Gareth Farr was born 
                in Wellington (New Zealand) in 1968. 
                There’s a black and white photograph 
                of him in the booklet in white wing 
                collared shirt and tails (but no white 
                tie) looking not unlike the resurgent 
                techno pop star and amateur aviator 
                Gary Numan – with the exception that 
                Farr seems to be wearing white, possibly 
                surgical - assuredly not kid - gloves. 
                Leaving aside things sartorial Farr 
                is a graduate of composition and percussion 
                in Auckland, who later counted Samuel 
                Adler and Christopher Rouse as teachers 
                at Eastman in Rochester, New York. He 
                was taken early by the sound of the 
                gamelan and after becoming composer-in-residence 
                with Chamber Music New Zealand he has 
                had an active freelance career. 
              
 
              
The major work here 
                is Ruaumoko written in 1997, 
                which follows the seasons’s cycle in 
                the shape of Ruaumoko, God of Earthquakes. 
                Each movement corresponds to a season. 
                Given Farr’s immersion in the world 
                of Pacific Rim percussion one expects 
                the gamelan sonorities, the gongs but 
                there’s also some romantic tracery here 
                as well alongside the ominous drum rolls 
                that portend the Earthquake’s eruption, 
                and are separately tracked. I was especially 
                taken by Spring, whose motionless calm 
                - high flutes, low brass – pays court 
                to minimalism but rather more to the 
                buzz of nature. Summer is full of brassy 
                energy, some Stravinsky influence and 
                a filmic blaze of triumph. 
              
 
              
Orakua is a 
                setting of a poem by Leon Coad and is 
                sung by his son, Conal, depicting a 
                battle between Maori and the white settlers 
                ("Their deathless pride of race 
                we did not rout") and which ends 
                in lines of Maori. It was written in 
                1941 or 1942 – the notes can’t quite 
                decide - during another war in which 
                "Our hand grenades and Enfield’s 
                ceaseless fire" had another context. 
                A steady bass line and wind arabesques 
                lead to outbursts or eerie calm. Rangitoto 
                was part of the Millennium celebrations 
                and depicts an eruption of the island 
                of that name. It’s very loud, deliberately 
                so. Apparently a concertgoer told Farr 
                it was the loudest piece he’d ever heard 
                from a symphony orchestra - but then 
                he probably hadn’t heard Solti and the 
                Chicago brass murder Bruckner. There’s 
                some La Valse here, a certain 
                Chinoiserie, percussion and whoops. 
              
 
              
Te Papa is effusive 
                and optimistic and features male and 
                female voices singing a rather naïf 
                poem by Bill Maguire, half of which 
                is in Maori, a translation one assumes 
                of the English. Tom toms make their 
                mark here as does a colouristic and 
                once more filmic sense – this was the 
                music that opened the new Museum of 
                New Zealand. The roars and sword clashes 
                of Beowulf are exciting and characterful 
                as is the melee that precedes them. 
                I don’t know if Farr has received any 
                film music commissions but he seems 
                a natural. 
              
 
              
The Morrison Music 
                Trust seems to be going great guns, 
                as it were, in promoting native music 
                in New Zealand – this is the first of 
                three I have to review. The booklets 
                are eye-catching and worth reading and 
                the performances are assured. 
              
 
               
              
Jonathan Woolf 
               
              
see also reviews 
                of three 
                other releases 
              
              
 
               
              
 
              
 ALL DISCS AVAILABLE 
                FROM:- 
              
 Morrison & Co Music 
                Trust
                PO Box 135
                Wellington
                New Zealand
                www.trustcd.com 
              
 and 
              
 Russell Armitage Management
                PO Box 320
                Hamilton
                New Zealand
                fax +64 7 853 6504
                phone +64 7 853 6503
                r-armitage@wave.co..nz 
              
 all Gareth Farr's works 
                are available from 
              
 Promethean Editions
                PO Box 7348
                Wellington South 6039 NZ
                phone +64 4 473 5033
                fax +64 4 473 5066
                info@promethean-editions.co.nz
                www. 
                promethean-editions.co.nz