Cygnus Ensemble

 
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Cygnus Ensemble's Recording of Milton Babbitt's
Swan Song No. 1, on Bridge Records

Jeffrey Milarsky Conducting:

"confident and eloquent" --

"...Spick and span"--

Performance--5 Stars
Sound --------5 Stars
BBC Music, March, 2004 "electrifying" (the Cygnus guitarists, with Scott Kuney)

Allan Kozinn, The New York Times
This enterprising and supple group--featuring guitars, strings and woodwinds in pairs--presents a light, lively evening of music from contemporary American composers, with offshoots into the European past.

Paul Griffiths, The New York Times
The Cygnus Ensemble shows why they are considered among the best of the new music groups. On this CD, they bring a highly unusual instrumentation and masterful ensemble playing to bear on a program of diverse works.

CDeMusic
But my favorite chamber disc this month is the debut CD by the Cygnus Ensemble, a group comprised of flute, oboe, violin, cello and two guitars - a really exciting new variation on the overused Pierrot ensemble. (It's great hearing how composers as diverse as Anthony Braxton and Sebastian Currier handle the assignment.)

Frank J. Oteri, Newmusicbox The Cygnus Ensemble is structured rather like an Elizabethan consort, with its strings (violin, cello, 2 guitars) and winds (flute, oboe). But though they may derive inspiration from a distant era, Cygnus dedicates itself to contemporary music, bringing along the clarity and directness of the ancient "broken consort."
John Halle's 'Spooks' is a charmingly harrowing journey through an unpredictable landscape that draws upon jazz and pop music as well as serialism and minimalism. David Lang's 'Frag' is Reich-like minimalism as it might have been performed by a traveling ensemble during Shakespeare's time. Anthony Braxton is a saxophonist and composer who works both sides of the street-that is, in both improvised and composed forms, inspired by Stockhausen as much as Charlie Parker. His Composition No. 186 is baroque, minimalist and rhythmic in the African and Indian traditions all at once. For the serial fans, there's a spare, poignant suite of songs by Charles Wuorinen.

The Cygnus Ensemble balances novel aplomb with a warm, inviting precision, lending cohesion and affability to this set of contemporary works.

Tower Records Necessity is the mother of [invention], for both composers and performers of this age. If a group of talented musicians who love new music wish to perform together, but their instrumentation does not fit traditional ensemble templates, do they give up? Certainly not, as the musicians of the Cygnus Ensemble prove. Their instrumentation is unusual, but their blend of flute, oboe, violin, cello and two guitars does have precedent in the "broken consort" of Elizabethan times, with its blend of recorders, viols and lutes (and in fact, the ensemble is not so far from that of much chamber music, as soon as one realizes the two guitars can fulfill the textural role usually taken by a piano). Further, these players know that if they announce their availability, composers will come. In fact, composers relish the chance to create new repertoire as much as performers, since their work may come to define a sound other will want to exploit. And Cygnus's sound is infectious - light and clear, capable of both delicacy and drive, timbrally rich, transparent yet able to accomodate whatever degree complexity one might desire.

musicplex
“excellent concert” -

Paul Griffiths, January, 1998, The New York Times
“The mindful voice of Ives, of Stravinsky and of Mr. Wuorinen’s music would not seem to be implied much by such a song as “Night and Day,” but Mr. Anderson’s extraordinary arrangements of this and other numbers by Jerome Kern and Richard Rogers set them squarely and astonishingly in the same tradition...”

Paul Griffiths, The New York Times
“intelligent birds of a feather”
Piera Paine, Summer 1998, The New Music Connoisseur "first rate"
Bernard Holland, March, 1994, The New York Times
“The performances were on a very high level, and it is impossible to single out any one player. I thought that all the pieces were presented in ways that showed them at their best. Not only were all technical difficulties overcome, but the character of each piece was conveyed effectively. If Mr. Anderson’s aim was to show how the guitar can play a significant role in chamber music, he certainly succeeded.”

Leo Kraft, Summer 1998, The New Music Connoisseur
“As is typical in a concert where all the music is unfamiliar, surprises of all kinds occurred. One of the most pleasant was to discover the Cygnus Ensemble is a group of first-rate musicians. Each played with a degree of precision and fervor one rarely hears.”

Asbury Park Press, 1994
“These players seem to feel as comfortable playing this music, despite its complexity, as may guitarists are playing the music of Sor or Giuliani.”......
“Cygnus continues to give captivating performances of twentieth century music featuring some of today’s outstanding young musicians.”

Guitar Review, Fall, 1991
“here performed ever so elegantly by the players for whom it was written.”

Fanfare, May/June 1991
Anderson and Fader are expert chamber musicians with a perfect sense of timing, virtuosity, and a sensitivity to nuance. O’Connor and Whitfield have supple tones capable of warm lyricism or powerful bite. All the musicians phrase beautifully and have a keen awareness of their musical roles. The ensemble is together in both music and spirit, giving a sense of spontaneity even when the music is complex or quick-changing.

Guitar Review, Spring 1991
Their playing shaped sonic wave motion and used microtones in textures of uncommon beauty.

The Philadelphia Inquirer, June 11, 1990
Mr. Babbitt’s piece Soli e Duettini is a striking addition to the repertoire...His melodies leap freely around the fretboard, and his rhythms are complex and perilous. Yet Mr. Anderson and Mr. Fader played the work from memory and gave an impressive account of it.

The New York Times, April 2, 1991
...an ensemble of superior performers.

Newark Star-Ledger, March 5, 1991
...a superb performance. -

The Boston Phoenix, February 22, 1991

 

 
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