🚚 Free Worldwide Shipping on All Orders!Shop Now
HomeStore

Dancing on Water

Product image 1

Dancing on Water

Dancing on Water

Marty Walker performs music for clarinet and bass clarinet written for him by composers Daniel Lentz, Peter Garland, Jim Fox, Michael Jon Fink, Rick Cox, and Michael Byron. Performing with Walker are noted new music stalwarts William Winant, Wadada Leo Smith, Amy Knoles, and others. The music runs the gamut from a lush work for ten pianos and ten clarinets to a technically thorny solo and includes just about everything in between. Although the individual pieces are on their surfaces quite different from one another, they share a certain commonality—an embrace of music’s inherent sensuality. Critics have described Walker’s playing as ā€œmasterful,ā€ ā€œflawless,ā€ and ā€œtrue artistry.ā€ Minnesota Public Radio’s Michael Barone called this album a ā€œmild-mannered, soul-filling collection of contemporary ā€˜meditations’. . . think Satie and Morton Feldman, and you come close to the overall mood. Delicate textures prevail…the thinking-listener’s slow lane.ā€ 21st Century Music magazine wrote, ā€œIf people are best known by the company they keep, then clarinetist Marty Walker is blessed indeed. He keeps wonderful company with an excellent series of composers…. Both the playing and the recording quality are sparkling.ā€
$18.99
Dancing on Water—
$18.99

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Marty Walker performs music for clarinet and bass clarinet written for him by composers Daniel Lentz, Peter Garland, Jim Fox, Michael Jon Fink, Rick Cox, and Michael Byron. Performing with Walker are noted new music stalwarts William Winant, Wadada Leo Smith, Amy Knoles, and others. The music runs the gamut from a lush work for ten pianos and ten clarinets to a technically thorny solo and includes just about everything in between. Although the individual pieces are on their surfaces quite different from one another, they share a certain commonality—an embrace of music’s inherent sensuality. Critics have described Walker’s playing as ā€œmasterful,ā€ ā€œflawless,ā€ and ā€œtrue artistry.ā€ Minnesota Public Radio’s Michael Barone called this album a ā€œmild-mannered, soul-filling collection of contemporary ā€˜meditations’. . . think Satie and Morton Feldman, and you come close to the overall mood. Delicate textures prevail…the thinking-listener’s slow lane.ā€ 21st Century Music magazine wrote, ā€œIf people are best known by the company they keep, then clarinetist Marty Walker is blessed indeed. He keeps wonderful company with an excellent series of composers…. Both the playing and the recording quality are sparkling.ā€