Description
Composer Christopher Robertsās four serene yet deeply emotive pieces for solo qin (a Chinese zither-like instrument) are quiet, sparce, slightly eerie, almost Feldmanesque. Performed by the composer, who learned the qin while living and teaching for many years in Taiwan. This is a 30-minute CD EP/single. āSo Confucius walks into a bar, just in time for Bill Evansās last set, and after closing time pulls out his qin for a few solos ⦠Thatās the vibe that Christopher Roberts captures in these intimate nocturnal musings where crystalline harmonics dance among gutsy bass slides while elegant harmonies whisper their most private thoughts. A truly haunting recording.ā [John Schneider, Host of KPFKās Global Village] āThe most Chinese of instruments, the qin has roots in the ancient literati traditionā¦. Having studied its classical tradition in Taiwan, the quixotic Roberts (also a double bassist) also brings his own traditions of jazz, blues, and solo improvisation to the table. While starting somewhere near its traditional core, Roberts bends his instrument in new directions entirely, turning it westwards even as he faces east.ā [Gramophone magazine] āāExoticā is a relative term. Gorecki's music is exotic compared to Lloyd Webberās, Ligetiās music is exotic compared to Goreckiās, and Christopher Robertsā music is exotic compared to nearly any music you are likely to think of.⦠Last Cicada Singing integrates Eastern and Western music so well, finding their common ground in calm reflection of natural sounds and processes. Sit back, relax, contemplate.ā [Malcolm Tattersall, Music & Vision] āYou-are-there-grade realism. The recording is Christopher Robertsā hauntingly beautiful and stunningly well-recorded Last Cicada Singing [Absolute Sound magazine] āMesmerizing sounds...quiet, sparse, serene music.ā [Michael Barone, Minnesota Public Radio]