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About Arcana

My name is Ben Hogwood, editor of the Arcana music site (arcana.fm)

New music – Floorplan: What A Friend (Classic Music Company)

by Ben Hogwood

Floorplan take another step along the road in their relationship with Classic with a powerful club track, What A Friend.

Previous releases on Luke Solomon’s label have been well received –  We Give Thee Honor has done particularly well on UK radio, while Like Dat was a strong club track. Robert and Lyric Hood have also been busy on stage, at Brunch Elektronik in Barcelona, The Warehouse Project in Manchester and Igloofest in Montreal.

What A Friend has the familiar chopped vocal samples with tough, four to the floor beats, deliverng a strong blend of tougher techno and gospel tinged woth euphoria. You can listen below:

Published post no.2,145 – Thursday 11 April 2024

In concert – Charlotte Saluste-Bridoux & Joseph Havlat @ Wigmore Hall: Szymanowski, Poulenc & Schubert

Charlotte Saluste-Bridoux (violin, above) and Joseph Havlat (piano, below)

Szymanowski 3 Myths Op.30 (1915)
Poulenc Violin Sonata (1943)
Szymanowski arr. Havlat 3 Kurpian Songs (from Op.58) (1930-32)
Schubert Rondo Brillant in B minor D895 (1826)

Wigmore Hall, London
Tuesday 10 April 2024 (1pm)

by Ben Hogwood

This recital was given under the umbrella of YCAT (Young Classical Artists Trust), the organisation supporting promising classical talent celebrating their 40th anniversary this year. Violinist Charlotte Saluste-Bridoux is one of the current roster, and with pianist Joseph Havlat she gave a captivating recital.

The two began with the highly perfumed 3 Myths of Karol Szymanowski, ideal concert material that can show off a performer’s virtuosity but also their descriptive potential and range of tonal colour. These pieces, written as part of a highly productive partnership Szymanowski enjoyed with violinist Pawel Kochanski, were declared by the composer to have created ‘a new…mode of expression for the violin’.

There was a sense of the new in this performance, notable for its wide range of instrumental colour. The first ‘myth’, La fontaine d’Aréthuse, was strongly characterised, the fountain vividly evoked by Havlat’s opening phrases before Saluste-Bridoux took control with fearless virtuosity. Both musicians were notable for their convincing melodic phrasing, the violin sound strikingly beautiful both with and without the mute. The musical links back to Wagner and Franck were clear, most notably in Narcisse, where the performers brought clarity to the dense counterpoint. This was descriptive music indeed, and Szymanowski’s sound world – unusually advanced for 1915 – took the audience far from the hall. The hollow piano towards the end of Dryades et Pan was notable, Havlat responding to the ghostly harmonics from the violin.

The excesses of Szymanowski were countered by one of Poulenc’s most substantial chamber works. The Violin Sonata has a very different profile to its more famous counterparts for wind instruments, being a troubled work bearing the imprint of the Second World War and personal bereavement. Completed in 1943, it is a work riddled with dark anxiety, though this performance brought out the bittersweet lyricism of the first movement. The nocturnal Intermezzo evoked the guitar, suggesting the influence of Debussy but soon holding the audience in suspense before the finale took off at quite a pace, as though looking to evade capture. Once again this was a performance of high technical standard, one that got beneath the surface to reveal the loss at the heart of Poulenc’s writing – the composer lamenting the Spanish poet Federico Garcia Lorca, who died in the Spanish Civil War.

We then heard three highly effective arrangements from Joseph Havlat of Szymanowski’s Kurpian Songs, selected from the twelve Polish folk texts set by the composer for singer and piano in 1932. As Prokofiev showed with his arrangements of 5 Poems of Anna Akhmatova for violin and piano, such a transcription can be extremely effective – and Havlat’s arrangements were just that, ideally balanced and equally spread between violin and piano. Saluste-Bridoux played with notable dexterity, the two performers enjoying the rustic Bzicem kunia and the sharp outbursts, tinged with regret, of A pod borem siwe kunie.

The musical outlook changed notably for Schubert’s Rondo brilliant, which was effectively an extended encore. The violin was arguably too full bodied to start with, the piano back in the mix, but as the Rondo progressed the balance was restored and we were able to enjoy Schubert’s humour, expressed through an oft-repeating, stop-start theme. This was successfully lodged in our heads by the end, capping an extremely fine recital. These are two artists to watch out for – especially with the Schubert recorded for Delphian Records.

Published post no.2,144 – Wednesday 10 April 2024

Switched On – The Utopia Strong: The BBC Sessions (Rocket Recordings)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

Six years in, The Utopia Strong continue to spread their wings, a band who are successfully blending the art of studio recording with that of improvisation. The latter is very much in play on The BBC Sessions, a collection of five tracks recorded in session for Marc Riley on 6Music in September 2022.

Arcana have been fortunate to interview Steve Davis and Kavus Torabi from the band, but for now the word goes to Torabi on how the album progressed. “When we hit a point where all three of us really had something going, we would continue while the proverbial tape was rolling, so, the shorter pieces are the result of about ten or fifteen minutes playing that you wouldn’t have heard.”

What’s the music like?

There is a strong unity between the three protagonists here, and the result is a powerful suite of pieces that creates a wide range of ideas. A lot of the action takes place in the company of drones, providing a point of reference for the listener and a strong harmonic base.

Certainly Miniature Citadels establishes its base early on, the drone supporting some melodic jousting above. The lines are angular but there is an impressive amount of energy generated, supplemented by a chunky rhythm section.

Lamp Of Glory is a beauty, with a melodic figure up top dancing in the half life, like an energetic strobe light. Soon the pipes take centre stage, played by Mike York, a virtuoso display The final two tracks are lengthy studies. The Tower Is Locked is highly descriptive music, the structure in question shimmering in the half light, before an increasingly powerful drum track takes hold. Finally Weather All, a tribute to the much loved producer, is underpinned by a strong, bassy drone over which a number of electronic bleeps and psychedelic riffs play out. The confidence with which these two tracks unfolds is both assuring and impressive.

Does it all work?

It does. The Utopia Strong prove difficult to classify, in the best possible way – and their music and its development are compelling throughout.

Is it recommended?

Most definitely. This is a band still very much in development, but the span and content of these tracks gives an indication of what they are capable of. With three very different musical minds that complement each other well, The Utopia Strong have got to that enviable position where everything they do is well worth experiencing.

Listen & Buy

Published post no.2,137 – Tuesday 9 April 2024

New music – Caribou: Honey (Merge Records)

by Ben Hogwood

Dan Snaith, the man better known in musical circles as Caribou, returns with his first new material in two years. Honey is a dancefloor track, co-produced by Four Tet, that has a pretty nippy beat, a rounded bass sound and some pretty psychedelic goings-on up top. Fans will be pleased! You can watch below and listen / buy via Bandcamp:

Published post no.2,142 – Monday 8 April 2024

On Record – Ride: Interplay (Wichita / PIAS)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

The second coming of Ride is now officially longer than the first. This is a statement that seemed very unlikely when they first split in 1996, but Mark Gardener, Andy Bell, Loz Colbert and Steve Queralt now appear to be together for keeps.

Interplay is the third album of their second incarnation, and the band have been candid about how difficult it was to record – yet such openness now appears to be one of their key strengths.

What’s the music like?

This is a very strong album, and could be the record that see Ride cross over to being a genuine rock band as well as acknowledged shoegaze royalty. Songs like the opening Peace Sign are key to this, being a full-blown anthem with winsome, jangly guitar lines and a great chorus to boot.

Gardener’s voice sounds great, more versatile than before. Monaco finds an edge to the voice reminiscent of The The, while Last Frontier has a softer side that sounds more familiar, tipping towards New Order or Electronic. What fans might not have expected is the barely concealed anger powering the centre of the album. Portland Rocks gives an indication of this, but I Came To See The Wreck goes the whole hog, the standout track of the album. “Rage, body and soul” is the takeaway lyrical couplet of an all-consuming song.

Elsewhere, Midnight Rider is a groovy throwback, while Sunrise Chaser brings brighter colours to the table. The band marry electronics and guitars convincingly, and production is excellent.

Does it all work?

It does. Melodic, meaningful and with songs that stick.

Is it recommended?

It certainly is – with Interplay Ride have made the album of their career so far.

For fans of… Slowdive, My Bloody Valentine, Spiritualized

Listen and Buy

Published post no.2,141 – Sunday 7 April 2024