These are versatile 
                multi-instrumentalist performances. 
                The lists of instruments wielded and 
                corralled by the husband and wife duo 
                of Eleanor Duncan Armstrong (flutes) 
                and Dan C. Armstrong (percussion) is 
                formidable. This also implies different 
                performance "spaces"- in 
                fact personalities - throughout. 
              
 
              
For example Dan Welcher, thankfully 
			  increasingly visible and audible on disc, asks for C flute and 
			  alto flute but also a veritable arsenal of percussion it would 
			  take a while to relate - sizzle cymbal (hello?), log drums (four), 
			  tom-toms and marimba amongst a number of others. Here we have a 
			  wind gong substituted for the tam-tam - so at least a degree of flexibility 
                exists when it comes to instrumentation. 
                Things aren't always so extreme elsewhere 
                but they are sometimes. There's plenty to beguile the ear, 
			  though the instrumentalists have to work hard - and they betray no 
			  sign of the effort involved. Welcher's 
                Kiva plays adroitly with metrics, 
                as well as bringing a heavy battery 
                of percussion. 
              
 
              
Lynn Glassock constructs 
                an enticing Three Days in May. Sonorities 
                ripple and there's a feeling of Francophile 
                limpidity throughout. The plumage here 
                is fascinating, juxtapositions of avian 
                flute and suggestive percussion adding 
                viable almost visualised pleasure. The 
                verdant Matisse quality of the central 
                movement is contrasted with the syncopated 
                drive of the finale. There's also plenty 
                of colour and incident in Dana Wilson's 
                1997 Pu Em Remu - (From The Tears) 
                where the flautist also plays percussion 
                and both musicians engage in some discreet 
                chants. 
              
 
              
Burt Fenner enjoys a more extended canvas. 
			  Fulsome percussion tattoos create their own rhythmically complex 
			  sound world and the finale is an exceedingly exciting one. 
			  Hofmann's 
                Sonata piccola dates from 1975. 
                It's not at all wintry, offering instead 
                one of the few truly witty moments in 
                the programme in the shape of a finale 
                of diverting lightness and not too much 
                ironmongery. Finally we arrive at the 
                earliest work, Peter Tanner's 1958 Diversions 
                for flute and marimba. Cast in six 
                movements there's no gainsaying this 
                piece's staying power. Employing the 
                "less is more" principle when 
                it comes to this combination Tanner's 
                ear is acute and his melodies strong. 
                There's a delightful Song - one can imagine a 1950s chanteuse 
			  going to town with it - a clear and insinuating waltz 
                and then the French lines of the finale, 
                maybe with a modest debt to Poulenc. 
              
 
              
There's plenty of variety here but even so the 
			  best works make themselves clear - the Tanner and Hofmann 
                and then the Glassock. But everything 
                has its place and the versatile performers 
                bring effusive life to all these demanding 
                works. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf