Amir Mahyar Tafreshipour - Tafreshipour: Persian Echoes
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CD

Tafreshipour: Persian Echoes

Label Naxos ‎– 8.579023
Format CD, Album, Stereo
Barcode 0747313902378
Country Germany
Released 2018
Genre Classical, Folk, World, & Country
Style Persian Classical
1 Harp Concerto "Persian Echoes" : 1. Andante - Allegro 9:13
2 Harp Concerto "Persian Echoes" : 2. Tranquillo 6:21
3 Harp Concerto "Persian Echoes" : 3. Allegro 5:57
4 Quintet "Alas" For Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon, Horn And Piano : 1. Allegro 9:44
5 Quintet "Alas" For Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon, Horn And Piano : 2. Mourning 10:10
6 Trio "Lucid Dreams" For Harp, Violin And Cello : Andante 8:29
7 Yearning In C 9:25
Composed By – Amir Mahyar Tafreshipour
Engineer – Adrian Hart
Engineer – Alex Barnes
Engineer – Andrew Keener
Engineer – Sebastian Lexer
Producer – Amir Mahyar Tafreshipour
Amir Mahyar Tafreshipour isn't the first composer to meld his cultural musical heritage into classical composition. And he does so as convincingly as Dvorak, Bartok, or De Falla (in his own style, of course).

Tafreshipour said this of "Persian Echoes," his harp concerto: "My intention was not to compose an exotic piece simply with the use of Eastern melodies, but rather a work which weaves together sounds associated with Persian traditional music combined with Western classical music."

And he succeeds. The Persian modes he uses gives the work a strong ethnic identity. And yet the structure and use of those modes build on Western art music traditions. It's a fluid work that takes the listener on an engaging journey of discovery.

"Alas" for chamber quintet also uses traditional Persian motives. In this case, though, the overall sound is more Western -- and more academic. The oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn and piano pop in and out with little fragments that occasionally grind against each other. It's not a bad work -- just one that sits in stark contrast to the tonal harp concerto that precedes it.

"Lucid Dreams," for harp violin and cello, is similar in style to Alas. It has a rhapsodic, dream-like quality to it.

There's little chance "Yearning in C" will be confused with Terry Riley's "In C." And yet both share the same basic idea. Start on C, and use it as an anchor throughout the work. Tafreshipour's concept eschew's driving rhythms for an unfolding of the music that that seems to ebb and flow.

The four works on this release present several sides of Amir Tafreshipour's style. Whether his music is consonant or dissonant, it always retains a trace of his Middle Eastern heritage. And that blend makes his a unique and interesting compositional voice.
Barcode (Printed) – 7 47313 90237 8
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