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Lee Pui MING (b.1956)
she comes to shore
to… [6:16]
coils [4:35]
turning [7:05]
open [2:07]
dive [7:23]
she comes to shore (2009) [23:27]*
…she [7:07]
shimmers [3:39]
Lee Pui Ming – piano improvisation
The Bay-Atlantic Symphony/Jed Gaylin*
rec. Humber Recording Studios, Toronto, Ontario, Canada and Pfleeger Hall, Rowan University, Glassboro, New Jersey (she comes to shore), dates not given.
INNOVA 796 [64:20]
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Her sixth CD release to date, Canada-based Hong Kong native
Lee Pui Ming’s she comes to shore is one of those tricky
to categorise musical ventures which might as easily have ended
up in the jazz section. The innova website places it under ‘new
classical/jazz’, and the only reason it finds its way onto the
classical section of MWI is that there is a piece listed with
the word ‘concerto’ in the subtitle. Lee Pui Ming’s work
here is described as ‘open’ improvisation, presumably in order
to distinguish it from ‘free’ improvisation, which has gathered
something of a reputation for unlistenability over the last
fifty or so years since being recognised as a genre. The sustained
intense barrage of notes of coils will be quite familiar
territory to those aware of some quarters of free jazz performance,
but in general the musicianship here is more on the sensitive
and personal side. It is invidious to make direct comparisons,
but one needs points of reference and the spectre of Keith Jarrett
and pianists such as Paul Bley is never too far away either,
particularly in the gentler pieces such as to… and the
related … she. Lee Pui Ming’s technique and imaginative
inventiveness cast a wide net, and there is always an underlying
sense of direction and structure in her improvisations. I’m
not so inspired by the piano-slapping of open, but the
string-manipulating harmonic-series resonances of shimmers
has its own appeal. Turning has something of the
atmosphere of Debussy’s Des pas sur le neige, and the
impressionistic undulations of dive also have a Francophile
quality in parts.
she comes to shore is subtitled concerto for improvised
piano and orchestra. The improvised piano part has the freedom
to move over the orchestra with only the given tonality of the
accompaniment at any one point as a restriction of the kind
of material which might arise. As one might expect, this orchestral
material does contain a certain amount of static texture and
repeating patterns, but the actual musical content turns an
interesting idea into a fascinating and emotive work, provided
with effective climaxes and a good deal of structural integrity.
Imagine something a bit like Gorecki’s Symphony of Sorrowful
Songs adapted to make a richly textured piano concerto and
you might have some idea as to what to expect from the first
movement, which concludes in an extended solo cadenza. The second
movement is a darker affair, with, after a gentle introduction,
the string sonorities punctuated by stabbing low brass and close
clusters from the piano. Throw in percussion and we’re in cinema
land, a cataclysmic event of some kind putting us all in extreme
peril. The final movement is a resolution and rescue from this
turbulent central section, more lyrical material creating a
serene landscape of high mountains and a calm sea. There are
no booklet notes, so the imagination of the listener is given
free rein to make of this piece what it will, but there are
so many associations with a wide variety of film scores that
no-one will have difficulty creating their own narrative and
internal visual imagery.
You won’t have heard the Bay-Atlantic Symphony orchestra on
CD before as this is its debut recording, but by all accounts
they make a fine job of she comes to shore. This CD is
well recorded and highly involving and entertaining, showcasing
the remarkable talents of a fine musician at their best. I would
suggest this is more a disc for fans of the Hollywood grand
gesture in the concerto and of the genre blurring work done
by musicians such as Chick Corea and Keith Jarrett in the solo
piano playing than enthusiasts for intellect-challenging avant-gardism.
This said, such personal and emotively charged statements deserve
respect, and have certainly gained my admiration.
Dominy Clements
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