A Mask That Changes – Daniel Asia

$12.99

SKU: 829

Description

Amichai Songs & A Mask That Changes features: Jeremy Huw Williams, baritone, Daniel Linder, piano; Adrift on Blinding Light features: Robert Swensen, tenor, Tannis Gibson, piano

Amichai Songs is comprised of poetry by the Israeli poet Yehuda Amichai, Israel’s most prominent modern poet. The texts present an intriguing view of the modern Jewish Israeli experience. Amichai unwraps and unravels the relationship between the people of Israel, the Jews, the Situation (Israel’s place in the Middle East, in all of its ramifications), the individual living in these circumstances, and his relationship to God and the natural world. Included are discussions of God’s presence, slaughtered chickens, Auschwitz, the nature of life in Jerusalem/Israel, universal riddles, soldiering, and the natural world.

In all-Asia provides music that supports the texts and gives them his own curious and idiosyncratic readings. This means that the musical language is quite wide and inclusive, and is used to bring a deeper meaning and understanding to the texts. The music is Jewish in that Asia is Jewish, in the same way that Bach’s works are Christian as he was a Lutheran. But it is of course universal in the manner that all fine music is just that-God willing.

Astrobiology and the Arts are interested in the implications of life beyond Earth. This suggests many questions. What does this mean regarding the view of ourselves in relationship to the cosmos, to ourselves, to God? How do we re-configure our relationship to others out there, and our relationships with those right here? How do we understand our place in time and space? How does this affect our everyday lives? Pines didn’t seek to ask or answer these in his poems in Adrift on Blinding Light-but he does.

Pine’s Last Poems, left on his desk upon his passing, were sent to Asia by his wife. They remained on Asia’s desk for a long time before he could confront them, as the final documents his friend left for us. They confront the dying, the ambiguity of Spring and death, and some unfinished business of our history, Vietnam. They are dedicated to Paul’s memory.