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Passaggio: Einaudi by Lavinia
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Passaggio: Einaudi by Lavinia
Current price: $44.99
Barnes and Noble
Passaggio: Einaudi by Lavinia
Current price: $44.99
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Passaggio
,
Lavinia Meijer
's first release on
Sony
, is an album of the crossover music of
Ludovico Einaudi
, an Italian composer and pianist who encouraged the Dutch harpist to record some of his most popular pieces. The playing on this 2014 album is highly polished and appealing, and
Meijer
demonstrates considerable powers of concentration and precision in performances of her harp transcriptions of
Einaudi
's highly repetitive keyboard music. Some will find
's renditions emotionally communicative and mood enhancing, and most of the credit for their effectiveness belongs to her, because
's modal harmonies and conventional patterns tend toward a bland prettiness, or pretty blandness, that's all of a piece. Simple melodies and repeated arpeggiated chords have the instant attraction of minimalist music, and simplicity is often a virtue in the proper context. But because one piece blurs into the next, one might be left remembering only an impression of
's dreamlike and evanescent style, nothing more sharply defined.
's recording is clear and close-up, and
has presence in a fairly resonant studio space. ~ Blair Sanderson
,
Lavinia Meijer
's first release on
Sony
, is an album of the crossover music of
Ludovico Einaudi
, an Italian composer and pianist who encouraged the Dutch harpist to record some of his most popular pieces. The playing on this 2014 album is highly polished and appealing, and
Meijer
demonstrates considerable powers of concentration and precision in performances of her harp transcriptions of
Einaudi
's highly repetitive keyboard music. Some will find
's renditions emotionally communicative and mood enhancing, and most of the credit for their effectiveness belongs to her, because
's modal harmonies and conventional patterns tend toward a bland prettiness, or pretty blandness, that's all of a piece. Simple melodies and repeated arpeggiated chords have the instant attraction of minimalist music, and simplicity is often a virtue in the proper context. But because one piece blurs into the next, one might be left remembering only an impression of
's dreamlike and evanescent style, nothing more sharply defined.
's recording is clear and close-up, and
has presence in a fairly resonant studio space. ~ Blair Sanderson