Machajdík's
music is tonal-melodic, spare to the
point of minimal but without the iterative
persistence of Reich or the pummelling
rhythmics of Nyman. Notes and chords
are sounded and pecked at then left
to resound.
In the case of this
‘home-made’ but nice-sounding CD the
musicians are recorded at close quarters.
In Kirin the spareness
ushers in a brief moment of precious
rhythmic animation - a little birth
for which all those stele-like lonely
chords are a sort of birth.
Obscured Temptations
is a sequence of three short
piano solos - static, enigmatic ...
with a steady and simple beauty. Deserted
Tracks has a greater sense of
melodic continuum borne along by the
singing cello. The piano provides the
staccato contrast while the cello resonantly
sings its song. The cello solo reminded
me of the 'easier' Peter Maxwell Davies
with its long lyrical breaths and tinge
of folk-landscape melancholy.
Solstice for
cello and harp has Machajdík’s
trademark infusion of static address
especially very early in the piece.
Later there is a much more animated
fast-flowing episode providing contrast
to these sphinx-like melodic cells.
The instruments are not a combination
I would immediately have thought congruent
but they work well in this context -
tribute to executants and composer.
Flowing into
the Unknown is the most substantial
piece here. Its simple gracious way
takes added savour from the combination
of instruments. The music gives that
sense of a slow motion flowering, Bachian
at one level, folksy at another, pentatonic
and Slav. More Nyman-like, this piece
drifts towards Schnittke's Spiegel
im Spiegel and pristine contemplation.
Aside from some roughnesses
in the trio piece these pieces seem
skilfully and, more to the point, sensitively
put across.
You now know what to
expect from this composer who has had
many artistic residencies and commissions.
He is highly active in the field of
dance, theatre and visual arts.
Rob Barnett