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Archive for the ‘New Lullaby Project’ Category

A note from composer Hayg Boyadjian

I received this note on December 19th from composer Hayg Boyadjian.  I premiered his new lullaby, “Cancion de Cuna” on December 10 & 18 in Cambridge & Nashua.  I recorded and performed his ‘Mi Tango’ on an Albany Records release in 2010 (Listen or Watch)

Dear Aaron:

I was very impressed in a number of ways at your New Lullaby Project Premiere Concert at the New Music School on Saturday evening where you performed twelve lullabies for guitar solo, a good number of them world premieres, including my lullaby “Cancion de Cuna”.
Performing twelve mostly new works by twelve living composers is in my mind a great accomplishment, given the amount of work involved in learning these twelve pieces, which must have required a great deal of commitment on your part. I should say that we composers are lucky to have a musician of your caliber and dedication in presenting these new works to audiences. One would have a hard time to imagine the challenges that you faced in learning these works written in a musical language that is not traditional, as the concert of Saturday demonstrated. I would wish that other musicians were as dedicated as you are in promoting the works of living composers, it is a priviledge to have you as a champion of our compositions.
Finally I should add that I enjoyed the performances of all the twelve lullabies. Each one of them written in a different musical idiom and each one communicating a different mood made the concert very interesting for its given variety.
Thank you for all your dedication to new music,

Hayg Boyadjian-composer

www.haygboyadjian.com

Hayg Boyadjian

Hayg & Aaron, Wellfleet 2010

2011 – A Musical Year in Review

El Show de Fernandito w/Marisela Marrero & Leonard Caplan

Welcome to my first Year-in-Review.  All of the names words with underlines are links.  Please check out the amazing collaborators, awesome publications and very cool video and recordings.   Enjoy,

-Aaron

2011 started off with a bang with a program titled, “A Minor Concert of Major Works”.  The last third featuring the awesome Kai-Ching Chang on piano for the Concierto de Aranjuez.  The concert earned my first review with the Boston Musical Intelligencer (Read Here). I also returned to El Show de Fernandito for a performance & interview (Watch).  Got moving on Twitter:  @AaronLC

John McDonald

February: A return to Harvard University’s Pusey Room Series, directed by Carson Cooman with the wonderful Duo Diavolo (Orlando Cela).  My debut at the Currier Museum of Art in Manchester (cupcakes included) was followed by a return to John McDonald’s Composition Seminar at Tufts University for a new lullaby sharing, and a trip out west to CSU Bakersfield, where Jim Scully & Roger Allen Cope hosted me for a recital and master class on their Guitar Arts Concert Series. Reviews of my New Lullaby CD appeared in Classical Guitar Magazine, Fanfare Magazine (2x), The Triangle, American Record Guide.

Woodville H.S., New Hampshire

Explaining the magic of nails at Lakeway Elem., Littleton, NH

March: A concert of contemporary music and a master class at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas was made possible by the wonderful New Lullaby composer Nolan Stolz (listen & watch on YouTube).  I returned to Colorado for concerts with the Alamosa Live Music Association (go Lucas Salazar!) at Adams State College, house concerts in Denver and Boulder, as well as much needed downtime in some amazing hot springs.  My return to Boston heard concerts for the Ligue Francophone and one of the most fantastic endeavors of 2011: a 13-performance, 3-concert and 3-workshop (20 events!) residency in one week in Northern New Hampshire (900 miles of driving!), sponsored by the Arts Alliance of Northern New Hampshire (AANNH) and NEFA.  Amazing!

Alamosa after-party, Mexican style

Gabriela Granados

April: After a giant blizzard, the AANNH Residency finished with a concert by Duo Diavolo.  The magical dancer Gabriela Granados & I brought ¡Con Fuego! to Springfield for a lively concert with City Music Springfield.  I appeared solo on Canary Burton’s ‘The Latest Score’ on WOMR, Provincetown.  Reached 600 fans on Facebook!

May: Premieres of New Lullabies by Thomas Schuttenhelm and Michael Veloso in Cohasset & Boston, Mass.  Started Greater Boston House Concerts with the first performance by violinist Shaw-Pong Liu. Joined the faculty of the Boston Conservatory with Berit Strong and Olav Chris Henriksen to revamp the classical guitar program; a very cool month!

Thomas Schuttenhelm

June: Repeat performance of the May New Lullabies and ¡Con Fuego! was joined by cellist Rafael Popper-Keizer for its debut, during a downpour, at the International Festival of Arts & Ideas in New Haven, CT.  A repeat performance in Cambridge rocked!  WATCH Polo by De Falla (cello & guitar)

Rafael Popper-Keizer at Arts Ideas

July: Demonstrated how to say ¡Olé¡ at an Enrichment Program in the Berkshires (watch). Read review.  I gave a Spanish themed performance for the 2nd Greater Boston House Concert. (Read review)

Teo Morca, Catherine, Gabriela, Cee Bearden

August: ¡Con Fuego! set out west with Gabriela Granados, Catherine Larget-Caplan as navigator, for performances in Taos, NM (Taos Academy of Arts), & Alamosa (KRZA), Leadville (Tabor Opera House) and Centennial, Colorado.

September: Hurricane moved concerts and I moved people, musically speaking, on Cape Cod and at the University of Vermont in Burlington, where I premiered the first two 12-tone New Lullabies by Jacob Mashak and Patricia Julien and a 3-voice lullaby by Alan Fletcher.

October: Performances with pianist John Thomas and a solo enrichment program on the Cape and New Hampshire.  A new lullaby by Canary Burton was premiered as well.  Went down to Texas for debut performances at Esquina Tango in Austin & the Greater Houston Guitar Guild (radio too LISTEN). Sadly, Fort Worth fell through thanks to United/Continental (not fun!).  Texas premieres by Hayg Boyadjian, Jonathan Feist, Alan Fletcher, and Michael Veloso.  My work as an Artist Entrepreneur was featured in an article in the International Music Fraternity Mu Phi Epsilon’s magazine, The Triangle:  Building a career through talent and savvy.

Valerie Hartzell & GHGG

Apple Store Boston

November: Duo Diavolo teamed up for more concerts with Greater Boston House Concerts performing in Boston, Newton and Cape Cod the awesome music of Ravi Shankar, Astor Piazzolla, Enrique Granados and Toru Takemitsu. Reached 800 fans on Facebook!

Aaron & Orlando - Duo Diavolo

December: Duo Diavolo performed for the NEFA Idea Swap. The awesome chamber work Sextour Mystique (Mystic Sextet) by Villa-Lobos was performed by myself and  students from the Boston Conservatory.
• I recorded & released my first digital single:  Summertime by Gershwin arranged by Takemitsu (click to listen).
New Lullaby Project Concert was featured in the Jewish Advocate and the Dorchester Reporter.
A solo performance at the Apple Store was followed by a New Lullaby Project Premiere Concert of 12 New Lullabies (#’s 18-30) in Cambridge, MA and at Studio 99 in Nashua, NH, with seven composers present and milk & cookies.  The year ended with a performance and interview on Jewish Perspectives, a monthly program on Boston NBC 7.

New Lullaby Concert, 12/10/11, Francine Trester, Hayg Boyadjian, John McDonald, Martin Schreiner, Demetrius Spaneas, Patricia Julien and Jacob Mashak

2011 turned out to be pretty darn awesome!

***I know none of this would not be possible with the great love and support I receive from my wife Catherine Larget-Caplan and her sister Caroline. Thanks to the amazing composers who entrust their music to me; my duo partner Orlando Cela; all the organizations and people listed for making the concert/piece/article possible.  And to each person who takes a moment to just listen.  You rock!

Most Photos & Video courtesy of Catherine


Jewish Perspective on NBC, Dec. 25, 2011

I had the great honor of being interviewed and performing a few pieces on the Boston’s NBC 7 for the monthly show, Jewish Perspective.  I spoke mainly about the New Lullaby Project but wonderful questions got me speaking about sound, how we listen and my own background prior to classical music.  Playing live, with only the camera as audience, is a wonderful challenge that was both exhilarating and daunting.  

I performed two New Lullabies from the New Lullaby CD, Leaky Roof and No Time (listen), both by Jonathan Feist.  I also performed a beautiful arrangement by Toru Takemitsu of George Gershwin’s Summertime (iTunes).  I had recently recorded Summertime and seeing that it was winter I found it timely.

Jonathan Feist & Aaron on Jonathan's pond

It aired at 6am on Sunday morning and though I was up working until 3:30am I did not get to see it.  I hope to have some video from the show in early January.  If you did see the show please tell me what you thought. Thanks!

“ps. I should add that it is a bit ironic to have Gershwin and Jonathan Feist on a Jewish show on Christmas. Born Jewish, both have no use for religion. Feist recommended “It Ain’t Necessarily So” for an encore…”

JP photos by Catherine

Thoughts on the New Lullaby Project Premiere Concerts

On December 10th, I had the great honor of performing 12 New Lullabies:  five world premieres, seven Cambridge premieres.  It was fascinating!
The oldest lullaby was written in 2009 and the rest come from 2010-2011.  Also present at the recital were 7 of the 12 composers, a great honor, and a milk & cookies reception (thank you cookie composers and Catherine & Caroline!)  The program was repeated on 12/18/11 at Studio 99 in Nashua.  The Milk and Cookies were quite a wonderful treat.  Organic milk is always a must!   Read on for my thoughts on the pieces and some video.

The Program:

Wiegenlied (2011) by Thomas Schuttenhelm
The Moon Through The Window Shines Down (2009) by Thomas L. Read
Lullaby in Three Voices (2011) by Alan Fletcher
Song for Daddy* (2011) by Francine Trester
Cancion de Cuna* (2010) by Hayg Boyadjian
Upward* (2011) by John McDonald
Whispers (2011) by Canary Burton
A Lullaby for Restless Times* (2010) by Martin Schreiner
Little Dancer (2010) by Michael Veloso
After Many Days Without Rain (2011) by Patricia Julien
Lulubye (2011) by Jacob Mashak
A Child Sings at Thanksgiving *(2010) by Demetrius Spaneas
* World Premiere

Aaron and New Lullaby Project Composers: Trester, Boyadjian, McDonald, Schreiner, Spaneas, Julien, Mashak

Played without an intermission and a minimum of talking, relatively speaking, the concert was just about an hour.  I found the greatest challenge to the program to be actually creating an order to the program.  Though each piece was unique in its musical language of a lullaby the pacing of the concert was a concern.  A flashy start and finish was impossible, yet the basic of a program needed to be present:  beginning, middle and end.

I found myself creating rough descriptions of the pieces either in their harmonic qualities or their construction, i.e. 12-tone, contrapuntal, repetitive, tonal, warm vs. sparse.

My Thoughts (these are not final and do not represent the composer’s, see their program notes for that)

I opened with Wiegenlied by Thomas Schuttenhelm, as since its premiere in May 2011 it has received repeated performances, so I felt very comfortable, but also it has qualities that I love, harmonics, unusual harmonies, and a lulling middle section that I think exemplifies the New Lullaby Project: it is contemporary music and clearly a lullaby.  Thomas also writes some mean program notes (click here to read)

Thomas L. Read‘s lullaby received its premiere in 2010 and though simple in its construction (repetitive bass figure and heart breaking melody) it is actually quite a challenge.  In an effort to keep lines legato and the bass figure consistent the left hand does some wonderful acrobats.  Though I find the piece full of a restrained passion it is hypnotic.  A real gem.

Alan Fletcher’s Lullaby in 3 Voices is the most technically difficult of this program and possibly of the whole batch of New Lullabies.  I don’t say that as a criticism, for I find it quite beautiful and though I have heard the moments of magic they don’t always occur in the concert!  A mere 30 measures, the piece requires the performer to hear and respect each of the three voices (each singing a lullaby or do the three together make the lullaby or both?).  I look forward to the continued discoveries in this finger twister.

Song for Daddy is Francine Trester’s second New Lullaby.  The first being My Darling’s Slumber recorded on the New Lullaby CD.  I find it amazing to play a second piece by a composer especially soon after the first.  The language is understood from the start, signs and symbols are no longer a mystery but something to be fulfilled.  I also like to think that the composer is writing with their last experience of me in mind.

Song for Daddy on Youtube

Cancion de Cuna by Hayg Boyadjian is the second work I have played of his but the first lullaby.  (I recorded his Mi Tango for his Albany CD Vientos, 2010).  Hayg’s language is unique and playful.  Often using the guitar as a single voice the player moves quickly throughout the range of the fretboard with vibrato, thick sound and unusual rhythms.  As in every piece of Hayg’s, there is a moment of sheer difficulty.  Four bars of this lullaby took many, many hours.  The biggest challenge though was having to sing the finally melody, in Spanish, as I played.  The first time was rough but it creates an amazing effect.  To many more!

Upward is John McDonald’s second New Lullaby as well.  His first being You Are Alone To Sleep recorded on the New Lullaby CD.  Probably the sparsest of this set of new lullabies, John has each phrase move in a lulling rhythm from the lowest notes upward to three octaves above harmonics all in the space of 4 or 5 notes.  A great effect and I got to work on my LH thumb technique à la cello.  I found the sparse textures of this work to be a good compliment to follow Hayg’s. (His program note is beautiful)

Whispers is a sweet work by Canary Burton that reminds me of Provincetown and how the wind can whip by or massage your face.  From a single melodic line the music takes on unusual phrasing and odd intervals before relaxing on harmonics and lulling arpeggio.  The tossing and turning of an exciting dream or not deep sleep almost finishes the piece but just at the last moment calm returns, much as the sun on a summer afternoon on the Cape.  (I can’t say this is what she  imagined but as a performer I can take liberties.)

Martin Schreiner’s lullaby is the 2nd of the contrapuntal lullabies though it comes in and out as the restlessness of the title is due the contra-rhythms of the voices 3/4 and 6/8.  Sometimes the voices move together and then they quickly move apart to return to each other.  I find the dynamics of his writing be just right with the repetitiveness complimented but the color and dynamic changes.  Though the piece begins simply each new section, in essence, expands on the melody and harmony: a new bass note, larger dynamic.  All said, I found the harmonic section though all natural harmonics to be quite challenging in the balance of the harmonics and accompanying strings.  This lullaby will continue to grow and be explored.

Michael Velosos’ Little Dancer, as its title suggests contains both the lullaby aspects of the genre and a bit of dance.  The lullaby starts sweet with fleshy chords and a nice wide melody before the 4th string motif begins, but then a little dance sneaks in, and before we know it we are accelerating and moving along in an accented 6/4.  The climax of this section though is followed by some ultra-sweet harmonies and an awesome melody on the second string.  The coda has us back in a lulling rhythm though are melody still moves throughout 2-2.5 octave range.  I found the extra movement in this piece very helpful in making the program move to the final three works.

After Many Days Without Rain is the first 12-tone lullaby on the program.  As testament to Patricia Julien’s abilities the work is so much more than just a mere theory exercise.  It is beautifully written, not a note needed to be changed, lush in its voicing, free in its positioning and also demanding.  The rhythm is 5/4 and the resolution of sleep is a wonderful find.

Lulubye is the 3rd submission by Jacob Mashak, and my favorite.  Also a 12-tone lullaby, Jacob’s varies greatly from Patricia’s.  In two voices most of the work, the work begins quite quietly with short phrases.  Each section has a similar figure that grows in notes and harmonically before coming back down to pp.  The shape of the whole work being a big hairpin < > .  One of the listeners on Sunday 12/18 in Nashua was particularly moved by this work.

A Child Sings at Thanksgiving by Demetrius Spaneas came to me as the closer of the main program for a number of reasons.  Its repetitive and great harmonies, lulling rhythms, singing melody and a second half of beautiful harmonics.  It also re-imagines the” Thanksgiving Hymn “We Gather Together” in an abstracted and fleeting way, the work perhaps evokes an adult’s distant memories of holidays past.”  I have not received many work that are arrangements or re-imagining (see Trester and McDonald’s first lullabies) and I found that quality quite becoming.  A Child Sings is brief, sweet and beautiful, and a lot of fun to play.

VIDEO A Child Sings At Thanksgiving, 12/10

As an encore I performed Toru Takemitsu’s Summertime by George Gershwin.  This work inspired the New Lullaby Project back in 2006 and so I found it to be a fitting end for this one.  I also just recorded it:  http://aaronlargetcaplan.bandcamp.com/

Lullabies aren’t just for kids – The Jewish Advocate, 12/9/11

Jewish Advocate Article 12/9/11

A New Work by Univ. of New Hampshire Composer Ryan Vigil

I opened my mail today to find an amazing gift of music!  Composer and good friend, Ryan Vigil, sent me a new composition like one I have never seen:  an evening length work for solo guitar; 69:30!

I am honored by the dedication and even more so by the fact that he felt inspired to create this music “out of an experience at a guitar recital by Aaron Larget-Caplan.”  Isn’t that exciting!

He writes in the note:

“I found myself struck by the unique loveliness of the sound as, in between pieces, Aaron quietly, and carefully, tuned his instrument.  Of course, the tuning of a guitar at a guitar recital is not at all uncommon; yet, on this particular occasion I was struck by the particular beauty of the instrument.  The delicate sound of harmonics and open strings; the natural and unselfconscious manner of execution; and the concentrated listening Aaron was engaged in all struck me.  In particular, the sound of the instrument – which I have long admired – struck me as more beautiful than ever before.  A short while later I decided to compose a piece which celebrated that sound, and that unselfconscious, highly attuned, kind of listening.  In recognition of the genesis of the composition, as well as my gratitude for his continuing friendship and advocacy for my music, this piece is dedicated to Aaron Larget-Caplan”

Sharing music of another for the public is a great honor, and it is truly wonderful to receive such a gift and responsibility.  I am just the messenger but a very happy messenger!

Thank you Ryan.

ps. Ryan Vigil is featured on my New Lullaby CD with the final track:  Shhhh – www.NewLullabyProject.com

pps. I’ll start working on it very soon so the public can hear more of the magic that is Ryan Vigil’s music.

Kate & Ryan Vigil with Aaron, "New Lullaby Concert" Littleton, New Hampshire

Classical Guitar Magazine “New Lullaby” CD Review

Classical Guitar Magazine (UK), February 2011, p. 47

“This disc of a programme comprised entirely of lullabies especially written for this recording project by a variety of American composers is sub-titled 14 Enchanting Ways to Fall Asleep; what a field-day any reviewer could have had with that title if only this was a poor, inconsequential recording.  As it is, here are 50+ minutes’ worth of attractive, mostly peaceful, compositions, music to sooth and relax to.

The liner notes tell of two distinct types of lullaby:  one which gives ‘warmth and protection to the listener’, the other being of a darker nature with ‘hints of fear’’ the greater part of New Lullaby is given to the former and due to the skill of the performer, the expertise of the writing and let’s not forget the first-rate quality of the recorded sound, this is an attractive package all-around.

Ideal late-night listening – recommended.”
– Steve Marsh

Purchase or Download New Lullaby at:  http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/AaronLargetCaplan

5-day Arts Residency in Northern New Hampshire

Join Aaron for Concerts (in Berlin, Littleton & Gorham) & “Artist as Entrepreneur” & Guitar Workshops

Aaron Larget-Caplan, a brilliant young Boston-based guitarist, is our guest artist for a five-day residency at North Country schools and other community sites Monday, March 28, through Friday, April 1.
“Aaron Larget-Caplan is a riveting artist whose musical styling begs immediate attention. His classical guitar performance was a treasure…”  –Washington Post
In addition to his work with students in area schools from Errol to Piermont, this talented artist will present three concerts, along with two guitar workshops and a lecture/discussion on “The Artist as Entrepreneur.”  Music lovers, artists, educators and community members — including families with children of all ages — are invited to join us at one or more of the public events!

Concerts

·  Noon, Monday, March 28 · The Bistro, White Mountains Community College,

Berlin (free, sponsored by the WMCC Student Senate)

· 6:30 pm, Tuesday, March 29 · Littleton Opera House, 2 Union St., Littleton ($10 adults, $15 families) — tickets at the door. This special concert, “New Lullabies & Dances,” is for everyone!  Children of all ages are invited to come in their PJs, join us for milk and cookies (supplied by the Littleton Food Coop), and hear lullabies new and old, by composers from Gershwin to UNH faculty member Ryan Vigil, who will be at the concert.  Read about Aaron’s New Lullaby Project athttp://www.aaronlc.com/newlullaby/
· 7 pm, Friday, April 1 · Gorham Auditorium, 20 Park St., Gorham ($10, $5 students, $20 families) — tickets at the door.  “The Nature of Dances and Dreams” is the first concert at the beautiful, newly renovated auditorium, and it’s a great start: Aaron is joined by Venezuelan cuatro player and flutist Orlando Cela, in a concert of Latin dances and works inspired by nature. The program includes “Venezuelan Waltzes” by Antonio Lauro, “History of the Tango” by Astor Piazzolla, and muisc of Erik Satie, Toru Takemitsu, David Vayo (NH premiere) and New Hampshire’s own Kevin Siegfried.

Workshops
All workshops are $10, $5 for students; preregistration requested (emailinfo@aannh.org or call 323-7302).

· 6:30 pm, Monday, March 28, at Old Mill Studio, 36 King Square, Whitefield:

The Artist as Entrepreneur. Artists in all disciplines are invited to this program about the value of being an entrepreneur for artists in the 21st century.  Aaron will cover topics addressing what the artist needs to do beyond his or her artwork, including using technology, the realities of operating a small business, marketing and promotion, and collaboration. Aaron will primarily use examples from music, but the lecture/discussion is appropriate for – and open to – all artists.

· 7 pm, Wednesday, March 30, Guitar Workshop at The Art Cellar, 75Main St., Plymouth (presented in partnership with Friends of the Arts). $10, $5 students.

· 6:30 pm, Thursday, March 31-  Guitar Workshop, Gorham Auditorium, 20 Park St., Gorham ($10, $5 students).

From tuning to stretching, scales and arpeggios to rasqueado (flamenco strumming), Aaron will introduce and work on warm-up techniques for guitarists at all levels, beginners to advanced. Though most of the focus will be on classical/fingerstyle techniques, all styles are welcome. Topics covered will include posture, right-hand technique, sound production, metronome work and more. Bring your guitar!

As part of each workshop, Aaron will offer a master-class session to one to three individuals who would like to perform and receive individual feedback in the group setting. If you would like to perform a piece, please call 323-7302 or emailinfo@aannh.org.  Bring your music as well as your guitar.

About Aaron Larget-Caplan

Boston-based guitarist Aaron Larget-Caplan was born in Oklahoma and raised in Colorado; he made his debut at the Tabor Opera House at 17 years of age and has since performed as a soloist and chamber musician in venues around the US and Europe.  In 2006 Aaron released “Tracing a wheel on water,” which the great American composer Ned Rorem called “Musical, affecting and skilled.”  That year he also founded the Spanish classical music and flamenco dance group ¡Con Fuego!

In 2007 Aaron began the New Lullaby Project, a multi-compositonal endeavor that collects new lullabies from composers throughout the world for guitar solo.

Aaron has received awards and grants from the American Composers Forum, D’Addario Foundation, Denver Classical Guitar Society, music fraternity Mu Phi Epsilon, and the Massachusetts Cultural Council. He is a graduate of the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, where he received an award as Outstanding Educator and Performer. He was the youngest solo roster artist with Young Audiences of Massachusetts.  His Arts Enrichment programs, “The Spirit of Spain” and “Latin Travels,”  have been called “enriching for all ages” & “a feast of sounds, colors and dance..” They are also educational and include stories, activities, poetry and anecdotes on the pieces and cultural history that allow the students of all ages and to approach music and life with better understanding.
Aaron’s residency is funded in part by the New England Foundation for the Arts through the NEA Regional Touring Progam, with support from the National Endowment for the Arts and the state arts agencies of New England, including the New Hampshire State Council on the Arts, and by the New Hampshire Electric Co-op Foundation and TransCanada. Thanks also to our community partners and sponsors, including the Old Mill Studio,  the Town of Gorham,  White Mountains Community College, Laconia Savings Bank, Loon Mountain, Littleton Coin, the Sunset Hill House (Sugar Hill), Libby’s Bistro (Gorham), 150 Main St. (Errol), and Town & Country Motor Inn (Shelburne).

Click here to download a schedule and event posters..

Please help us spread the word by forwarding this email to friends, colleagues and anyone you think may be interested!

American Record Guide New Lullaby CD Review

American Record Guide, January/February 2001, p. 227

New Lullaby

Composers: Job, Feist, Trester, Wheeler, Siegfried, Small, Stolz, Cooman, McDonald, Vayo, Leisner, Schwarts, Vigil
Aaron Larget-Caplan, guitar
Six String Sound 888-01 – 53 minutes

Mr. Larget-Caplan directs the New Lullaby Project from his home base in Boston.  Here he has collected 14 lullabies from 13 composers, most not well known (only David Leisner was familiar to me, and he as one of our finest guitarists who also composes).  All the pieces were composed between 2006 and 2009.  Each is well crafted, and each performance is well played and sensitive.  The notes include descriptions of each piece by its composer.

Larget-Caplan says in his introduction that the works are of two types, the first consoling and protective, but a second type that is quietly disturbing, as if on the edge of a sleep troubled with bad dreams.  They are presented in what might be described as ascending order of weirdness.  The early pieces are all fairly conventional, pretty, and soothing.  Others near the end have other qualities.  David Vayo’s ‘Berceuse’ is the longest piece, at seven minutes, and asks the performer to sing (or, in Larget-Caplan’s case, to moan) and whistle.  His notes don’t indicate that his intent was anything other than consoling, but the effect is rather creepy.

David Leisner’s ‘Disturbed, a Lullaby’ is indeed disturbing, with a non-tonal, pointillistic texture, as if he were attempting a quiet irony.  The final work, Ryan Vigil’s ‘Shhhh’, is done entirely in harmonics, with three strings tuned to alternate pitches.  The work is five minutes of nearly inaudible sounds that get even softer as the piece progresses.

It will come as no surprise that I don’t recommend that you hear this recording all in one sitting.  Every piece is quiet (don’t wake the baby!), and that can become monotonous.  Some pieces are charming, some disturbing.  –Keaton

Kenneth Keaton is a professor of music at a Florida university and has earned three degrees in classical guitar performance.

New Lullaby is available on Amazon, CDBaby and itunes

New Lullaby CD thoughts by Author Glenn Kurtz

This is a recent note I received from author Glenn Kurtz regarding my New Lullaby CD.  If you have not read his book, Practicing: A Musician’s Return to Music, I highly recommend it.  Most of all he writes beautifully.  Though it centers on the guitar it is a story that can speak to professional musicians or general lovers of music.  It speaks about aspects of life in a conservatory and what can follow, it is personal, and informative regarding the history the most beautiful instrument in life:  the guitar.  Thanks Glenn!

“It’s not every musician who invites you to fall asleep during his performance. But while it often happens at recitals–by invitation or not–usually it’s for the wrong reasons. “New Lullaby,” despite its subtitle, “14 enchanting ways to fall asleep,” will not put you to sleep. On the contrary, it is a beautiful, perceptive, and evocative performance that earns and deserves your rapt appreciation. Most of all, however, it felt to me like a courageous exploration of a mood or a state that is rarely identified, and these days all-too rarely enjoyed: attentive peacefulness. It is the mood of listening to a story before you fall asleep, of letting your mind relax and attend. A calm, meditative, expansive, playful, serious mood of lingering with your imagination. Listening to these fourteen pieces, you have the feeling that anything might happen. Aaron Larget-Caplan’s playing is sensitive, assured, and spontaneous. Like a good storyteller, he keeps you listening and leaves you wanting more. And as with the best performances, “New Lullaby” wakes you up to a world of new experiences.”

Glenn Kurtz, author of Practicing, A Musician’s Return To Music

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