River City Writer

A Street Level View of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

ESO Blog Night - Dispatch #4

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And, we’re back… with “Dreaming of the Masters II- Rhapsody GEB,” which was written by Allan Gilliland especially for Eddins, who is conducting and playing the piano. Impressive. And on top of that, he appears to be playing without reading any music. Extra impressive.

Unfortunately, we’re having a moment of technical difficulties—the sound system in the room isn’t working—so I can’t tell just how impressive it truly is. This room is quiet soundproof. We’re able to hear some of the louder parts…and, there we go. We’ve got sound again.

Seriously…conducting and playing the piano? I’ve never seen that before. I don’t want to call it gimmicky, because it’s really not, and he’s doing a good job of it, but it’s so usual that I really don’t know what else to say about this piece.

Let’s start with this: it’s beautiful. I love jazz piano, and this is jazz with an orchestra. It’s got all the playfulness of jazz, with the power of the symphony. Very cool. I’m not even sure what to call this. It’s not jazz, but it’s definitely got elements of jazz to it.

Whatever it is, it’s an enchanting piece of music. It reminds me of the ocean…East Coast ocean, with large waves crashing against cliffs on a grey day. Except, it’s happening in slow motion. And in silence. And in black and white. The music is the soundtrack to a silent movie whose core emotion I can’t quite pin down.

In the midst of this, there is a moment of high energy. We’re in a dance hall or a ballroom somewhere. We’re in the same film, but now there is colour. Are we in the same location? Is this dance hall in a town on Canada’s east coast, or somewhere in New England?

We’re taken back outside for a brief moment before something dark and sinister creeps in. Violence? No. There’s a playful note underneath this seemingly dark section. It’s audible in the music, and visible in the way that Eddins is moving and interacting with the musicians he’s leading.

Still, something here is not quite kosher. There is a tension. Is it a fight? Is it tension between lovers? Whatever it is, we’ve hit the big jazz number. This could be a playful dance between two strong characters, or it could be the lead-up to a fight between two rivals.

And…wow…let’s call that #4 with a bang! If I wasn’t in this room, I might even been standing with the few people who are giving a standing ovation.

Written by Adam Snider

February 22nd, 2008 at 9:23 pm

Posted in Events, Music

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