TAKING SHOSTAKOVICH OUT

by Edward Ware

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1.
Fugue 2 02:45
2.
Fugue 5 03:01
3.
Fugue 6 03:56
4.
Fugue 8 03:07
5.
Fugue 11 02:03
6.
Fugue 12 03:18
7.
Prelude 14 06:02
8.
Fugue 14 03:17
9.
Fugue 17 02:52
10.
Fugue 21 03:18
11.
12.

about

liner notes:

Context and meaning exist in relationship, and this is as apparent in life as it is in art. How we understand and use a language clearly impacts our engagement with the world we inhabit, our perceptions and our interpretations of it. Do ideas have their own innate pure meaning or does this arise only from our relationship with them?

Music, that most fluid of our arts, is a paradoxically emphatic and liberal conveyor of meaning, idea and culture. Just consider for a moment the startlingly disparate political and social ideologies to which the music of Wagner and Beethoven have famously been attached. As a composer living in communist Russia, Shostakovich (1906 - 1975) had to navigate an often shifting political context that could quickly impact the perceived meaning of his music.

Symphonic writing by its nature, tends to the more public sphere and equally perhaps, the more intimate character of string quartet or piano music to the more personal.

Shostakovich wrote his 24 preludes and fugues on his return from the Bicentennial Bach competitions in Leipzig in 1950 (in a blistering surge of creativity spanning a mere three and a half months). Although clearly written as a complete cycle the works component parts each posses a wonderfully distinct character, and it is this diversity within the strict confines of 'academic fugue' that allows us to (as Alexander Melnikov writes in the liner notes to his Harmonia Mundi recording of the cycle in 2008/'09) appreciate “...the sheer amount of virtuosity and genius required..." from Shostakovich to create such a composition.

The idea for this recording comes in part, from an interest in exploring the impulses from which the demands of improvised music can spring - what kind of material? - an entire tune, a few notes, a theme, a texture, a sound - how does the starting point impact an immediate response? but also the question of context and meaning. If we take an idea and put it somewhere else, what will it reveal? How will we perceive it? What unexpected insights might arise?

'Taking Shostakovich Out' is an exploration of these kinds of concerns; an allusion to the importance of creativity, open mindedness, free will and the vitality of the human spirit.

Edward Ware, Barcelona - August 2022

credits

released September 9, 2022

concept/drums - Edward Ware

soprano sax - Chris Kelsey

engineer - Peter Karl

recorded - December 2021
Acoustic Recording, Brooklyn, New York

mixed and mastered - July 2022
New Village Studio, Barcelona
by Edward Ware with Julian Jahanpour

cover art: Zoe Tisato

a madlabmusic production

www.madlabmusic.com

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all rights reserved

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about

Edward Ware New York, New York

I moved from New Zealand to New York in 1990 looking for the stimulus and challenges of life in an artistic centre of international stature and reputation. My work is equally inspired by the influences of visual art, literature and poetry as it is by the sonic worlds of other composers.
I currently spend my time between NYC and Barcelona. More info. can be found at my web site.
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