Shadows and Shades
By
James Michael Stevens
Written by
Steve Sheppard
James must be one of the most prolific pianists around today,
his muse is in full flow here again as we take a look at the artists latest
release Shadows and Shades, the
quality of light and the reflective mood from it is always a fantastic subject
matter to create art with music from, and on this splendid release from James,
he does it great justice indeed.
James Michael Stevens has a deft and sensitive touch on
the keys; the opening piece on the album is a fine example and called Borealis, the gentle crafted nature of
this opening piece is wonderfully picturesque; this is something that can be
said about every track on this new album too, as we move through one story to
another.
Tracks like Hour Glass
and Theme from an Early Morning are
but two that created some amazing imagery in my mind, the ever onward motion of
the aforementioned composition was incredibly addictive, whilst the laid back
easy like Sunday morning feeling of the latter, was simply sublime.
As we move ever onward we find tracks like the meditative Lost in a Moment, a slice of ambient
magic, and then that newly found peace leads us to a musical sanctuary in the
form of Where Peace Is Found, two
beautiful tracks with a different structure to them both.
Shadows and Shades is an album that you can just drift
off to and rest a while in its magical reveries, the penultimate offering from
the album did that very thing for me, and is called Twilight Meditation, a track that for me was my personal favourite,
but I have always been a fan of that mystical interplay with minor and major,
the artist then concludes the album with a delicate offering entitled When Night Has Fallen, a song that one
would not be surprised to find in a love segment of a movie one day.
Shadows and Shades by James Michael Stevens is a calming creation of totally quality solo
piano work, the artist has been in full flow for a few years now, and is
manifesting some fantastic material for us all, and its very pleasing to say
that this album now adds to that catalogue of brilliance with great ease and
sublime skill, this is solo piano at its very best.
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