Classical The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/classical/6460-melnyk-lubomir.feed 2024-05-19T21:09:35Z Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management Lubomyr Melnyk - Illirion (2016) 2019-01-03T15:04:28Z 2019-01-03T15:04:28Z http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/classical/6460-melnyk-lubomir/24617-lubomyr-melnyk-illirion-2016.html bluesever administration@theblues-thatjazz.com <p><strong>Lubomyr Melnyk - Illirion (2016)</strong></p> <p><img src="http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/ObrMuz/Classical/Melnyk/illirion.jpg" border="0" alt="Image could not be displayed. Check browser for compatibility." /></p> <pre><em> 1 Beyond Romance 16:12 2 Solitude No. 1 (Live) 7:36 3 Sunset 3:49 4 Cloud No. 81 16:02 5 Illirion 14:12 </em> Lubomyr Melnyk - piano </pre> <p> </p> <p>It's easy to write off a musician like Lubomyr Melnyk. Track down any nay-sayer (which is easy to do, thank you Internet comments) and you'll probaby hear or read variations of these complaints: it's just repetition. He's just playing broken chords and no melody. Sure, he can play 19 notes in a second, but speed doesn't make for great music. The Ukranian-born pianist has been in the recording business for close to 40 years now, so I'm going to treat such criticisms as old hat. Instead, I'd like to approach for what it is -- a demonstration of Melnyk's self-styled niche.</p> <p>If you are new to Lubomyr Melnyk's musical approach, it's something he calls "continuous music". He'll rapidly play a figure over and over again, sometimes with only the slightest variation along the way, with the artistic purpose of providing the listener with a soft bed of sound. It's like when electronic musicians produce a drone to hypnotize you; only musicians like Melnyk have to accomplish the same effect the acoustic way. Hence, the necessity (or the desire?) for him to produce as many as 19 keystrokes within any given second. Being a fan of composers like Terry Riley, Melnyk decided early in his career that sounds were more crucial to his pieces than their nuts-and-bolts content. With five pieces clocking in at almost an hour, you're in for some long form meditations on Illirion.</p> <p>These five tracks were recorded over the span of three years in various places. Three were recorded in a studio in Winnipeg in 2012, 2013, and 2014, and the remaining two were recorded in the Netherlands with one being a live performance. "Beyond Romance", "Cloud No. 81", and the title track all hover around the 15-minute mark. That's an awful lot of notes, but it certainly doesn't feel like it. This brand of minimalism illustrates the difference between absorbing many notes and withstanding many notes.</p> <p>"Cloud No. 81" is one track that doesn't rely on swift arpeggios to get its point across. Instead, it plays with a shifting emphasis as chords pop up and down like pistons. Just when you think you have the rhythmic pattern nailed down, Melnyk shifts it by one degree. It remains the same figure, but it travels by way of a completely different walk. Opener "Beyond Romance" is the biggest display of the pianist's tantric approach, spreading the arpeggios high and wide for more than 16 minutes.</p> <p>"Sunset", Illirion's shortest number, is probably the fastest composition here. Curiously, it also spends a great deal of time toiling away in the piano's lower register, giving the song a rumbling effect no matter how many high notes he tickles. If the tempo of "Sunset" is furious, then "Solitude No. 1", the lone in-concert recording, is probably the slowest and most orthodox sounding. In the album's liner notes, Melnyk seems ready to admit that this song is more about the key changes than the rapid-fire ambience -- a piece to encapsulate progression and an eventual return to its starting point.</p> <p>Closing number "Illirion" is out to tie up all these traits into one 14-minute ball of flame -- or at least that's how it comes across. "This piece presents the pure sound of the piano in its initial opening quietude, where we can hear the marvelous deep cave-like resonance of the entire instrument singing in its soul". More fodder for the hater's cannon, for sure. It's also a work of art developed deeply in earnest. The only hyperbole I take issue with is Lubomyr Melnyk's reputation as a "prophet of the piano". How do you prophesize from a piano? ---John Garratt, popmatters.com</p> <p>download (mp3 @320 kbs):</p> <p><a href="https://yadi.sk/d/WTycw6pPTCBZIw" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">yandex </a> <a href="https://www.mediafire.com/file/vlnbobi53qdnuf8/LbmrMlnk-I16.zip/file" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">mediafire</a> <a href="https://ulozto.net/!nagIXwnIU1ke/lbmrmlnk-i16-zip" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">ulozto </a> <a href="http://ge.tt/7WGVqbt2" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">gett</a></p> <p> </p> <p><a href="http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/javascript:history.back();">back</a></p> <p><strong>Lubomyr Melnyk - Illirion (2016)</strong></p> <p><img src="http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/ObrMuz/Classical/Melnyk/illirion.jpg" border="0" alt="Image could not be displayed. Check browser for compatibility." /></p> <pre><em> 1 Beyond Romance 16:12 2 Solitude No. 1 (Live) 7:36 3 Sunset 3:49 4 Cloud No. 81 16:02 5 Illirion 14:12 </em> Lubomyr Melnyk - piano </pre> <p> </p> <p>It's easy to write off a musician like Lubomyr Melnyk. Track down any nay-sayer (which is easy to do, thank you Internet comments) and you'll probaby hear or read variations of these complaints: it's just repetition. He's just playing broken chords and no melody. Sure, he can play 19 notes in a second, but speed doesn't make for great music. The Ukranian-born pianist has been in the recording business for close to 40 years now, so I'm going to treat such criticisms as old hat. Instead, I'd like to approach for what it is -- a demonstration of Melnyk's self-styled niche.</p> <p>If you are new to Lubomyr Melnyk's musical approach, it's something he calls "continuous music". He'll rapidly play a figure over and over again, sometimes with only the slightest variation along the way, with the artistic purpose of providing the listener with a soft bed of sound. It's like when electronic musicians produce a drone to hypnotize you; only musicians like Melnyk have to accomplish the same effect the acoustic way. Hence, the necessity (or the desire?) for him to produce as many as 19 keystrokes within any given second. Being a fan of composers like Terry Riley, Melnyk decided early in his career that sounds were more crucial to his pieces than their nuts-and-bolts content. With five pieces clocking in at almost an hour, you're in for some long form meditations on Illirion.</p> <p>These five tracks were recorded over the span of three years in various places. Three were recorded in a studio in Winnipeg in 2012, 2013, and 2014, and the remaining two were recorded in the Netherlands with one being a live performance. "Beyond Romance", "Cloud No. 81", and the title track all hover around the 15-minute mark. That's an awful lot of notes, but it certainly doesn't feel like it. This brand of minimalism illustrates the difference between absorbing many notes and withstanding many notes.</p> <p>"Cloud No. 81" is one track that doesn't rely on swift arpeggios to get its point across. Instead, it plays with a shifting emphasis as chords pop up and down like pistons. Just when you think you have the rhythmic pattern nailed down, Melnyk shifts it by one degree. It remains the same figure, but it travels by way of a completely different walk. Opener "Beyond Romance" is the biggest display of the pianist's tantric approach, spreading the arpeggios high and wide for more than 16 minutes.</p> <p>"Sunset", Illirion's shortest number, is probably the fastest composition here. Curiously, it also spends a great deal of time toiling away in the piano's lower register, giving the song a rumbling effect no matter how many high notes he tickles. If the tempo of "Sunset" is furious, then "Solitude No. 1", the lone in-concert recording, is probably the slowest and most orthodox sounding. In the album's liner notes, Melnyk seems ready to admit that this song is more about the key changes than the rapid-fire ambience -- a piece to encapsulate progression and an eventual return to its starting point.</p> <p>Closing number "Illirion" is out to tie up all these traits into one 14-minute ball of flame -- or at least that's how it comes across. "This piece presents the pure sound of the piano in its initial opening quietude, where we can hear the marvelous deep cave-like resonance of the entire instrument singing in its soul". More fodder for the hater's cannon, for sure. It's also a work of art developed deeply in earnest. The only hyperbole I take issue with is Lubomyr Melnyk's reputation as a "prophet of the piano". How do you prophesize from a piano? ---John Garratt, popmatters.com</p> <p>download (mp3 @320 kbs):</p> <p><a href="https://yadi.sk/d/WTycw6pPTCBZIw" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">yandex </a> <a href="https://www.mediafire.com/file/vlnbobi53qdnuf8/LbmrMlnk-I16.zip/file" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">mediafire</a> <a href="https://ulozto.net/!nagIXwnIU1ke/lbmrmlnk-i16-zip" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">ulozto </a> <a href="http://ge.tt/7WGVqbt2" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">gett</a></p> <p> </p> <p><a href="http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/javascript:history.back();">back</a></p> Lubomyr Melnyk - Melnyk: Fallen Trees (2018) 2019-02-27T14:36:09Z 2019-02-27T14:36:09Z http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/classical/6460-melnyk-lubomir/24894-lubomyr-melnyk-melnyk-fallen-trees-2018.html bluesever administration@theblues-thatjazz.com <p><strong>Lubomyr Melnyk - Melnyk: Fallen Trees (2018)</strong></p> <p><img src="http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/ObrMuz/Classical/Melnyk/fallen.jpg" border="0" alt="Image could not be displayed. Check browser for compatibility." /></p> <pre><em> A1 Requiem For A Fallen Tree A2 Son Of Parasol A3 Barcarolle Fallen Trees B1.1 Part I: Preamble B1.2 Part II: Existence B1.3 Part III: Apparition B1.4 Part IV: They Are Down B1.5 Part V: Not Forgotten </em> David Allred - Voices Lubomyr Melnyk - Composer, Piano, Primary Artist, Voices Anne Müller - Cello Hatis Noit - Composer, Voices Robert Raths - Art Direction, Producer, Voices </pre> <p> </p> <p>Following his somewhat underwhelming major-label debut Illirion, which felt like an airbrushed greeting card-ization of his innovative style, pianist Lubomyr Melnyk returned to Erased Tapes with his 2018 release Fallen Trees. Inspired by train voyages through deep European forests, the album is vast and detailed, but there's a rhythmic drive which the listener's mind hooks onto like a cable car. Pieces like "Son of Parasol" can be likened to minimalism because of their hypnotic repetition and gradual change, but this feels much more complex and involved. And on pieces like the marvelous "Barcarolle," there are heavy servings of heart-warming sentimentality, only enhanced by Melnyk's technical prowess. "Requiem for a Fallen Tree" features the otherworldly vocals of Hatis Noit, who perfectly conveys a feeling of being whisked away, just as Melnyk's piano playing does. The second half of the album is taken up by the five-part "Fallen Trees" suite, which sounds like an entire cross-country journey boiled down to 21 minutes. Centerpiece "Apparition" is made all the more breathtaking due to the presence of cellist Anne Müller and guest vocalist David Allred. Fallen Trees is an excellent example of Melnyk's artful and accessible form of music, which never sacrifices heart for sheer technical ability. ---Paul Simpson, AllMusic Review</p> <p>download (mp3 @320 kbs):</p> <p><a href="https://yadi.sk/d/xtiCje1lYf45wg" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">yandex </a> <a href="https://www.mediafire.com/file/fvdrr12ryre5wc1/LbmrMlnk-MFT18.zip/file" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">mediafire</a> <a href="https://ulozto.net/!nlPmUb1uHcYo/lbmrmlnk-mft18-zip" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">ulozto </a> <a href="http://ge.tt/20Kkkdu2" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">gett </a> <a href="https://bayfiles.com/1bH6T6u6b5/LbmrMlnk-MFT18_zip" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">bayfiles</a></p> <p> </p> <p><a href="http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/javascript:history.back();">back</a></p> <p><strong>Lubomyr Melnyk - Melnyk: Fallen Trees (2018)</strong></p> <p><img src="http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/ObrMuz/Classical/Melnyk/fallen.jpg" border="0" alt="Image could not be displayed. Check browser for compatibility." /></p> <pre><em> A1 Requiem For A Fallen Tree A2 Son Of Parasol A3 Barcarolle Fallen Trees B1.1 Part I: Preamble B1.2 Part II: Existence B1.3 Part III: Apparition B1.4 Part IV: They Are Down B1.5 Part V: Not Forgotten </em> David Allred - Voices Lubomyr Melnyk - Composer, Piano, Primary Artist, Voices Anne Müller - Cello Hatis Noit - Composer, Voices Robert Raths - Art Direction, Producer, Voices </pre> <p> </p> <p>Following his somewhat underwhelming major-label debut Illirion, which felt like an airbrushed greeting card-ization of his innovative style, pianist Lubomyr Melnyk returned to Erased Tapes with his 2018 release Fallen Trees. Inspired by train voyages through deep European forests, the album is vast and detailed, but there's a rhythmic drive which the listener's mind hooks onto like a cable car. Pieces like "Son of Parasol" can be likened to minimalism because of their hypnotic repetition and gradual change, but this feels much more complex and involved. And on pieces like the marvelous "Barcarolle," there are heavy servings of heart-warming sentimentality, only enhanced by Melnyk's technical prowess. "Requiem for a Fallen Tree" features the otherworldly vocals of Hatis Noit, who perfectly conveys a feeling of being whisked away, just as Melnyk's piano playing does. The second half of the album is taken up by the five-part "Fallen Trees" suite, which sounds like an entire cross-country journey boiled down to 21 minutes. Centerpiece "Apparition" is made all the more breathtaking due to the presence of cellist Anne Müller and guest vocalist David Allred. Fallen Trees is an excellent example of Melnyk's artful and accessible form of music, which never sacrifices heart for sheer technical ability. ---Paul Simpson, AllMusic Review</p> <p>download (mp3 @320 kbs):</p> <p><a href="https://yadi.sk/d/xtiCje1lYf45wg" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">yandex </a> <a href="https://www.mediafire.com/file/fvdrr12ryre5wc1/LbmrMlnk-MFT18.zip/file" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">mediafire</a> <a href="https://ulozto.net/!nlPmUb1uHcYo/lbmrmlnk-mft18-zip" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">ulozto </a> <a href="http://ge.tt/20Kkkdu2" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">gett </a> <a href="https://bayfiles.com/1bH6T6u6b5/LbmrMlnk-MFT18_zip" target="_blank" onclick="window.open(this.href,'newwin','left=27,width=960,height=720,menubar=1,toolbar=1,scrollbars=1,status=1,resizable=1');return false;">bayfiles</a></p> <p> </p> <p><a href="http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/javascript:history.back();">back</a></p>