Slovenčina Čeština
Váš nákupní košík je prázdný.
Vítejte, můžete se přihlásit.


KAYE KATHRYN - CD WHAT THE WINTER SAID

 WHAT THE WINTER SAID - suprshop.cz
Objednací číslo: 31960600


988

Na objednávku. Dodání trvá obvykle 6 týdnů.


Datum vydání: 1.11.2013
Žánr INSTRUMENTALNA
EAN: 0884501976206 (info)
Label: Kathryn Kaye
Obsahuje nosičů: 1
Nosič: CD

Popis - WHAT THE WINTER SAID:
This is the third album from pianist-composer Kathryn Kaye, whose first two CDs, Dreaming Still and Heavy as a Feather, were nominated for Zone Music Reporter (ZMR) Best Instrumental Album – Piano in 2011 and 2012. A holiday album like no other, produced by Will Ackerman, and featuring a stellar group of supporting musicians, What the Winter Said will draw you in, capturing your senses and your heart with what Daniel Burgan (StillStream.com), described as “some of the most thoughtful and profound piano work I have ever heard.” The CD has 10 original compositions and 4 old, beautiful, but seldom-heard carols, plus a cover of Will Ackerman’s The Bricklayer’s Beautiful Daughter. Here is what some of the reviewers have said about What the Winter Said. Bill Binkelman, of Zone Music Reporter, wrote: “As on her two previous releases, her piano playing is restrained, subtle, never overreaching into melodrama, sometimes somber but always laced with a gentle sense of beauty, occasionally tinted with a dash of nostalgia or romance. Kaye excels at a careful, nuanced style, letting individual notes work their magic on the listener’s emotion, and not putting any of the intended reactions in bold face or underlined, an approach of which I am a particular fan. “Kathryn Kaye is carving out a specific niche for her talents, a niche of being musically soft-spoken, playing and composing in a style that bears witness to the gentler side of human emotions, whether they be the pleasant ones or the ones that remind us we are, after all, human because we also feel pain. However, in many cases with Kaye’s music, it is the pain of regret and remembrance, not outright sorrow or loss. What the Winter Said … is the perfect soundtrack for falling leaves, falling snow, and falling temperatures - all best savored in front of a hearth with a crackling fire, of course!” Dana Wright, of Muzikreviews.com, said that 'Kathryn Kaye is a musician that will sweep you off your feet. Her music tugs at the deepest parts of you, coaxing rich emotion from subtle and complex melodies. Her newest album, What the Winter Said, is a beautiful journey through snow covered hills and the days of holly and ivy, midwinter and starry crisp nights spent with the one you cherish most. 'Kathryn Kaye has graced us with another beautiful album. It is snowy wonderment in wintery glory. As with much of Kaye’s work, nature is a central theme. Taking subtle nuances of an ice covered branch or a snowy field, her playing brings the scene to life in the listener’s mind. She is an evocative and thought provoking artist and I clamor for more of her playing each time the album comes to an end. Her third CD, What the Winter Said is a unique and profound album, drawing you in to her unique and elaborate style. This album looks at Yuletide with an all new vision. There are original pieces and some rarely used carols to stir the blood. Throughout the album, Kaye is supported by a cast of talented musicians, crafting a sound experience that has given me many nights of enjoyment and will do so for many more to come. This is piano music at its finest. The youngest daughter of the local postmistress and a coal miner/general store owner, Kathryn grew up in the Appalachian mountains of southeast Kentucky. At the age of four she began playing hymns, folk music, and children’s songs on her family’s old upright piano. She continued to play and sing at small-town churches, school and community events, county fairs, and on local TV and radio stations. At 17 she attended Eastern Kentucky University, where she first learned to read music, and with great enthusiasm seriously studied music and art. She eventually focused exclusively on music, and obtained a double major in keyboard and voice. To continue her musical training, Kathryn moved to Germany, where she studied piano with pianist Aldo Schoen, and voice with chamber music singer Josef Maria Hauschild. During her nine years in Germany, she performed professionally as a classical singer, folk singer/composer, pianist, and organist, becoming particularly enchanted by the restrained yet deeply emotional chamber music of Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, Liszt, and Hugo Wolff. Kathryn writes: “Although the inspiration for my compositions comes from a variety of sources, the strongest by far is nature. I’m moved by nature’s colors, sounds, and changing seasons, all of which blend with melodies and visual images from my past. I never have a goal when I write songs. Instead, I stay out of the way and allow the music to happen. It is my hope that what I write will resonate with someone else, but in that person’s uniquely personal way, even if it’s very different from my own experience as I compose and play.” She concludes: “Most of the music I write takes me by surprise, sometimes feeling like an accident! I’ve come to believe that nature, the world, and even the universe are full of creative accidents that are cause for celebration.” A prolific composer of simple, haunting, lyrical melodies, Kathryn has an arresting style that some have compared to Satie, Liszt, and Brahms. Her songwriting is influenced by the simple harmonies of the Appalachian folksongs and hymns that she heard, sang, and played as a child, by her experience performing classical music, and by the beauty of the Rocky Mountains where she now lives. Bill Binkelman has described her compositions as “evocative, restrained, yet strongly melodic,” and John M. Peters of The Borderland wrote of her work that it is “quietly stunning,” and “musically rich and ideal for reflection or finding a little peace in one’s life.” Will Ackerman produced Kathryn's first CD, Dreaming Still, at his Imaginary Road Studios in Windham County, Vermont. Released in January 2011, the album was #1 on the ZMR Top 100 Chart for January and February, and it remained on the charts for 10 months. At the end of the year, it was ranked number 2 out of more than 2,300 CDs, and was a finalist for Best Album and Best Instrumental Album-Piano. She also was nominated Best New Artist. Kathryn’s second CD, Heavy as a Feather, also produced by Will Ackerman, quickly moved to #2 on the charts, and was an outstanding critical success. At the end of 2012, it finished number 11 of over 2,300 albums, and was again nominated for Best Instrumental Album-Piano. Kathy Parsons wrote of this CD that “the uncluttered melodies are played with such heartfelt expression that each becomes a distinctive gem as well as part of a flowing, cohesive whole.” For Michael Diamond, her songs “evoke the earthy ambience and subtle shadings of an Andrew Wyeth painting.” And Dick Metcalf (Rotcod Zzaj, of Improvijazzation Nation) wrote that Heavy as a Feather was, “quite simply, the best piano/orchestral work I’ve heard this year…'


Nové akce - HUDBA:


Jiní právě kupují: