Gavin BRYARS (b. 1943)
            The Sinking of the Titanic (1969-)
            Gavin Bryars Ensemble
            rec. 2012 Live Tour, date and location not given.
            
GB RECORDS BCGBCD21 [74:40]
            
            
 Taken from the Gavin Bryars Ensemble 2012 Live 
              Tour, this version of The Sinking of the Titanic is a different 
              prospect to the 1994 recording on the Point label (446-061-2). This 
              included a Boys Choir as well as strings and the variety of effects 
              which make up the core of the work, but as is the conceptual nature 
              of the piece you can expect each performance to have unique features, 
              let alone each version. The genesis of The Sinking of the Titanic 
              is outlined by the composer in the booklet, but more importantly, 
              Bryars’ approach and his artistic response to the disaster 
              is also made clear.
               
              The basis of the piece is the hymn tune “Autumn”, which 
              was reported to be the last piece the band was playing as the Titanic 
              finally sank. According to Walter Lord its sound “flowed across 
              the deck and drifted in the still night far out over the water”. 
              The Sinking of the Titanic is a kind of monument in music: 
              a moment in time and history, stretched and elongated, but encapsulating 
              the idea of eternal music sounding beneath the icy water, and expressing 
              a sense of distant time as well at times as the immediacy of the 
              tragedy, and perhaps the looming of vast metallic shapes, submerged 
              and distorted.
               
              The Sinking of the Titanic is a kind of meditation, but 
              is also more than this. I always find it a moving experience, as 
              much for the understated respect it shows for those involved but 
              also in creating a space to reflect on mortality and humanity in 
              general. Particularly poignant in this version is the music box 
              playing La Maxixe – like the one played in one of 
              the lifeboats to “amuse and distract” the children. 
              All of the sounds which emerge have symbolism or basis in reports 
              from the scene, and the multi-layered nature of the piece is a large 
              part of its fascination.
               
              There are a few distant coughs on this live recording, but other 
              than some unnecessary applause at the beginning and end this is 
              a well-produced release and comes highly recommended, even if you 
              already have one of the other recorded versions – there are 
              now around five available. Each one has its own character, and this 
              one is every bit as remarkable as any of the others and perhaps 
              even more so.
               
              Dominy Clements