The Piano Music of Mike Garson / Holt
Pianist and composer Mike Garson is perhaps best known for his longstanding musical relationship with David Bowie, which began in 1972. He made his mark on numerous Bowie albums and traveled thousands of miles on tours spanning more than four decades, including Bowieâs first and last performances in the U.S. When classical pianist Danny Holt first heard Mike Garsonâs music, it was as if it reached out of his stereo speakers and grabbed him. Holt and Garson first crossed paths in 2004 when Holt was a graduate student at CalArts. The two hit it off, and Garson even helped produce Dannyâs Fast Jump album, also released through innova. Garson and Holt developed a musical kinship, and that relationship led them to this album, Piano Music of Mike Garson. Mike Garson and Danny Holt share a voracious appetite for new music and monster piano technique. Garson developed a compositional process that favored first-take improvisational works composed in real-time with the help of a Yamaha Disklavier. Holtâs playing and Garsonâs music both have a sense of immediacy, aliveness, and being âon the edge.â All of this comes together to form a perfect pairing in this first-ever album of Mike Garsonâs solo piano works, a project that survived both Garsonâs home burning to the ground in a 2018 wildfire, and the Covid-19 pandemic.
Danny Holt has been called âthe classical music equivalent of an extreme sports athleteâ (The Record) and Gramophone called his Fast Jump album (innova Recordings, 2009) âa compelling showcase for Holtâs innate virtuosity and gregarious temperament.â Known as a champion of adventurous new music, Holt has performed with the Los Angeles Philharmonic New Music Group, Blue Man Group, Bang on a Can All-Stars, California EAR Unit, and the Calder Quartet, among others.
REVIEW:
Mike Garson may be best known for his extensive collaborations with David Bowie on disc and in concert, yet his credentials as pianist, composer, and arranger embrace a wide stylistic scope. You canât really pinpoint his virtuosity within any genre, because he interweaves classical, jazz, and pop traditions organically and fluidly. What is more, he evolved a technique blurring improvisation and composition, where he would improvise fully-formed works, recording directly onto a Yamaha Disklavier, bypassing the notation process. Heâd usually record at slightly slower tempos, and then use the Disklavierâs technology to play the pieces back faster. Over a period of about 10 years, Garson amassed around 3200 piano pieces this way, of which roughly one out of ten was a âkeeperâ.
Garson often takes his cue from preexisting pieces. The nearly eight-and-a-half-minute 3X18 uses Ravelâs Gaspard de la nuit as a jumping off point, although some of the compound two-handed arpeggios border on Sorabji-like atonality. Homage to Chopin and Godowsky is a brilliant, freewheeling fantasia inspired by Godowskyâs transcription of Chopinâs C major Op. 10 No. 1 Etude, and may be more dazzlingly difficult to play.
Imagine a David Bowie ballad effortlessly merged with a FaurĂ© Nocturne, and youâve got Garsonâs Nocturne in D-flat. Although the Hommage to Ligeti mirrors that composerâs restless rhythmic asymmetry and use of registers, the musicâs rhapsodic lyrical qualities are pure Mike Garson. Actually, Garsonâs Tribute to Keith Emerson sounds more authentically âLigeti-likeâ, even though itâs superficially rooted in the opening of Emerson, Lake & Palmerâs Tarkus.
The point is that Garsonâs magpie temperament and eclectic outreach never yields formulaic or clichĂ©d results. Thereâs a consistent freshness to his inventiveness, and he rarely repeats himself. You canât say that about many contemporary composers who write a lot for the piano.
Along with his brilliant technique, Danny Holt is able to imbue each composition with a distinct character. He gets exactly the right rhythmic feeling for jazz and pop oriented works, yet brings a wide dynamic range and sophisticated voicing to more complex selections. It would be interesting to hear Garsonâs original Disklavier renditions of the 17 pieces selected for this release, yet one would miss the imprint of Holtâs own musicality and multi-leveled, even transcendent virtuosity. Holt provides detailed notes about the process of learning, assimilating, and recording this music under the composerâs supervision. A major and, needless to say, unique piano release, not to be missed.
-- ClassicsToday.com (10/10; Jed Distler)
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The Piano Music of Mike Garson / Holt
The Piano Music of Mike Garson / Holt
Pianist and composer Mike Garson is perhaps best known for his longstanding musical relationship with David Bowie, which began in 1972. He made his mark on numerous Bowie albums and traveled thousands of miles on tours spanning more than four decades, including Bowieâs first and last performances in the U.S. When classical pianist Danny Holt first heard Mike Garsonâs music, it was as if it reached out of his stereo speakers and grabbed him. Holt and Garson first crossed paths in 2004 when Holt was a graduate student at CalArts. The two hit it off, and Garson even helped produce Dannyâs Fast Jump album, also released through innova. Garson and Holt developed a musical kinship, and that relationship led them to this album, Piano Music of Mike Garson. Mike Garson and Danny Holt share a voracious appetite for new music and monster piano technique. Garson developed a compositional process that favored first-take improvisational works composed in real-time with the help of a Yamaha Disklavier. Holtâs playing and Garsonâs music both have a sense of immediacy, aliveness, and being âon the edge.â All of this comes together to form a perfect pairing in this first-ever album of Mike Garsonâs solo piano works, a project that survived both Garsonâs home burning to the ground in a 2018 wildfire, and the Covid-19 pandemic.
Danny Holt has been called âthe classical music equivalent of an extreme sports athleteâ (The Record) and Gramophone called his Fast Jump album (innova Recordings, 2009) âa compelling showcase for Holtâs innate virtuosity and gregarious temperament.â Known as a champion of adventurous new music, Holt has performed with the Los Angeles Philharmonic New Music Group, Blue Man Group, Bang on a Can All-Stars, California EAR Unit, and the Calder Quartet, among others.
REVIEW:
Mike Garson may be best known for his extensive collaborations with David Bowie on disc and in concert, yet his credentials as pianist, composer, and arranger embrace a wide stylistic scope. You canât really pinpoint his virtuosity within any genre, because he interweaves classical, jazz, and pop traditions organically and fluidly. What is more, he evolved a technique blurring improvisation and composition, where he would improvise fully-formed works, recording directly onto a Yamaha Disklavier, bypassing the notation process. Heâd usually record at slightly slower tempos, and then use the Disklavierâs technology to play the pieces back faster. Over a period of about 10 years, Garson amassed around 3200 piano pieces this way, of which roughly one out of ten was a âkeeperâ.
Garson often takes his cue from preexisting pieces. The nearly eight-and-a-half-minute 3X18 uses Ravelâs Gaspard de la nuit as a jumping off point, although some of the compound two-handed arpeggios border on Sorabji-like atonality. Homage to Chopin and Godowsky is a brilliant, freewheeling fantasia inspired by Godowskyâs transcription of Chopinâs C major Op. 10 No. 1 Etude, and may be more dazzlingly difficult to play.
Imagine a David Bowie ballad effortlessly merged with a FaurĂ© Nocturne, and youâve got Garsonâs Nocturne in D-flat. Although the Hommage to Ligeti mirrors that composerâs restless rhythmic asymmetry and use of registers, the musicâs rhapsodic lyrical qualities are pure Mike Garson. Actually, Garsonâs Tribute to Keith Emerson sounds more authentically âLigeti-likeâ, even though itâs superficially rooted in the opening of Emerson, Lake & Palmerâs Tarkus.
The point is that Garsonâs magpie temperament and eclectic outreach never yields formulaic or clichĂ©d results. Thereâs a consistent freshness to his inventiveness, and he rarely repeats himself. You canât say that about many contemporary composers who write a lot for the piano.
Along with his brilliant technique, Danny Holt is able to imbue each composition with a distinct character. He gets exactly the right rhythmic feeling for jazz and pop oriented works, yet brings a wide dynamic range and sophisticated voicing to more complex selections. It would be interesting to hear Garsonâs original Disklavier renditions of the 17 pieces selected for this release, yet one would miss the imprint of Holtâs own musicality and multi-leveled, even transcendent virtuosity. Holt provides detailed notes about the process of learning, assimilating, and recording this music under the composerâs supervision. A major and, needless to say, unique piano release, not to be missed.
-- ClassicsToday.com (10/10; Jed Distler)
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Description
Pianist and composer Mike Garson is perhaps best known for his longstanding musical relationship with David Bowie, which began in 1972. He made his mark on numerous Bowie albums and traveled thousands of miles on tours spanning more than four decades, including Bowieâs first and last performances in the U.S. When classical pianist Danny Holt first heard Mike Garsonâs music, it was as if it reached out of his stereo speakers and grabbed him. Holt and Garson first crossed paths in 2004 when Holt was a graduate student at CalArts. The two hit it off, and Garson even helped produce Dannyâs Fast Jump album, also released through innova. Garson and Holt developed a musical kinship, and that relationship led them to this album, Piano Music of Mike Garson. Mike Garson and Danny Holt share a voracious appetite for new music and monster piano technique. Garson developed a compositional process that favored first-take improvisational works composed in real-time with the help of a Yamaha Disklavier. Holtâs playing and Garsonâs music both have a sense of immediacy, aliveness, and being âon the edge.â All of this comes together to form a perfect pairing in this first-ever album of Mike Garsonâs solo piano works, a project that survived both Garsonâs home burning to the ground in a 2018 wildfire, and the Covid-19 pandemic.
Danny Holt has been called âthe classical music equivalent of an extreme sports athleteâ (The Record) and Gramophone called his Fast Jump album (innova Recordings, 2009) âa compelling showcase for Holtâs innate virtuosity and gregarious temperament.â Known as a champion of adventurous new music, Holt has performed with the Los Angeles Philharmonic New Music Group, Blue Man Group, Bang on a Can All-Stars, California EAR Unit, and the Calder Quartet, among others.
REVIEW:
Mike Garson may be best known for his extensive collaborations with David Bowie on disc and in concert, yet his credentials as pianist, composer, and arranger embrace a wide stylistic scope. You canât really pinpoint his virtuosity within any genre, because he interweaves classical, jazz, and pop traditions organically and fluidly. What is more, he evolved a technique blurring improvisation and composition, where he would improvise fully-formed works, recording directly onto a Yamaha Disklavier, bypassing the notation process. Heâd usually record at slightly slower tempos, and then use the Disklavierâs technology to play the pieces back faster. Over a period of about 10 years, Garson amassed around 3200 piano pieces this way, of which roughly one out of ten was a âkeeperâ.
Garson often takes his cue from preexisting pieces. The nearly eight-and-a-half-minute 3X18 uses Ravelâs Gaspard de la nuit as a jumping off point, although some of the compound two-handed arpeggios border on Sorabji-like atonality. Homage to Chopin and Godowsky is a brilliant, freewheeling fantasia inspired by Godowskyâs transcription of Chopinâs C major Op. 10 No. 1 Etude, and may be more dazzlingly difficult to play.
Imagine a David Bowie ballad effortlessly merged with a FaurĂ© Nocturne, and youâve got Garsonâs Nocturne in D-flat. Although the Hommage to Ligeti mirrors that composerâs restless rhythmic asymmetry and use of registers, the musicâs rhapsodic lyrical qualities are pure Mike Garson. Actually, Garsonâs Tribute to Keith Emerson sounds more authentically âLigeti-likeâ, even though itâs superficially rooted in the opening of Emerson, Lake & Palmerâs Tarkus.
The point is that Garsonâs magpie temperament and eclectic outreach never yields formulaic or clichĂ©d results. Thereâs a consistent freshness to his inventiveness, and he rarely repeats himself. You canât say that about many contemporary composers who write a lot for the piano.
Along with his brilliant technique, Danny Holt is able to imbue each composition with a distinct character. He gets exactly the right rhythmic feeling for jazz and pop oriented works, yet brings a wide dynamic range and sophisticated voicing to more complex selections. It would be interesting to hear Garsonâs original Disklavier renditions of the 17 pieces selected for this release, yet one would miss the imprint of Holtâs own musicality and multi-leveled, even transcendent virtuosity. Holt provides detailed notes about the process of learning, assimilating, and recording this music under the composerâs supervision. A major and, needless to say, unique piano release, not to be missed.
-- ClassicsToday.com (10/10; Jed Distler)