Iceland Symphony Orchestra, Daníel Bjarnason - The Grotesque & The Sublime (2026) [Hi-Res]

  • 24 Feb, 19:14
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Artist:
Title: The Grotesque & The Sublime
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Sono Luminus
Genre: Classical
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) / flac 24bits - 192.0kHz
Total Time: 01:10:47
Total Size: 289 mb / 2.13 gb
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Tracklist

01. FEAST: I. a voluptuous scene that masquerade
02. FEAST: II. the presence of a masked figure
03. FEAST: III. the brazen lungs of the clock
04. FEAST: IV. dance of the mummer
05. FEAST: V. the revelation
06. FEAST: VI. one by one dropped the revellers (danse macabre)
07. FEAST: VII. dominion over all (skeleton procession)
08. Fragile Hope
09. Inferno: I. The Bells
10. Inferno: II. A Passage
11. Inferno: III. Dark Shores

Daníel Bjarnason is a hub-like figure in the group of composers who could be said to constitute a First Icelandic School. But he also stands slightly apart from his peers. As the nation’s foremost conductor, he has premiered and recorded works by its central protagonists including Jóhann Jóhannsson, Anna Thorvaldsdottir, María Huld Markan Sigfúsdóttir and others (notably on the Sono Luminus series Emergence, Recurrence and Occurrence). But Bjarnason’s own music has long sprawled beyond the borders of the school’s distinct aesthetic and incorporated non-abstract forms such as opera, dance and film scores.

While some Icelandic orchestral music enacts a gradual transformation on a vaporous orchestra, akin to the shifting shape and colour of a North Atlantic cloud, Bjarnason’s formative orchestral works often cleave to a solid, defined musical object which might be distorted or obscured before emerging again intact. His music has never shied away from the slow, drone-lagged music of Icelandic archetype but it has also used more varied tempi and more urgent rhythmic profiles. It has also deployed different time scales in parallel – notably in works such as Emergence and From Space I Saw the Earth, in which planes of music operating at different speeds momentarily sync. This brings to his music a sense of what the late Danish composer Per Nørgård described as ‘the timeless forces of existence – nature in the broadest sense.’ Those works had their roots in breakthrough concertos for cello and piano, Bow to String and Processions, both of which thrive on the process of expanding strong, fertile material by zooming deep in or stretching wide out – a more thematic, less spectral approach than that of Icelandic fashion but one that still sees Bjarnason reveling in the properties of sound itself. - Andrew Mellor


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