|
home > music
>
TONY WAKEFORD
Cupid & Death
1996
Tursa 011 CD
TONY WAKEFORD'S 'solo' album, Cupid & Death (1996 TURSA 011
CD), is devoted to the theme of vanitas, the juxtapositioning of
beauty with the fleetingness of life. While the CD contains pieces in
the classic Wakeford style, it also reflects his growing interest in ambient
music, or perhaps that should be musique ambiante as three of the
pieces have French titles.
The opening/title track, 'Cupid & Death I', is a setting to Tony's
own music of the words of a baroque masque, and I found this the most
impressive. It begins with a single bell-like note, a motif repeated on
other tracks. Tony's initially unaccompanied singing is joined by a cello
and then echoed by a deep-throated alter ego provided by Karl Blake. The
varied combinations of these two male voices are unusual but effective.
The track then becomes more upbeat with urgent strings and other parts
weaving their threads into the web of sound.
The next four tracks are instrumentals. 'Le Lac Noir' is very reflective
and relaxing. 'Jardin du Luxembourg' (which begins with a sample from
Discrete charm of the bourgeoisie) features Eric Roger on lazy
'jazz trumpet' and Tony on piano, with string accompaniment. 'La Nuit
Est Arrivée' has a very busy, almost Latin-American, percussive accompaniment
and more trumpet together with 'underwater noises' and various film
noir soundclips. These middle two instrumentals have a John Barryish
feel, not to mention a lush French decadence. 'The Day of the Angel' opens
with Tony on kaustisen, which is apparently some kind of Scandinavian
plucked dulcimer or psaltry, and contains samples from the late great
Terry Thomas and from Belle de Jour.
'A Rose in Hell' with acoustic guitar and dramatic use of string
interludes will be more familiar to Wakeford/Sol fans, while 'Heaven
& Hell' is quite slow with piano music composed by That
Summer.
The final track, 'Cupid & Death II', begins with Lorna Martin singing
a whispered introduction. The employment of flute, then strings,
demonstrates the Wakeford mastery of rising tension. In this track
the central theme is addressed in Tony's own words as a contest
between Cupid and Death, an image represented in the excellent cover
artwork by Andrew King. More good artwork - by Tor Lundvall - appears
inside.
For me, the opening and closing tracks are best, but fans of ambient
experimentation will no doubt find much else to attract them. Unlike some
other artists, Tony Wakeford is not stagnating but finding new directions.
Rik - Updated: 1 November 1996
|