Afterthoughts
Gary Schmidt
Written by
Steve Sheppard
It’s been a while since I have bathed in the calming refrains
of a Gary Schmidt album, if I
remember correctly it was in the year that everyone wants to forget 2020, and
we relaxed with Gary in the realm of A
Classical Meditation, skip forward 3 years and we are at a new place in
time and tide as Gary Schmidt now
presents to us a 10 track album full of colour, positivity, new beginnings and
hope, in this amazing fresh release Afterthoughts.
The opening foray is startlingly brilliant; a lively up-tempo
offering entitled This New Day, here
Gary plays with a flourish, a passion for life. A true excitement can be felt within
his performance, one that is like pulling back the curtains on a beautiful
early summer morning, as there is just about everything to look forward to from
the cadence of the day. Listen carefully for the crafted interplay between
major and minor, in a largely forward thinking offering, tinged with a clever
little mood of reflection.
One of my personal favourites, of which there were many,
would be this following composition called The
Stillness of Flow, whilst Gary played the piano with such emotion, it was
easy for me to visualise a river in full flow, then those quiet moments when
the waters find a drifting eddy with which to float and just be, much like life
really. This for me is true artistic flair and emotive brilliance, and all
presented with such passion and desire.
Ancient Time Telling was released as a single earlier on
this year and contained such a delightful string section which with ease danced
with the maestro’s piano, for me this was and is one of the pianist’s most
memorable pieces, a timeless refuge of memory, reflection and storytelling, all
brought together by a thoughtful hand on the musical tiller.
It is time now to just relax and enjoy the classical styles
created by Schmidt on this next arrangement entitled Transcendental Etude, a composition, that from my research, is one of
the most difficult to perform, and considered a triumph of piano literature. Here
that technical side of the artist comes forward and completes this presentation
with an unbridled success, this is a piece to sit down and listen to without
distraction, and then stand and applaud at its conclusion, it really is that
good.
We arrive at the half way juncture and as we do we come
across light hearted reverie entitled Face
that Lights My Face. The magical energy about this specific piece is the
beautiful fluency and flow of the track. Schmidt manifests something so
incredibly beautiful, and with the touch on each key a new tone is brought into
our musical reality, this is a classic feel good creation.
A short form narrative is now before us called simply Impromptu and composed originally back Sibelius back in the 1890’s, as an
arrangement this is quite forward thinking and was also part of the romantic
era in classical piano too. Here the artist gifts us a gentle fluent
composition that holds a slight note of mystery and passion within its
constraints.
One cannot help but love this next piece entitled Ellen's Song, here is a track bathed in
loving respect, the warmth that flows from this composition is like a warm hug
in the middle of winter, one will find added strings within the composition
that add a delightfully sublime layer and texture of a calming reverie into the
piece.
The short musical narrative of Berceuse (Cradle Song) is up next; here Gary in less than two
minutes brings peace, tranquillity and serenity to the fore in charming
heart-warming performance, one that leads us beautiful into the final segments
of the album.
We now reach the penultimate track off the album and it is
called Simply Reflected. Schmidt
pulls off one of his best performances on this offering, one that is
artistically sublime, but also technically brilliant. Again this is a track
that needs to be enjoyed with the attention towards the structures of the
arrangement, the sublime melody which for me illustrated one of the finest solo
piano juxtapositions I think I have heard for years.
The concluding creation is a composition brought into this
world by Shuman and called Dreaming. Schmidt leaves us with an
arrangement that nestles into the arms and breathes a sigh of peace before
drifting off into a night time reverie, a delightfully warming way with which
to leave an album indeed.
Afterthoughts by Gary Schmidt is one of those blissful albums that you could spin
in a moment of happy solitude, and bathe in the moment with, it’s music to ease
the mind and sooth the soul, where the artist highlights his technical prowess,
his studies on reflection and his tender touches of emotional understanding. Afterthoughts by Gary Schmidt is an all-round fantastic album, the phrase is indeed
old, but there is indeed something for everyone within this new offering of
piano mastery.
No comments:
Post a Comment