Artist: Yo-Yo Ma
Title: Yo-Yo Ma Plays The Music of John Williams
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Sony Music
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans) / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:06:47
Total Size: 329 Mb / 306 Mb
Tracklist:1. Cello Concerto: Cello Concerto: I. Theme & Cadenza
2. Cello Concerto: Cello Concerto: Cello Concerto: Cello Concerto: II. Blues
3. Cello Concerto: Cello Concerto: Cello Concerto: Cello Concerto: III. Scherzo
4. Cello Concerto: IV. Song
5. Elegy
6. 3 Pieces for Solo Cello: No. 1, Rosewood
7. 3 Pieces for Solo Cello: 3 Pieces for Solo Cello: 3 Pieces for Solo Cello: 3 Pieces for Solo Cello: No. 2, Pickin'
8. 3 Pieces for Solo Cello: No. 3, The Long Way North
9. Heartwood
Performers:Yo-Yo Ma (cello)
Los Angeles Recording Arts Orchestra
John Williams, conductor
Even when not composing music for film, John Williams tends to tie his music to fairly concrete images, as this collection of cello works attests. The inspiration for Heartwood, for example, came from a book containing photographs of trees. His Three Pieces for Solo Cello were attempts to reflect the African-American experience. In the liner notes of this CD, Williams describes the cello as groaning under the crack of the work-gang whip for Rosewood, dancing exuberantly in Pickin', and singing a lullaby in The Long Road North. Even Concerto for Cello and Orchestra, a piece that would seem to be the most traditionally "classical" in its approach, is described as containing a "hero's role" for the cello, allowing the instrument "to address the audience in the manner of a clear and direct soliloquy." This visual approach to composition helps ground even the most "modernist" passages, allowing Williams' music to remain accessible to the more casual listener while still yielding enough riches to satisfy a more demanding audience. This collection boasts some of Williams' most compelling and heartfelt writing, boosted by typically expressive performances by Yo-Yo Ma. The warmth of Ma's cello complements Williams' emotional style, particularly in the reflective Heartwood and moving Elegy. Williams proves here that more than just his theme from Star Wars deserves long life in the concert hall repertory.
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