Album Review: Fantasías by Rupert Boyd – elegance and grace from a modern master

Well, I’ve been at it again – lucky enough to have the latest recording from a top classical guitar talent to feature and review for you.

And this particular recording comes from New York-based Australian guitarist (and one half of the Australian Guitar Duo), Rupert Boyd. I was particularly relishing this review as Rupert is one of my favourite artists currently active (I really love his version of J.S. Bach’s Prelude from the Lute Suite in A Minor BWV 997 that’s on YouTube for example: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJPys_Yh3P4) and I wasn’t disappointed….. But first a little background for you.

FANTASÍAS
CD Cover Design

Fantasías – a varied collection of works for solo classical guitar

On April 28th 2016, Little Mystery Records released Rupert Boyd’s eagerly awaited second solo CD Fantasías (LMR-103).

Described by the Washington Post as “truly evocative”, and by Classical Guitar Magazine as “a player who deserves to be heard”, Rupert Boyd is recognized as one of the most talented guitarists of his generation.

Recorded by renowned producer John Taylor in a centuries-old church just outside of London in November 2015, Fantasías contains a varied collection of works for solo classical guitar, including four fantasias that span from Elizabethan England to modern-day Hawaii. The album also includes works by the Australian composer Phillip Houghton, a tango by the Argentinian composer Astor Piazzolla, a work by Cuban composer Leo Brouwer, and four traditional Celtic songs arranged for guitar by David Russell.

Fantasías is Rupert Boyd’s second solo album, and follows from his debut recording Valses Poéticos (2008), which received the following review in Soundboard, the quarterly publication of Guitar Foun dation of America: “Boyd’s playing is beautifully refined, with gorgeous tone… musically and technically flawless… [the Granados is] one of the best recorded performances of this work on guitar.” Rupert Boyd has also recorded an album Songs from the Forest, with his ensemble the Australian Guitar Duo, which was described as “wonderfully entertaining” by Classical Guitar Magazine, and “very impressive” by Soundboard.

Nicole’s Verdict on Fantasías?

There is a overarching sense of real elegance and grace in Boyd’s playing across the various  pieces on the recording from Spanish classics of the repertoire to melancholic Celtic traditional tunes to Elizabethan English across to more modern South American and Australian pieces and beyond.

To say that Boyd is a versatile player would be an understatement. This recording is a testament to not only to that versatility but to his fantastic sense of musicality, style and grace across various styles.

Within that the whole recording has a sense of being grounded. And when I say grounded I don’t mean heavy. In Boyd’s rendition of Downland’s Fantasie (one of the recording’s highlights for me), for example, there is just an exquisite lightness, and a fantastic sonorous, bell-like tone in the playing. The lightness achieved is “grounded” by a real sense of surety in the playing. It’s a sense of musical surety that true mastery of an instrument brings.

The big highlight on this recording for me is de Falla’s The Miller’s Dance (arr. Tim Kain). As If you’re a classical guitar fan I’m sure you’re aware that this piece is already on a thousand recordings. This particular offering, however, is delivered with an assured gentleness and elegance and not the oft-times overblown machismo and bravado that can accompany such a piece. This version genuinely put this piece in a new light for me, and that’s not something that happens very often. Rupert also has an elegance of tone to match the elegance of approach – simply wonderful, rounded and full.

Also well worth a mention are the beautiful renditions of four Celtic traditional tunes (arranged by David Russell). As someone who used to play in a folk group back in the day these kinds of pieces have a soft spot in my heart anyway, but in the wrong hands they can have the ability to sound twee and trite. Not so the case here with Rupert Boyd’s wonderful playing, which again is graceful and the right touch of melancholia.

In a nutshell: A wonderful tour around the modern (and not so modern!) guitar repertoire played by a modern master with sureity of style, full of elegance, and assured gentleness.

Who is Rupert Boyd?

 

Rupert holds degrees from the Australian National University School of Music, the Manhattan School of Music and Yale University School of Music. And his performing career has taken him across four continents, from New York’s Carnegie Hall, to festivals in Europe, China, India, Nepal, the Philippines and Australia.

In addition to winning the Andrés Segovia award from the Manhattan School of Music, Rupert Boyd was a winner of the Lillian Fuchs Chamber Music Competition and the Eisenberg-Fried Concerto Competition.

What does Rupert himself have to say about Fantasías?

Speaking about Fantasías, Rupert Boyd says “I am very excited to share this new CD, which is the first solo album that I’ve recorded in eight years. The album is a collection of some of my favourite compositions for solo guitar, including classic works from the guitar canon, and a number of lesser known, but wonderful gems. It was recorded in a beautiful church and I couldn’t be happier with the clarity of the recording, which perfectly captures the church’s wonderful acoustics. In music, the title fantasia was given to a piece of no fixed form, and which was intended to be an exploration through the imagination of the composer. I like to think that this album as a whole, in just over an hour, can transport the listener on a journey that traverses over four hundred years and across four continents. I hope that all audiences, from the connoisseur of classical music, to anyone who enjoys music or the guitar can find something they love.”

Album Review: Falling Like Tears – mimi duo

I have been super-fortunate once again over the past few weeks to have the pleasure of listening to and reviewing another wonderful new recording, comprised of almost entirely original compositions (save one piece). Falling Like Tears is the first (and Kickstarter campaign-backed) recording from classical guitar and piano pairing, mimi duo. Also being a pianist, as well as classical guitarist myself I was quite excited to listen to this recording.

The WA based mimi duo features guitarist, composer and arranger Duncan Gardiner and pianist Setsu Masuda. Masuda’s story as a musician I find particularly interesting and heart-warming in that she returned to piano after a hiatus only in 2009, and holds now the AMusA and LMusA from the AMEB as well as performing in the mimi duo and other performance settings. A super talented woman!

Gardiner is perhaps more well-known to those in Western Australian and Australian classical guitar circles and already having toured internationally, and with three albums and a book of original works to his name. A super talented chap!

mimi duo have been playing and performing together since 2012 and in 2015 they featured as guest soloists with the Fremantle Symphony Orchestra. This year (2016) sees them take to the international stage with a tour of Japan. A super talented duo!

Falling Like Tearsmimi duo’s first recording is somewhat a case of art inspiring art inspiring art. A good proportion of the recording has been inspired by a story – The Rose, the Butterfly, the Bee and the Moth – written by renowned author Jane Harrison. Harrison’s story had then been illustrated and turned into an art book, apparently a sculptural art installation which opens up like a concertina, by artist Jo Darvall.

I won’t give the game away on the story, but Harrison’s story is presented with some of Darvall’s artwork within the beautifully presented CD packaging with the recording.

Again,without wanting to give the story away (and I encourage to you to head over to iTunes or www.mimiduo.com.au to grab your own copy) each of the pieces has been very sensitively composed and very much reflective of the different phases of the story it has been written around.

It’s challenging to pick a favourite track from the recording as they’re all really lovely pieces in their own right (each ranging from around 2 minutes to about 7 minutes in length), 15 tracks in all.

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If I had to be pinned down to favourite track, however, I would probably have to go with Slowly, Deeply, which is a crucial pinnacle point in the story.

Slowly, Deeply is a piece featuring a bittersweet, slightly melancholy piano melody to the fore, with the guitar providing some wonderfully coloured, shimmering chords (great playing, and fabulous tonal shifts and control on the part of Duncan). The piece, about halfway through, then moves into a more urgent, pressing reinforced melody from the piano, with some fabulous tremolo action in the background from the guitar. The guitar then drops away with quite dramatic effect to leave the piano playing solo with plenty of sustain pedal, before the guitar then enters again with some wonderful fade in-fade out chords. A very beautiful piece.

And if I had to be pinned down to another favourite I’d go with A Thousand Cranes Beat Their Wings – a wonderful, Japanese-inspired interplay between the guitar and piano. This piece is not a part of the The Rose, the Butterfly, the Bee and the Moth story, but rather a piece that Duncan was inspired to write following the terrible earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan in 2011. The mood and style of the piece is one that fits in very well indeed with the mood and style of this recording.

All in all, Falling Like Tears is an incredibly beautiful piece of work, featuring some wonderful original compositions for guitar and piano, presented in a manner sensitive to the music being presented by two clearly talented musicians. I highly recommend this recording if you’re a fan of contemporary classical guitar, of new music or of heartfelt and haunting lyrical melodies and soundscapes.

Visit www.mimiduo.com.au to find out more about mimi duo and to grab your own copy of Falling Like Tears. You can also do the download the album from iTunes.