Quiet Beauty
By
Diane Wheeler Dunn
Written by
Steve Sheppard
It’s always good to hear new names to you, heading your way
in the business of music, and in the genre of flute, a style where my own wife
is an active participant. Now before us as the year draws to an end, is a
wonderful new album called Quiet Beauty
by Diane Wheeler Dunn that heads our
way, and what a stunning collection of very classy compositions it is too.
From the off a pulsating percussive beat guides our way
through the transcendent performance of the opening piece called Yearning, a vibrant sparkling beginning
indeed.
Quiet Beauty is a thirteen track release that
contains a whole plethora of gems, like this next one entitled FaerieTrippin', a moody number that
manifests a wonderful mysterious energy through its crisp presentation, and
then into offerings like the title track Quiet
Beauty, a piece that has a hovering sense of anticipation about its
performance that I adored so much, a gentle percussive beat and a delicate
keyboards, it certainly manifests something very original indeed.
Diane Wheeler Dunn’s flute is utterly magical, tracks
like Wintering Woodland, a song
where a pristine and cold, yet crisp performance can be found, and one that
also contains a blissful ambient backdrop too.
Our penultimate piece is sublime and called Flutes n Flowers, a piece that gifts us
a growing hope of a new spring dawning perhaps, this is one of my personal
favourites from the album, and in parts reminded me of the UK’s Nigel Shaw and his Echoes of the Forest album, deep, but nature filled and utterly
idyllic.
We finish with a track full of rhythmic promise and called Sailing on a Dreamboat, this was a very
crafted and classy way to leave the album, percussion and keyboards gift a
meditative intent, and the magical flute of the artist guides the way through
this concluding offering.
Quiet Beauty by Diane Wheeler Dunn is much more than just another flute album, it
is a pastiche of wonderfully balanced and beautiful compositions, ones that you
would delight in listening to multiple times over. Here is an album that is
fluent, artistic and quite natural, and one of the best flute albums of this
style I have heard for quite some time.
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