![]() ![]() The poem ends by asking Coney Island, or the reader, “if there is a girl up there / in a striped shirt, her head back, eyes closed, / laughing her head off-” Breckenridge captures this with an unforced simplicity that sets in high relief the poem’s adult sexual theme as well as the recollection of a younger, more innocent time. “The Cyclone” evokes Coney Island’s iconic wooden roller coaster, with a looping quality to the music. Intriguing melodies and harmonic explorations capture the otherworldly strangeness of the experience. The music drifts between con moto and weirdly calm – even the high note on the word “delight” is part of the flow. “The Mechanism of Pleasure” concerns a patient experiencing a flare of ecstasy while awake during brain tumor surgery. Here the music inhabits an emotional knife-edge, pinpoints of sound alternating with loping melodic intervals. “Black Ice,” about a car crash and its psychological aftermath, begins with staccato anxiety, lapses into a time “suspended in each second,” and returns to panic mode before a softer mood descends to limn the poet’s dark thoughts. Garfein is at his most visceral in this concise triptych. ![]() The set closes with a glistening setting of a powerful portrait of the awareness of mortality, “Otherwise,” with Breckenridge at her sensitive best in the ruminative melody, ending on a questioning high note that seems to linger in uncertainty into the ensuing silence.įinally, Three Rides sets poems by KC Trommer to music for voice (Breckenridge), piano ( Thomas Bagwell) and cello ( Dave Eggar). Patently religious, vivid but cryptic, the anti-war “Mosaic of the Nativity: Serbia, Winter, 1993” becomes a micro-symphony of anger, regret, and spiritual mystery in Garfein’s hands. There’s something a bit Sondheim-esque about the languid, thoughtful “Twilight: After Haying,” while a delicate resolve infuses the sorrowful “Evening Sun,” a remarkable poem that depicts a recollection of youth: As she dances, a little girl learns early to grin and bear life, her skirt turning and flaring like Yeats’ widening gyre. That’s just the example that happened to be flowing into my ears as I composed this sentence. The smoothly folded-up melody of the line “I am the one whose love overcomes you” leads to a dramatic flourish at the end of the first poem (“Briefly It Enters, and Briefly Speaks”). The music reflects the lyrics in sometimes eye-opening but always fitting ways. Forthright soprano Marnie Breckenridge and the fine pianist Michael Brofman prove to be ideal interpreters of the suggestive melodies and accessibly modern, rhythmic piano parts. In The Luminous Particular, Garfein sets poetry by Jane Kenyon for piano and voice. It’s an altogether gorgeous recording of this compelling music. The cello-piano mix is pristine, the piano sounding rich and bell-like. Shao’s tone comes through with on ineffable sweetness that’s a credit to the audio engineering as well as to her energy and technique. Recorded with clarity and depth at Oktaven Audio outside New York City (Garfein is currently on the NYU faculty), it touches the spirit from the speakers or (better yet) the noise-canceling earbuds much as it did in concert. The Layers (the piece) brings together Romanticism in the first movement, a hallucinatory aura in the second, and a modernist klezmer feel in the finale. Like the composer’s earlier King of the River, these are settings of poems for solo voice with accompaniment. Shao and Blacklow now deliver this music to one and all on a new album, The Layers, which also includes two other significant Garfein works. Last fall I had the pleasure of hearing cellist Sophie Shao and pianist John Blacklow perform a glowing new piece by GRAMMY®-winning composer Herschel Garfein, a cello sonata of sorts called The Layers inspired by the Stanley Kunitz poem of that name. ![]()
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