Ross Edwards naturally 
                  earns an important place in the Australian Composer Series. 
                  The piece that gives this disc its ostensible title, White 
                  Ghost Dancing, also alerts one to the wide range of his 
                  influences and musical enthusiasms. He ranges widely. Certainly 
                  there’s an acknowledged indebtedness to Aboriginal music but 
                  the driving rhythms surely owe their own special debt to Stravinsky 
                  – and in this particular case to the Rite of Spring. 
                  The fiery syncopation and the earth tones of Edwards’s winds 
                  also bring their own tangy sensibility and colour.
                Veni Creator 
                  Spiritus is an impressive work for octet. Owing its genesis 
                  to Palestrina-like origins it also offers romantic vistas that 
                  are not ashamed to embrace the filmic. Indeed the immediacy 
                  of Edwards’s writing is one of its greatest pleasures and his 
                  inquisitive absorption of salient models, far from limiting 
                  or dissipating the emotional power of his writing, serves only 
                  to intensify it. Here for example the second movement is a lively 
                  contrapuntal dance embracing “world” music textures with alacrity.
                In his Guitar Concerto, 
                  so well played by Karin Schaupp, we find another facet of Edwards’s 
                  armoury – a control over shifting rhythmic patterns and a conjuring 
                  up of unusual sonorities. There’s something to me reminiscent 
                  of Copland in the central movement – something fresh and open 
                  air in the string writing, which manages to be spare but not 
                  austere. The colouration is deft and subtle and the balance 
                  between solo and orchestral palettes intelligently worked out.
                When it comes to 
                  a much earlier work, Mountain Village in a Clearing Mist, 
                  we find a rather different perspective. The writing is a lot 
                  sparer and quiescent with energetic blocks that make their statements 
                  and then fade from hearing – the dynamics are deliberately a 
                  lot more compressed as well. Its calmness is a riposte to the 
                  composer’s earlier more frenetic statements, especially a work 
                  written for Roger Woodward – from the visceral acerbity of which 
                  Edwards retreated and recanted. 
                Chorale and Ecstatic 
                  Dance (Enyato I) brings with it cathartic warmth. 
                  It too is steeped in an antique air though one cross pollinated 
                  by filmic romantic gestures. And in the second section we find 
                  some buffeting cross rhythms in the dance and a delicious sense 
                  of fruitful juxtapositions – the Chorale and the dance, perhaps 
                  one of the keys to Edwards’s aesthetic. 
                Another winner from 
                  the ABC stable – and played as ever with brilliance by the Tasmanian 
                  Symphony Orchestra under Richard Mills.
                Jonathan Woolf