‘Hudbaby’ 
                is the name of a group of composers 
                formed at the Janáček Academy of 
                Performing Arts (Brno, Czech Republic) 
                in 1997. ‘Hudba’ is the Czech word for 
                music while ‘Baby’ is a colloquialism 
                for women (not in the sense of the Americanism). 
                All members of the group are represented 
                on this disc except, it would seem, 
                for Marcela Trtková-Vocílková. 
                The group unveiled itself to the world 
                in the 1998 Moravian Autumn International 
                Music Festival – for further information, 
                click here (http://www.kapralova.org.hudbaby.htm 
                ).
              
The 
                first work we hear is that of Kateřina 
                Rizizková (http://www.kapralova.org/KATKA.htm 
                ), a Romance in two movements 
                for piano. The first movement contains 
                both reflective and manic elements, 
                the latter with minimalist leanings. 
                The minimalisms seem to sit on the cusp 
                of the 
                obvious influence (Janáček’s obsessive 
                cell-repetitions) and a more States-side 
                minimalist (Glass, Reich and the like). 
                The second movement (no tempo indications 
                are given) is more Bartókian, once more 
                with obsessive elements. The performance 
                is a skilled one (by Alice Rajnohová), 
                but the recording tends towards the 
                tinny. Definitely worth hearing, though. 
                Also by Rezizková is Kolem 
                nuly (‘Around Zero’). The composer 
                writes, ‘Around Zero is a critical 
                point where outwardly one still can’t 
                see anything, but under the surface 
                something is crystallising. It is also 
                at this moment when an idea is born 
                – the piquant boundary between contour 
                and shapelessness’. Skilfully written 
                for percussion, it is a sonic (gentle) 
                tour-de-force. 
              
Lenka Foltýnová 
                (http://www.kapralova.org/LENKA.htm 
                ) contributes two works. First 
                up is Vedlejší pVíznaky 
                (‘Side Effects’) for percussion reveals 
                a wide-ranging imagination. Almost as 
                much as her note in the accompanying 
                booklet: ‘I took very free imagination 
                from stories by my great love Woody 
                Allen, and after briefly ‘examining 
                psychic phenomena’ I said to myself: 
                ‘Yes, but can a steam engine do this’’. 
                My kind of sense of humour. ‘Side effects’, 
                Foltýnová says, ‘appear 
                sooner or later in all of us. Do I hear 
                a knocking at the door?’. More probably 
                one of your own percussion instruments, 
                I would have thought, but in the final 
                movement its more tapping than knocking. 
              
Foltýnová’s 
                second piece is the final one on the 
                disc, Safranbolu (at least no 
                translation needed this time, it’s the 
                name of the Turkish city that inspired 
                it. In particular it is that city’s 
                calmness and beauty that touched the 
                composer, and this eight-minute work 
                is indeed hypnotically gripping. It 
                is a perhaps unexpected way to close 
                the disc, but an undeniably effective 
                and haunting one. Long, yearning lines 
                predominate. It is very well played 
                by cellist Jiří Bárta. 
              
Barbara Škrlová’s 
                Let mouchy (‘The Flight of the 
                Fly’) for cello and piano won first 
                prize in the ‘Generace’ composers’ competition 
                in 1999. Škrlová (http://www.kapralova.org/BARBARA.htm 
                ) is a composer and music therapist. 
                Let mouchy is amusing in its 
                direct imitation of a fly by the cello 
                at the very opening, and Pavlina Jelínková-Hluchá 
                is a finely expressive cellist in the 
                longer legato lines. I found myself 
                wondering whether it had the legs to 
                last eight minutes at times, but it 
                is a well-crafted work. 
              
Finally 
                to Markéta Dvořáková (http://www.kapralova.org/MARKETA.htm 
                )and her wonderfully titled Nezelený 
                muz (‘Ungreen Man’). If only the 
                text was replicated with a translation 
                (it is a translation into Czech by Ludvík 
                Kundera – father of the more famous 
                Milan - of a poem by Hans Arp called 
                ‘Bei grünem Kiebe’). Without recourse 
                to text, it is a pleasure to report 
                that the piece works marvellously on 
                its own terms. I like the way Dvořáková 
                segments the words (‘vsichny’ at around 
                the five-minute mark), so we can luxuriate 
                in the sheer special sounds of 
                the Czech language. 
              
A fascinating, memorable 
                disc that certainly merits investigation. 
              
Colin Clarke