North
Africa
North
Africa opens with an unusual cicada-like ostinato. The melodic voice, colored
with an exotic tuning, moves from clavichord to harpsichord, and ends with harp.
First
Instrument was named for the featured trumpet timbre, which was the first instrument
I ever played, beginning at the age of nine. The trumpet is surrounded by a
rich array of tone colors throughout the three contrasting movements of the
piece.
Rainbow
Sprinkles, inspired by a famous Brazilian melody, takes unexpected melodic and
timbral turns, led by an incisive harpsichord voice.
China
Gem is the last piece composed for my first midi sound module. (Purple Clouds
on The Forest, is the first piece composed for this instrument in 1989.) It
was followed by Giant Leaves on my Hamoa CD in compositional sequence. Named
for a jewelry store sign I noticed while visiting San Francisco, the music incorporates
some Indian tabla rhythms, making this the first of my compositions to demonstrate
the influence of my studies with Harihar Rao. The music begins and ends with
mysterious chords, building to a poly-rhythmic climax in-between.
African
Plains combines various rhythmic ostinatos with a through-composed melodic voice.
Yucca
Tree, in four movements, is a wild conflagration of diverse timbres and textures.
The
music on this recording was composed in 1993 and 1994.
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Michael Robinson, December 1999, Lahaina
© 1999 Michael Robinson All rights reserved