REVIEW : THEN IT BECAME CLEAR CD
By:
Don Kimenker, founder earBuzz.com
Date: 02 february 2012


 

"Sublime. It seems a genre impossibility to create instrumental new age music that is relaxing and musically innovative. We're mostly littered with damper-pedal sustained Steinways and breathy acoustic guitars along with electronic arpeggiated reverb keys. . but not here. Far from it - in fact all the way to the Netherlands for Anne Vanschothorst's latest CD, "Then it Became Clear". Harpist, Vanschothorst, has partnered with percussionist, Arthur Bont, on most of the tracks and the musical marriage is near perfection. The listener receives the timbre of the percussive harp complemented by assorted matched brushes, deep skinned toms, and exotic percussive choices to create a tapestry of beauty - truly. The CD opens with "Moos", a kiss to Elizabethan minstrel dirges but with sparse tribal hits that darken the melody. Track 4, "Life's Good", is counterpoint from what sounds like an homage to John Lennon's 'Working Class Hero' melodically. The percussion choices here are subtle, which, in our experience is a technically difficult place to hover for a percussionist - lightly keep rhythm at a slower tempo but still groove. Bont does this beautifully. More than anything, the maturity of the music is palpable. Even the two chord vamp, "Yes I Do", transports into a cinema aural space with a complexity that certainly would not be transcribed in paper. The performance is inspired. The title track, "Then it Became Clear", uses minor 2nd and dissonant intervals to introduce an almost violent arpeggiation that reveals a story within the composition of unsettled calm and sudden increased kinetic revelation. Vanschothorst plays with such range of dynamics from ferocious energy to tender as she mesmerizes the listener under the spell of what turns into a versatile instrument under her care. Towards the end of the CD, track 15, "Motion", and 17, "Triumph", are fine examples of Vanschothorst's technical ability in what sounds as one of the more challenging on the record. Bont swells cymbals underneath the harp's finger-fast arpeggios in "Motion", while still maintaining some semblance of serenity in the composition. "Triumph", similarly flies, but with a memorable focus on melody. So nice. Vanschothorst has a home in our carousel, and certainly could have a home as a composer for movie soundtracks - but that goal sounds short of the actual mark Vanschothorst has the ability to make here - a place in the musical era that combines both the unique beauty of the harp and exotic choices of percussion - all supported by touching emotional pieces with melodies that transport the listener to a better place."