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Garth Baxter: Ask the Moon
Composer Garth Baxter makes his Parma debut with a collection of his exquisite works for voice entitled Ask the Moon. This album is about the human condition and the pursuit of light in darkness. A setting of Sara Teasdaleâs âNights Without Sleep,â for voice and piano commences the albumâs journey of introspection. Then there is Three MadrigalsââThere is a Lady Sweet and Kind,â combines the elegance of the English art song with the character of a Stephen Foster folk tune; the performance of âThe Silver Swan,â a dark Irish ballad of sorts, is evocative of the Leontyne Price recordings of Samuel Barberâs art songs; âLove Me Not for Comely Grace,â embodies its text, demonstrating the sweet, yet complicated burden of affections. Following is âIs This the Cost?â an elegiac exemplar of Baxterâs flair for dramatic writing derived from Act II, Scene II of his opera Lily (Lisa VanAuken, librettist). Four Views of Love begins with âWhen You Are Old,â a reflective setting of the classic Yeats text. Be prepared for an incredible climax that expresses fully the ranges of the piano and the human voice trailed by blissful catharsis. Closing the album is Skywriting, a cycle âdrawing on words by Linda Pastan.â In the composerâs own wordsââ[Pastanâs] poems have so often touched me so deeply and in such a very personal way that it feels as if she has been listening to my thoughts. The title of the album, Ask the Moon, comes from the closing line of the final song, âWhy are your poems so dark?ââ
$16.99
Garth Baxter: Ask the Moonâ
$16.99
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Composer Garth Baxter makes his Parma debut with a collection of his exquisite works for voice entitled Ask the Moon. This album is about the human condition and the pursuit of light in darkness. A setting of Sara Teasdaleâs âNights Without Sleep,â for voice and piano commences the albumâs journey of introspection. Then there is Three MadrigalsââThere is a Lady Sweet and Kind,â combines the elegance of the English art song with the character of a Stephen Foster folk tune; the performance of âThe Silver Swan,â a dark Irish ballad of sorts, is evocative of the Leontyne Price recordings of Samuel Barberâs art songs; âLove Me Not for Comely Grace,â embodies its text, demonstrating the sweet, yet complicated burden of affections. Following is âIs This the Cost?â an elegiac exemplar of Baxterâs flair for dramatic writing derived from Act II, Scene II of his opera Lily (Lisa VanAuken, librettist). Four Views of Love begins with âWhen You Are Old,â a reflective setting of the classic Yeats text. Be prepared for an incredible climax that expresses fully the ranges of the piano and the human voice trailed by blissful catharsis. Closing the album is Skywriting, a cycle âdrawing on words by Linda Pastan.â In the composerâs own wordsââ[Pastanâs] poems have so often touched me so deeply and in such a very personal way that it feels as if she has been listening to my thoughts. The title of the album, Ask the Moon, comes from the closing line of the final song, âWhy are your poems so dark?ââ


