Here's an artist I didn't know about at all, surprisingly, despite the perfect meld of classical chamber music, jazz, and progressive keyboard elements. The music is often laid-back and meditative but at least in the first two albums rarely boring, with many surprising turns. It's hard to really compare it to any other artist, maybe a little like the keyboard artistry of famed Kenneth Knudsen featured here prominently but lacking completely the jazz/fusion high energy elements. I also thought that atmospherically it suited the lockdowns of this pandemic time perfectly. A good example is the title track of Intaglio, with its perfectly well composed harp concerto feel, similar to most well-thought-out classical music there is no repetition whatsoever in themes or melodies and no elements improvised, just passage after passage of new musical ideas:
Friday, 15 May 2020
Motohiko Hamase, 3 albums (1986-1988)
Here's an artist I didn't know about at all, surprisingly, despite the perfect meld of classical chamber music, jazz, and progressive keyboard elements. The music is often laid-back and meditative but at least in the first two albums rarely boring, with many surprising turns. It's hard to really compare it to any other artist, maybe a little like the keyboard artistry of famed Kenneth Knudsen featured here prominently but lacking completely the jazz/fusion high energy elements. I also thought that atmospherically it suited the lockdowns of this pandemic time perfectly. A good example is the title track of Intaglio, with its perfectly well composed harp concerto feel, similar to most well-thought-out classical music there is no repetition whatsoever in themes or melodies and no elements improvised, just passage after passage of new musical ideas:
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