Howard Shelley, Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra – Godard: Piano Concertos (2014) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Howard Shelley, Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra – Godard: Piano Concertos (2014)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:10:07 minutes | 1,15 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Hyperion Records

In sharp contradistinction to the rest of the composers in this series, all of whom look like walruses, Benjamin Godard looks quite a lot like Johnny Depp in his daguerreotype. We should be marketing this directly to teenage girls.

Howard Shelley directs the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra from the piano in this latest volume of The Romantic Piano Concerto series. As ever, they perform unknown music with consummate style and deep understanding, making the best possible case for the works. We have reached Volume 63 and the works of French composer Benjamin Godard, a figure who is almost totally forgotten today. He is described by Jeremy Nicholas in his booklet note as ‘a composer who combines the sentimental melodic appeal of Massenet with the fecundity and technical facility of Saint-Saëns’.

Among Godard’s oeuvre, well over seventy opus numbers are devoted to works for solo piano, ranging from Les contes de Perrault, Op 6, to Valse No 15, Op 153. His Hommage à Chopin can be found on Hyperion CDA67803, performed by Jonathan Plowright. Much of the enormous amount of music he produced followed in the tradition of Mendelssohn and Schumann (his admiration for the latter inspired a string quartet arrangement of Kinderszenen in 1876). With the emergence of more innovative composers, Godard’s conservative idiom meant his reputation faded before his early death in Cannes on 10 January 1895. However, in the three works presented here his writing for the piano exceeds the technical range of his two idols, and is often reminiscent of the bravura demands found in the concertos of Liszt and Rubinstein.

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God Is An Astronaut – All Is Violent All Is Bright (Live) (2021) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

God Is An Astronaut – All Is Violent All Is Bright (Live) (2021)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 51:59 minutes | 1,04 GB | Genre: Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © God Is An Astronaut

All songs written and produced by God Is An Astronaut (2005). Recorded at Windmill Lane Recording Studios in Dublin on Jan 23rd 2021.

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Goat Girl – On All Fours (2021) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Goat Girl – On All Fours (2021)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 54:36 minutes | 1,16 GB | Genre: Alternative Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Rough Trade

On the best song from Goat Girl’s 2018 self-titled debut, the South London band fantasized about smashing in a pervert’s head on a train. Yet the record mostly thrummed with the unsettling energy of a more otherworldly form of transport: the night bus, crisscrossing the capital at witching hour when normal senses, faculties, and decorum have slipped away. None of the awful creeps, shitheel politicians, or scuzzy encounters they sang about came from the realm of fantasy, but each bizarre story of the city whizzed past in a surreal blur, like warped William Hogarth street scenes glimpsed through a smeared window.

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Goat – Requiem (2016) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]

Goat – Requiem (2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 01:03:24 minutes | 533 MB | Genre: Alternative Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Sub Pop Records

In a culture obsessed with content, saturation, and continual exposure, it’s rare to find artists who prefer to lurk outside of the public eye. Thomas Pynchon is perhaps the most notable contemporary recluse—a virtually faceless figure who occasionally creeps out of hiding to offer up an elaborate novel steeped in history and warped by imagination—but for crate diggers and guitar mystics, Sweden’s enigmatic GOAT may qualify as the greatest modern pop-culture mystery. Who are these masked musicians? Are they truly members of the Arctic community of Korpilombolo? Are their songs part of their isolated communal heritage? Their third studio album, Requiem, offers more questions than answers, but much like any of Pynchon’s knotty yarns, the reward is not in the untangling but in the journey through the labyrinth. Western exports may have dominated the consciousness of international rock fans for the entirety of the 20th century, but our increasing global awareness has unearthed a treasure trove of transcendental grooves and spellbinding riffage from exotic and remote corners of the planet. GOAT’s previous albums World Music and Commune were perfect testaments to this heightened awareness, with Silk Road psychedelia, desert blues, and Third World pop all serving as governing forces within the band’s sound. But GOAT’s strange amalgam isn’t some cheap game of cultural appropriation—it’s nearly impossible to pinpoint the exact origins of the elusive group’s sound. The fact that they pledge allegiance to a spot on the periphery of our maps bolsters the nomadic quality of their sonic explorations. With Requiem, GOAT continue to rock and writhe to a beat beholden to no nation, no state. GOAT’s only outright declaration for Requiem is that it is their “folk” album, and the album is focused more on their subdued bucolic ritualism than psilocybin freakouts. But GOAT hasn’t completely foregone their fiery charms—tracks like “All-Seeing Eye” and “Goatfuzz” conjure the sultry heathen pulsations that ensnared us on their previous albums. Perhaps the most puzzling aspect of Requiem comes with the closing track “Ubuntu”. The song is little more than a melodic delay-driven electric piano line, until we hear the refrain from “Diarabi”—the first song on their first album—sneak into the mix. It creates a kind of musical ouroboros—an infinite cycle of reflection and rejuvenation, death and rebirth. Much like fellow recluse Pynchon, rather than offering explanations for their strange trajectories, GOAT create a world where the line between truth and fiction is so obscured that all you can do is bask in their cryptic genius.

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GBH – Momentum (2017) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

GBH – Momentum (2017)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 40:34 minutes | 901 MB | Genre: Punk Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Hellcat – Epitaph

Charged GBH, commonly known as GBH, are an English Punk band which was formed in 1978. They are were early pioneers of English street punk, often nicknamed “UK82”, along with Discharge, Broken Bones, The Exploited and The Varukers. GBH have gone on to influence several punk rock musicians. “Momentum” is their new studio album, released via Hellcat Records.

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Gazpacho – Fireworker (2020) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]

Gazpacho – Fireworker (2020)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 50:25 minutes | 523 MB | Genre: Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Kscope

For nearly twenty years, Gazpacho have reigned as the kings of atmospheric and affective art rock. That’s certainly no small feat, as the subgenre is full of wonderfully moody, ornate, and emotional artists; yet, none of them manage to achieve the same level of exquisite baroque resonance and hypnotically introspective weight as the Norwegian sextet. As a result, they never fail to provide awe-inspiring examinations of the human condition, and their latest observation, Fireworker, is no exception. It is undoubtedly among their greatest achievements, as well as one of the most profound pieces of music you’ll hear in 2020.

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Gaz Coombes – World’s Strongest Man (2018) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]

Gaz Coombes – World’s Strongest Man (2018)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 42:15 minutes | 463 MB | Genre: Indie Rock, Singer-Songwriter
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Virgin Music UK

The former leader of Supergrass, Gareth Michael Coombes a.k.a. Gaz Coombes, went back into hibernation in his Oxford studio to record his third solo album, in co-production with Ian Davenport, with whom he had already collaborated on Matador. Following his half-melancholic half-psychedelic pop exaltations cradled between Goat and Radiohead, World’s Strongest Man features eleven tracks of lavish yet nebulous orchestration (Wounded Egos, Weird Dreams), even strange at times (The Oaks). On Oxygen Mask, Gaz Coombes reminds us he can also produce a classy, minimalist ballad. Relying on an emasculated lyricism close to Cascadeur’s or Woodkid’s, where galloping rhythms jolt into other loops, Gaz Coombes continues his formidable solo breakthrough. And deals with his anxieties and chronic depression. While at first hard to apprehend, the opus reveals his richness over multiple listens. Complex and radiant.  – Charlotte Saintoin

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Gayle Blankenburg – Cameron-Wolfe: An Inventory of Damaged Goods (2018) [Official Digital Download 24bit/88,2kHz]

Gayle Blankenburg – Cameron-Wolfe: An Inventory of Damaged Goods (2018)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/88,2 kHz | Time – 01:18:58 minutes | 1,19 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Furious Artisans

The music of Richard Cameron-Wolfe is not intrinsically abstract, instead residing in various realms of non-abstraction – each composition’s seed-ideas emanating from an extra-musical impulse. Here we find, for example, psychodrama (three micro-operas), sound-portraits (Inventory, Lilith), esoteric symbolism, and ritual processes – all articulated in macro- and micro-structures based on the irrational elasticity of the prime-number series. The repertoire of this release brings together musicians from New York City and Los Angeles – eight outstanding performing artists with a deep understanding of contemporary music styles, vocabularies, and rhetoric. In addition, Cameron-Wolfe’s long-time friend, the distinguished actor Kevin Kline, makes a special “under the radar” guest appearance as poet-narrator in the micro-opera Sound-Shroud.

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Gayheart Willard – At Home in the Blue Ridge (2019) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Gayheart Willard – At Home in the Blue Ridge (2019)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 36:16 minutes | 686 MB | Genre: Country, Folk, Bluegrass
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Blue Hens Music

Folk music in Appalachia is usually a family affair, handed down from father to son, mother to daughter, shared via backyard parties, kitchen jam sessions, or old-time fiddler conventions. For breakout Americana star Dori Freeman, this is the world she grew up in, singing old songs with her father Scott Freeman and her grandfather Willard Gayheart. It was in this spirit that all three of them gathered in the frame shop that Willard owns near Galax, Virginia, along with producer Teddy Thompson, New York recording engineer and producer Ed Haber (Linda Thompson, WNYC), and Dori’s husband Nick Falk, to record an album of Willard’s originals and favorite songs. The resulting album, At Home in the Blue Ridge, coming May 24, 2019 on Blue Hens Music, is Willard Gayheart’s first solo album, an “about time!” moment in his 87 years. Over two days, the family gathered to play Willard’s songs, crowding around mics and recording everything live. When a customer came into the shop looking for a frame or one of Willard’s original pencil drawings (he’s an internationally renowned pencil artist known for his bucolic drawings of the region), Willard would get up from the recording to go help them out. This isn’t music made for stages, or made for commerce, it’s music made for family, for sharing a common experience. “It was a special thing to get to do,” Dori explains. “I’ve been picking with him and my dad for a long time, since I was a teenager, but hadn’t recorded anything like that with both of them. Plus it was great to get to work with a lot of originals that he had written over the years.”

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Gawain Glenton – The Myth of Venice: 16th-Century Music for Cornetto & Keyboards (2021) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Gawain Glenton – The Myth of Venice: 16th-Century Music for Cornetto & Keyboards (2021)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:01:48 minutes | 1,16 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Delphian Records

With the arrival of Adrian Willaert at St Mark’s Cathedral in 1527, Venice at last boasted a musician of international reputation to match its growing image as a ‘city rich in gold but richer in renown, mighty in works but mightier in virtue’. The establishment of Venice as the world leader in music publishing, and the coming and going of international musicians, made the Floating City anything but insular, and artistic competition was order of the day, with organists duelling to outdo each other in invention and grace; while on the streets a different culture of lively dances gave rise to more opportunities for instrumentalists to show off their improvisational skills.

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Gavin James – Only Ticket Home (2018) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]

Gavin James – Only Ticket Home (2018)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 51:15 minutes | 574 MB | Genre: Pop Rock, Singer-Songwriter
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © GS AllPoints

Only Ticket Home is Gavin James’s 2nd studio album which features the chart topping singles ‘Always’, ‘Hearts On Fire’ and ‘Tired’. Produced by Ollie Green and recorded at London’s prestigious Crypt Studios (Clean Bandit, Snow Patrol and more), Only Ticket Home follows James’s previously sold out European tour including a massive 13,000 capacity 3 Arena date in Dublin. With over 800M streams across Gavin James’s catalogue to date, 2M singles sold, 50 multi-platinum records from Ireland all the way to Brazil and having performed to over 3 million people around the world so far, Only Ticket Home looks set to become Gavin James’ biggest record to date.

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Gavin Harrison – Cheating the Polygraph (2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Gavin Harrison – Cheating the Polygraph (2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 49:10 minutes | 1,13 GB | Genre: Jazz Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Kscope

Gavin Harrison, drummer with British Prog innovators Porcupine Tree, currently working with King Crimson, and a musician whose playing and performing résumé includes stints with artists as varied as Iggy Pop, Lewis Taylor, Manfred Mann and Kevin Ayers, is to release a brand new solo album, entitled Cheating The Polygraph on Kscope on Monday, April, 13th 2015 / 14th April – USA & Canada / 17th April – Germany /22nd April – Japan .

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Gavin DeGraw – Something Worth Saving (2016) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]

Gavin DeGraw – Something Worth Saving (2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 36:28 minutes | 442 MB | Genre: Pop
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © RCA Records Label

“Something Worth Saving” is the sixth studio album by American singer-songwriter Gavin DeGraw. This album centers around uplifting messages and happiness. It’s the next phase in his life and he’s all about “focusing on the good things”. “Something Worth Saving” is the second album Gavin DeGraw has produced with other songwriters rather than writing the entire album himself. This album features work from Todd Clark, Jason Saenz, Gregg Wattenberg, Eric Frederic, Dave Bassett, Johan Carisson, John Shanks, and Gavin DeGraw.

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Gavin DeGraw – Finest Hour: The Best of Gavin DeGraw (2014/2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]

Gavin DeGraw – Finest Hour: The Best of Gavin DeGraw (2014/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 41:44 minutes | 497 MB | Genre: Pop Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © RCA Records Label

“Finest Hour: The Best of Gavin DeGraw” is a compilation album by American singer-songwriter Gavin DeGraw. This is his first “greatest hits” album. It contains songs from all his studio albums except Free (2009). It also includes the two new tracks “You Got Me” and “Fire”.

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PRISM Saxophone Quartet, The Crossing – The Fifth Century (2016) [Official Digital Download 24bit/88,2kHz]

PRISM Saxophone Quartet, The Crossing – The Fifth Century (2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/88,2 kHz | Time – 50:11 minutes | 778 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © ECM New Series

The music of English composer Gavin Bryars has long managed the distinction of being both “defiantly personal” (The New York Times) and “utterly accessible” (The Guardian). A deep yet unsentimental emotional resonance and a patient, contemplative view of time – whether relating to harmonic rhythm or human experience – are complementary characteristics that run through his instrumental, vocal and theatrical catalogue like a red thread, the composer inspired by disparate spirits from Wagner and Satie to Cage and Silvestrov. The ECM New Series released multiple recordings of Bryars’ music in the 1980s and early ’90s, including the classic albums After the Requiem and Vita Nova. The first full ECM album from Bryars in decades is The Fifth Century, which includes the seven-part title work: a slowly evolving – yet immediately involving – setting of words by 17th-century English mystic Thomas Traherne, performed by the mixed choir of The Crossing with saxophone quartet PRISM. The album also features Two Love Songs, luminous a cappella settings of Petrarch for the women of The Crossing.

Both Two Love Songs and The Fifth Century underscore the primacy of gradually unfurling melody in Bryars’ music, the quality that both deepens his works and makes them distinctly approachable. He learned the art of vocal music by working closely with singers, especially The Hilliard Ensemble (including for such albums as Vita Nova). “I spent a lot of time with The Hilliards, particularly John Potter,” he recalls. “Learning from them the value of detail in vocal music – intonation, vibrato, diction, breathing – was an important process. Since then, I’ve written a few hundred vocal pieces, and I’m working on my seventh and eighth books of madrigals. Still, I continue to listen closely to what performers tell me about their craft, to both address practical considerations and come up with productive challenges. It’s a joy to work with Donald Nally and The Crossing, which is one of the finest North American choirs, to my mind.”

The congruent mix of voices with wind instruments in The Fifth Century yields a haunting effect, human breath driving the musicality of each. About this, Bryars says: “I’ve always liked the saxophone quartet as a vehicle, and I wrote for it initially as a kind of surrogate string quartet in Alaric I or II, recorded on my ECM album After the Requiem, from 1991. And in my first opera, Medea, I replaced the oboes in the orchestra with saxophones. With my background in improvised music, I’ve always loved jazz saxophone players, from John Coltrane to Lee Konitz to Evan Parker. Percy Grainger’s transcriptions of early music for saxophones were also an inspiration – such pieces can sound beautiful on the saxophone, which is a relatively modern invention that can evoke much older sounds. With limited vibrato, a choir of saxophones and a choir of voices share a strange sort of purity, as well as that quality of human breath.”

As for the text of The Fifth Century, Bryars describes Traherne’s Metaphysical writings – a rediscovery of the late 20th century – as having “an intense spirituality, celebrating the glory of creation and an almost conversational relationship with his God. In many ways, Traherne’s work is astonishingly modern.” Brian Morton, author of this album’s liner notes, points out that T.S. Eliot believed that the power of the Metaphysical writers was that they experienced thought with the intensity of physical sensation, acknowledging “no gap between the sensuous and the intellectual.” That feeling – the sensuous and the intellectual synergistically in sync – comes out in the music of The Fifth Element as a kind of radiance, a warm glow. Bryars says: “My natural instinct is more toward the elegiac and melancholic, such as that Elizabethan regret in Dowland and Taverner. And a lot of religious writing can be dark, even doom-laden. But Traherne writes about ideas of time, eternity and omnipresence with a smile on his face, a kind of optimism. It felt absolutely fresh and inspiring to me.”

The mysterious kind of music within words speaks to Bryars, who has always been drawn to Petrarch’s sonnets for “the heartrending beauty of the poetry and their sheer technical brilliance,” he says. “As a composer, I live by commissions and these can take me in many different directions. But in an ideal world, where I could be free to write whatever I like, I would choose to write vocal music, especially settings of Petrarch.” With Two Love Songs, Bryars returns to the Italian humanist poet so beloved of Renaissance madrigalists, as well as to the sound of unaccompanied female voices. Prior to those of The Crossing, Bryars worked closely with Trio Mediaeval, the Scandinavian group having included pieces by him on their ECM New Series album Soir, Dit-Elle, from 2004. “There can be something very touching about the ethereal sound of high women’s voices,” Bryars says. “The spatial effect can be very beautiful. With the bass note way up there, the music lives on a higher plane.”

The sense of contemplative movement in Two Love Songs and The Fifth Century is characteristic of Bryars’ music and the way he thinks. “I do enjoy experiencing time in a way that is structured but not hectic or hyperactive,” he explains. “In choral music, I like to slow down the harmonic movement, not that it’s static but so that it’s gradually evolutionary. I like the effect of suddenly finding yourself in new harmonic territory without quite realizing how you got there. Most people think time is strictly objective, but it’s also subjective, a matter of perception. There’s a Zen-like idea that I appreciate: that time is going on forever, that time will go on whether you’re part of it or not. The challenge is to keep the focus concentrated. When that works, you can perceive a kind of eternity, one of infinite space.”

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