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LEBRECHT LISTENS | Howard Skempton Offers A Different Angle Of Contemplation For Times Of Isolation

Lebrecht_Listens_-William_Howard_

Howard Skempton: 24 Preludes and Fugues (Orchid)

★★★☆☆

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First there was J S Bach. Then came Dmitri Shostakovich. The form is open for others to play with. I was unaware of Skempton’s contribution until this CD landed. A northern Englishman in his early 70s, Skempton is a minimalist in the absolute literal sense that he uses the fewest number of notes to make his point. Not a minim more or less.

In prelude-and-fugue form this yields a string of aphorisms connected by a tonal centre and a gentle, rocking, bucolic mood. Some of the pieces last no longer than 40 seconds. The effect can be hypnotic if you want it to be, but pay closer attention and you’ll find a musical mind working with the simplest of materials to achieve a particular atmosphere. The pauses between each of the 24 pieces are as telling as the sound. William Howard plays with breathless poise.

At a time when radio stations are playing familiar stuff from a crisis playlist, I try to reach out for something off the beaten track, something to take me to a different angle of contemplation. Skempton took me there, and I’m glad of it. In these weeks of isolation, we need our ears to get us out of the house.

To read more from Norman Lebrecht, follow him on Slippedisc.com.

Norman Lebrecht’s new book Genius and Anxiety is available now.

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