Let me say from the 
                outset that this is a fantastic disc! 
                It should be heard by anyone who isn’t 
                prejudiced against mixing genres, playing 
                "arrangements", having fun. 
                So what is this? Cross-over? Any record 
                covering both Bartók and Deep 
                Purple could with some justification 
                be labelled "cross-over", 
                but to me it is something else. ‘Cross-over’ 
                implies that there are borders to cross, 
                and these four eminent musicians see 
                no borders; this is border-less music. 
                Maybe the guitar is the instrument that 
                lends itself most easily to building 
                bridges between genres, styles and times, 
                especially when played as on this disc. 
                Here are four of Australia’s best classical 
                guitarists, all of them with important 
                solo careers, but the first thing to 
                notice, in the very first track, is 
                that we don’t hear four individuals 
                playing as it were together; we hear 
                a guitar quartet, we hear unanimity 
                in rhythmic feeling, in the approach 
                to to the music, we hear musicians listening 
                to each other. 
              
 
              
The sound is great, 
                the placing of the instruments in the 
                stereo image is exact and they blend 
                marvellously. Of course you hear that 
                the unseen artists behind and between 
                your speakers are classically trained 
                but the effect is of a highly professional 
                popgroup playing acoustically for once 
                – and enjoying it. 
              
 
              
Very important, and 
                very imaginative, is the use of a whole 
                array of different guitars, thus finding 
                new and unique colours for each piece 
                of music. Besides the "normal" 
                classical guitar, we hear flamenco guitar, 
                baritone guitar, eight-string guitar, 
                octave guitar and steel-string guitar. 
                We even hear a resonator guitar, used 
                mainly in blues music, once even played 
                with so called ‘bottleneck’ technique 
                which gives an uncanny likeness to the 
                Hawaii guitar. 
              
 
              
There is tremendous 
                rhythmic zest in Juan Martín’s 
                Rumba Nostálgica, 
                which also lends its name to the whole 
                collection. I haven’t been so captivated, 
                so spellbound by a piece of "light 
                music" for many a good day. And 
                make no mistake: I don’t take "light 
                music" lightly. This is playing 
                on the same level as the world’s finest 
                string quartets, the same flexible interplay, 
                the same "eye-contact". Must 
                play it again, Sam! 
              
 
              
Then Piazzolla’s 
                Romance del Diablo, which is 
                not really as devilish as the title 
                makes us believe, rather impressionistically 
                colourful with a surprisingly modern-sounding 
                ballad-tune. The tango rhythm is there, 
                as in all his music, but not for dancing, 
                which it is in Roland Dyens’ Tango 
                en Skai, an attractively laid-back 
                piece with a catchy tune and sudden 
                rhythmic accents. 
              
 
              
When they continue 
                with Bartók’s  well-known 
                Romanian Folk Dances, originally 
                set for the piano and later orchestrated 
                by the composer, it strikes me that 
                guitars sound much more genuin in this 
                music, are closer to the idiom. The 
                arrangements here – all the arrangements 
                are by the members of the quartet – 
                as in the rest of the programme, are 
                colourful and observant to the character 
                of each piece. You even imagine there 
                is a cimbalom present, and the sixth 
                and final dance ends ecstatically. 
              
 
              
The Celtic music tradition 
                is also highlighted, both in a couple 
                of standard traditional songs, rubbing 
                shoulders with Bill Whelan’s latter-day 
                Riverdance-compositions. Especially 
                the first of them holds on to the ecstacy 
                created in Bartók, becoming even 
                more physical with steel-stringed guitar, 
                heaps of percussive effects and stomping 
                feet. My whole listening room was rocking 
                afterwards. 
              
 
              
There is also a World 
                Premiere Recording on the disc, a suite 
                by Nigel Westlake entitled Six 
                Fish, and there is a suitable amount 
                of splashes and other fishy sounds in 
                these colourful waters, housing such 
                rare specimens as Guitarfish, Sunfish 
                and Sling-Jaw Wrasse. 
              
 
              
Finally rock fans will 
                receive their share in Deep Purple’s 
                Highway Star. And why just rock 
                fans? In spite of a very modest interest 
                in rock music I enjoyed this track enormously 
                as one more example of border-less contemporary 
                music. 
              
 
              
The booklet text – 
                as always with ABC filled with interesting 
                information – tells me that SAFFIRE 
                – The Australian Guitar Quartet, got 
                together more or less as an ad hoc 
                group in 2002 for an outdoor concert 
                and after that decided to become a permanent 
                ensemble. They released their first 
                CD in June 2003 and it went straight 
                to the top of the Australian Classical 
                Music Charts. I see no reason why the 
                new disc shouldn’t go the same way. 
                I have no hesitation in recommending 
                it to all, except perhaps the most narrow-minded, 
                and even you should give it a try. If 
                there were something like "The 
                Border-less Recording of the Month" 
                I would appoint this disc to that title. 
              
Göran Forsling