertoire, such as Milton Babbitt's Minute Waltz and Philip Glass' Modern Love Waltz, as well as other gems. The remaining 11 waltzes are new, ten composed especially for this recording, with Ricky Ian Gordon's Waltz a happy discovery. The variety is enormous. Some have a direct connection with jazz: Anthony Cornicello's PostModern Waltz deconstructs a famous McCoy Tyner solo; my own Pulaski Skyway Waltz begins with a quotation from Mal Waldron's Firewaltz, Akin Euba's African Jazz study draws from the musical wells of Africa and Vienna, while Andrew Imbrie infuses a one-to-the-bar waltz with the headlong energy of bebop. Lee Hyla's One Moe Time has an improvisational feel, eventually cutting loose ecstatically before returning to its senses. Other waltzes comment trenchantly on the genre itself, like Ron Caltabiano's Character Sketch: About a Waltz. Virgil Thomson's birthday card to Mrs. Efram Zimbalist subverts the waltz rhythm with a thumping duple cross-rhythm in the process of quoting Happy Birthday. Charles Wuorinen's Self-Similar Waltz operates on a deeper level of wit, reflecting its muscular self in myriad ways; the listening experience is like walking through a set of fun-house mirrors. | |
| CONTENTS: Hayes Biggs, composer Susan's Waltz Eric Moe, piano Wayne Peterson, composer Valse Subliminale Eric Moe, piano Robert Helps, composer Valse Mirage Eric Moe, piano Andrew Imbrie, composer Waltz Eric Moe, piano Eric Moe, composer Pulaski Skyway Waltz Eric Moe, piano Louis Karchin, composer Ghost Waltz Eric Moe, piano Charles Wuorinen, composer Self-Similar Waltz Eric Moe, piano Joan Tower, composer Red Garnet Waltz Eric Moe, piano Akin Euba, composer Study in African Jazz 3 Eric Moe, piano Ronald Caltabiano, composer Character Sketch: About a Waltz Eric Moe, piano Roger Sessions, composer Waltz Eric Moe, piano Zygmunt Krauze, composer Music Box Waltz Eric Moe, piano Ricky Ian Gordon, composer Waltz Eric Moe, piano Karl Kohn, composer Waltz Eric Moe, piano Philip Glass, composer Modern Love Waltz Eric Moe, piano Lee Hyla, composer One More Time Eric Moe, piano Milton Babbitt, composer Minute Waltz Eric Moe, piano Roger Zahab, composer levitation of pianos during a waltz Eric Moe, piano Lou Harrison, composer A Waltz for Evelyn Hinrichsen Eric Moe, piano Matthew Rosenblum, composer Shadow Waltz Eric Moe, piano Virgil Thomson, composer For a Happy Occasion Eric Moe, piano Anthony Cornicello, composer PostModern Waltz Eric Moe, piano |
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