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T - T A U R I R O U N D T A B L E R E V I E W
Russia, and most of Europe, was gripped by a nationalistic fervour that was ably translated by the composers of that time with classic examples being Sibelius, Dvorak and Rimsky-Korsakov. Pictures At An Exhibition was conceived in 1874 following an exhibition of paintings by Mussorgsky's painter friend Victor Hartmann who had died a year earlier. Originally the piece of music was written for solo piano, but as has happened with most of Mussorgsky's works which were mainly unfinished at his time of death, the piece was amended and orchestrated with one of the most notable versions being that of Ravel who did so at the request of Serge Koussevitzky. The main concept for this lovely piece of music was as an accompaniment to the actual exhibition which had various paintings by Hartmann connected by various promenades finishing off at the translation into music of the architectural design of a great gateway into music (The Great Gate Of Kiev). With that brief introduction one can possibly appreciate in greater detail the intricacies of the work of Mussorgsky. Of further note, one should also look for a diagram of the Pictures this musical piece refers to (all easily found on the net!) to allow this marvellous classical masterpiece come to life. Introduction by Nigel Camilleri -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Nigel's Review The first of five Promenades opens this work of art and sets the theme
for the whole of the composition. Immediately one gets a feeling of people
walking through a hall to reach the first painting while at the same time
the underlying theme that rears its head throughout the whole of the composition
makes it's first appearance here. Of interest is that the trumpet solo
is replaced by the guitar and violin, though the essence of the brass
choir is maintained by T-Tauri with the use of tubular bells. Promenade II is the closest the band come to playing an almost hard rock
version of the classical piece and is a variation on a theme of Promenade
I, involving a sublime guitar solo. Promenade III is another short passage linking various rooms of the exhibition
and once again features a recurrence of the introductory theme, though
the theme, played by the violin, is relegated to the background with the
rhythm brought to the foreground. Bydlo, depicts a Polish ox-cart and in contrast to Tuileries, has a heavy-set tempo and the track conveys a sense of the cart passing in front of the listener with the sound getting progressively louder to then fade away as the cart moves off into the distance. The surprising part about this piece is that one would expect the music to be laborious, a reflection of the strain that the cart places on the ox. Instead, what one gets is a celebration of strength with the music being getting stronger, and louder (the passage is marked as a fortissimo) without a hint of stuttering. Promenade IV has a more airy and free feel attributed to the main theme,
a part that is played by the bass guitar, with the listener/viewer seemingly
lost in thought whilst looking at the marvels of this exhibition. The fifth and final Promenade leads us to Limoges (The Market Place)
which has a scene of French women quarreling in this central French city.
The hustle and bustle atmosphere is marked by a flurry of notes as the
music features a series of quavers to signify the frantic atmosphere at
the market. On the other hand, Catacombae features a series of chord progressions,
an effect that is carried out by the guitar power chords, the brass section
would play this in the orchestrated version. To add to the eerie atmosphere
Oudejans adds her operatic vocals that seem to flow through the catacombs. Baba Yaga is a witch from Russian folklore who lives in a Hut On Chicken's Legs. The tracks opens with the screams of the witch followed by her ride into the night searching for potential victims whose bones she grinds. The music has a brief pause where the music seems to come to a slowdown as the witch contemplates the fate of her victims, however after a series of chromatic descents the witch resumes her pursuit into the night to lead straight into The Great Gate Of Kiev. This was the design that Hartmann had made for an entrance gate to Kiev in honour of the Tsar Alexander II, a feat which was never accomplished. The majestic closing theme is in itself a lengthy piece of music which is unusual for such classical pieces, and features the bombasticity and grandiosity that such a regal gate could possibly have attributed to it in musical terms with bells tolling, a happy underlying theme and most importantly, the involvement of all instruments towards the end part which has a continuous crescendo and dramatic punctuation. The early seventies saw ELP introduce Mussorgsky to the progressive rock audience. It seems that this task has been entrusted to T-Tauri for the twenty first century! A commendable work and one that should please both the classical as well as the rock aficionado. Conclusion: 8.5 out of 10. Nigel Camilleri
Unfortunately I could find neither the piano suite or a symphonic rendition in the old vinyl collection (lots of orchestration's of Mussorgsky's St. John's Night on the Bare Mountain though) and like many I've never heard Emerson, Lake and Palmer's live rendition, nor Mekong Delta's '97 progressive rock version. So I'm working a little blindfolded here, basing comparison on memory. The band makes an early mark with electric guitar and keyboards, while violin takes centre stage as brass choir and trumpet solo are replaced in Promenade I. The floating melodies aptly convey the transitional character of the Promenade. In Gnomus the scurrying figure of the gnome seems portrayed by bass. Coincedentally, there have been remarks on Ravel's progressive orchestration for this vignette, where he used xylophone, ratchet and whip. The whispers, blowing wind-effects and atmosphere of T-Tauri point momentarily more to Pink Floyd's Careful with that Ax, Eugene. Both these tracks feature usage of tubular bells. In Promenade II, the most "standard" rock piece on the album, this link is strenghtened, primarily though Bart Beks's fine guitar solo. Here electric guitar and drums replace Ravel's horns and woodwinds with keys and bass in supporting roles. Ever since hearing T-Tauri's rendition of Vecchio Catello, the troubadour's
mournful song, for the first time, it's brought to bear thinking in comparative
thought towards Ennio Morricone. Not only through the early typical use
of guitar, but in its whole melody, though only up to the point where
the band breaks in with a personal interpretation with Gilmouresque guitar,
before returning to the mournful violin's sound. The two themes combine
for a splendid finale. My favourite of the 16 tracks. After the short, heavyclad rendition of the central theme in Promenade IV, T-Tauri follows through with frantic violin activity opening the Ballet of the Chicks in their Shells, which silly scherzo-theme is beatifully rendered on piano, with violin portraying the chicks. Goldenberg and Schmuyle, the wealthy Jew and the beggar in Two Polish Jews are as faithfully depicted as in Ravel's orchestration: Goldenberg's music pompous and the beggar presented through delicate violin. Their encounter erupts in a rock anthem, that might well be drawn from the ELP version. (It has their mark, but I can't be sure, not having heard ELP's live performance.) Another stroll through the Promenade before in Limoges we are greeted by the busy sounds of the market in this French city, which soon bursts into the dark and mysterious Catacombae in which keys and guitar build progressively to a crescendo, interwoven with chants as an unnerving sensation pervades throughout. Con Motuis in Lingua Mortua sees the Promenade's melody transformed into an eerie theme at which it is strenghtened by the keyboards, before melody ensues with some echoeing Spanish guitar. Baba Yaga proves a bit of symphonic rock - Savatage style - which brings to the fore the witch as she grinds the bones to feed her captives. This breaths the spirit of Slavic folklore in use of violin, although keyboards retain the modern aspect. The violin crescendo suggests frantic movement before a return to the symphonic rock anthem and a bursting intro of The Great Gate of Kiev which portrays the splendour of Hartmann's envisioned great gate honouring the Czar Alexander II. The hymn is interrupted by ecclesiastical musings, chants and even the chirping of birds. Bass turns almost jazzy at one instance, whilst tubular bells help build up a grand finale. T-Tauri shows great endeavour in maintaining flow and structure through all this. In conclusion, this rendition of Mussorgsky's composition (or rather Ravel's orchestration) stands out for its structural integrity and the good performances of the players. Pictures at an Exhibition also shows its remarkably good production with a fine level of sound quality. Now that the band has its first recording out and is performing live in Holland, let's hope for a second release with original material soon. Conclusion: 8 out of 10. Mark Sander
I'm not going to discuss all the themes, concepts and tracks on the album; I think both Nigel and Mark did an excellent job at that already. Let me just say that I'm highly impressed by T-Tauri's first release. Overall, the production is very good, although there are one or two tracks in which the drums sound a bit flat and dry. Highlights are the various versions of Promenade, Vecchio Castello (a prog rocker's wet dream), Baby Yaga and the bombastic (oops, I said the B-word) The Great Gate of Kiev. Although T-Tauri's first album is extremely impressive, I have to admit
that I was slightly disappointed. Not that the band doesn't do a great
job on this album, just because they also played a lot of other songs
at their concert which were great as well and a lot more accessible than
Mussorgsky's work. After all, Pictures at an Exhibition is not a CD you
put on as a casual listening or as background music. You really have to
sit down for it, and that of course asks a lot of the concentration from
the listener. Still, as a whole I'm very impressed with T-Tauri's performance on this album, and I was delighted to hear that they are working on a record deal for the next album, which will feature some of the other material they played live. In the meantime, Pictures at an Exhibition is a must-have for all prog rock lovers who don't shun a healthy dosis of classical music and are not turned off by the violin ! Conclusion: 8 out of 10. Ed Sander P.S. Check out the NL Gig List to see where the band is performing on
their autumn tour.
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