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"Another Face could easily have sunk into mere sound effects, a boring and ultimately meaningless exploration of all the sounds a solo violin can make. But the underlying lyricism and sheer bravura of (Chicago Symphony Orchestra's concertmaster, Robert) Chen's performance took us on the psychological journey that Felder envisioned."
By Wynne Delacoma
Classical Music Critic
Chicago Sun-Times
February 18, 2005
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"David Felder's affecting Colección Nocturna took its title from a Pablo Neruda poem, and presumably its shadowy, searching mood as well. The poem itself describes "a hard intonation of darkness," which Mr. Felder ably transcribed for clarinet, piano and tape, in a work that stood out for its highly emotive writing and direct, visceral style. Jean Kopperud played both clarinet and bass clarinet with fluid technique and expressive urgency. She was vividly complemented by the pianist Christopher Oldfather."
By Jeremy Eichler
The New York Times
November 23, 2005 |
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"The principal concert, given by the Buffalo Philharmonic
at the end of the week , was devoted to just two twenty-minute
pieces-Mr. Felder's percussion concerto BETWEEN and Mr.
Wuorinen's "Bamboula Squared". It was good to be able
to hear two major pieces by him(Felder): NOVEMBER SKY,
a duet for flutist and computer, descending from piccolo screams
to the cool dark of the bass flute, as well as the percussion
concerto. Both works showed the importance to a composer of being
around performers... Rachel Rudich was the intensely active performer
of NOVEMBER SKY; Steve Schick worked with athletic speed
and grace on a battery of instruments frontstage in BETWEEN...
The eventual orchestral performances were compelling and often
beautiful."
-Paul Griffiths, The New Yorker-
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"Felder's BETWEEN is a riveting score...There's some
gorgeous orchestral writing here - the use of percussion and
soloist Steve Schick's virtuosity being the pervasive if not
dominant feature. The pulsating basses evoke drama building to
double mallet toccata-like frenzy with bass drum shots falling
like mortars. With nicely engineered transitions, this is a schizophrenic
tone-poem, its seeming incoherence part and parcel of its power."
-Kenneth Young, Buffalo News-
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"David Felder's CANZONE XXXI stood in marked contrast
even though from common roots (3 previous Venetian canzoni).
Based on Dante's grief-laden Canzone on the death of Beatrice,
Felder's piece is tightly written, muted at first and passing
from snarling to more open as the mutes came off. Episodic in
form, and with multiple peaks of intensity, the music is uncompromisingly
modern and complex. It is not so much flagrantly dissonant as
simply not consonant and needs several hearings in order to become
accustomed to its language."
-Herman Trotter, Buffalo News-
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"Felder's brief LINEBACKER MUSIC was linked with
Stravinsky's RITE in that they both evoke feelings of
ferocity, even savagery: and on the technical level, they are
built not so much on the idea of themes as onelemental motifs
and recurring rhythmic phrases that can be so compelling as to
have the memorability of full-fledged themes. Don't expect LINEBACKER
MUSIC to remind you of 'The Blue Danube'. Wholly consistent
with its subject matter, it has a very declamatory opening, then
proceeds to be stridently aggressive and percussion-laced, and
to convey a feeling of massive strength at all times, even in
a brief, quiet section.It resemble "Pacific 231", an
acknowledged mini-masterpiece, in its driving insistence."
-Herman Trotter, Buffalo News-
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"INNER SKY was a highlight of the festival; and THREE
PIECES FOR ORCHESTRA's profound forward-pointing poetry ended
the festival."
-Hans-Theodor Wohlfhart, Neue Zeitschrift fur
Musik-
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"Chilean poet Pablo Neruda's verse (SIX POEMS FROM NERUDA'S"ALTURAS...")
is a disturbing view of many social issues and humankind's continual
struggle to cope. Felder, while not attempting literal portrayals,
does capture the flavor of uncertainty in his gestural music.
The first and shorter movement is an environment obsessed with
pell-mell forward impetus. It sounds chaotic at first, but if
you stay with it, an order and a strong dramatic profile emerge.
The music has an overriding feverish quality which is very well
projected via turbulent sometimes jumbled lines and effective
percussion bursts. This is music which may be harsh and gritty,
but clearly has a mind of its own and is definitely going somewhere.
The longer second movement lies in quiet linear expressions in
the strings with subtle wind sub texts colored by some extraordinary
percussion effects. This continual, intimate unfolding of musical
thoughts is suffused with a subtle beauty and guided by a sense
of logic which makes the relatively consonant concluding string
chord absolutely right. On second hearing (April 7), Felder's
music made the same strong impression. All that remains now is
for the Philharmonic to record this work."
-Herman Trotter, Buffalo News-
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"A far greater inventiveness and even a true personal expression
characterized the American, David Felder's music. His SIX
POEMS...is difficult to describe: melodic, but not melodious,
rhythmic but only with a clear pulse in the highly original last
movement, intangible, yet substantial, especially in the long,
elegiac middle movement which is surrounded by the two riotous
outer movements."
-Carl-Gunnar Ahlen, Svenska Dagbladet-
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"Elegance has a place of its own. A piece was played which
would be most interesting to hear again in thirty years when
it is time to pick a piece to be performed as representative
of this year's (1995) I.S.C.M. The American composer David Felder's
SIX POEMS...was extremely elegant varying between explosive
energy and austere lyricism, and at the same time so skillfully
written that it brought Richard Strauss to mind--if one can imagine
a Strauss who landed in today's swarming city life."
-Thomas Anderberg, Svenska Expressen-
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"David Felder's JOURNAL was, to this listener, the
most effective of the three commissioned works.... The work didn't
sound very lyrical at the outset, but during the course of ten
minutes or so, Felder has created a poignant, spirit-filled,
almost serene tone poem. "Journal" is well scored.
There is no chaos here with each instrument clearly audible and
contributing to the sense of the ensemble, yet still retaining
its individuality. Rather, there is a strong sense of coming
together as the music unfolds."
-Peter Jacobi, Bloomington Herald-
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"The most technologically advanced undertaking of the festival
was INNER SKY, complex and geogeously scored."
-Alan Rich, L.A. Reader-
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"Felder's THREE PIECES FOR ORCHESTRA is loosely based
upon episodes from the composer's experience. The outer movements
are dense yet form a purposeful continuum that clearly is going
somewhere. This is music with an epic reach, cosmic energy, and
unconcern with the commonplace, The central movement, however,
is a study in sonority, open textures, and spare orchestral colorations,
largely in slower, measured statements with a more reflective
ambience. Heralding horns make thematic suggestions that never
develop but give the form useful reference points. Summoning
brass and timpani usher in the final movement, which resumes
the character of the first movement, but is punctuated by interior
exclamations and melodic fragments concluding with massive percussion
hammer blows."
-Herman Trotter, Buffalo News-
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"There is much variety in Felder's music, as well as originality;
one might not think these five pieces came from the same composer,
yet one would certainly have a hard time putting another's name
to them. JOURNAL achieves shining textures, with dissonances
used to punctuate a basically consonant setting; it begins with
energy and settles into serenity. THREE LINES begins quietly
and ruminates for much of the piece; then comes a tough harsh
outburst, followed by an intriguing coda. NOVEMBER SKY
retains an ethereal, ecstatic quality throughout. The performances
are all first rate and the recordings are brilliant. Felder has
proven an original composer who takes a lot of chances and usually
wins."
-James North, Fanfare Magazine-
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"BOXMAN was the artistic high point of the festival
(Ars Electronica, 1987, Linz Austria) as a whole. The evolution
of such an impressive work happened in two ways: the composition
by David Felder, which used elements of jazz and the soundscapes
of new music was phenomenally interpreted by the excellent trombonist
Miles Anderson and was woven into synthesized sounds. A precious
rarity happened, namely a truly convincing symbiosis of natural
and digitalized sound. A piece of music of dynamic power, tender
sensibility, and vital humor. The work found congenial visual
interpretation through the clearly defined aesthetics of the
video wall. Through fluid, rapidly changing images, the trombonist
was mirrored by his interpretation as well as his interior states.
And this in a perfect harmony of real-time and pre-produced video.
A wholly credible artwork in music and visuals, and therefore,
in both realms a promise for the future."
-Franz Schwabeneder, Osterreich Nachrichten-
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"In NOVEMBER SKY the flute is commanded to go forth
and multiply, the flute's basic gestures cataloged and isolated,
and then made to grow, shrink, tighten and expand.The soloist
on stage in this quasi-concerto for flute and flutes was Jayn
Rosenfeld . She made her way through four members of the instrument's
immediate family, from piccolo to bass while loudspeakers on
either side alternately shrieked, cooed, and groaned in response.
-Bernard Holland, New York Times-
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"BOXMAN was as constricting in its psychological
context as it was expansive in its technical complexity. Trombonist
Miles Anderson put his horn through a variety of different effects,
interacting with pitch dividers, digital delays, sampled portions
of his own playing and a video wall display that cut up his image
and dealt it out in a wild shuffle. Anderson played his declamatory
role with relish, filling the hall with wailing, gut-wrenching
tones which were delayed and played back forming an eerie claustrophobic
canon. Like any technical innovation in the arts, Felder's live
interactive music-video promised novelty, but proved to be a
sharper scalpel for the dissection of the self."
-Richard Chon, Buffalo News-
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"Even more fun came when trombonist Anderson sat flanked
by loud speakers and nested within the wires and pedals of David
Felder's 'mini-opera,' BOXMAN. The richly fascinating
variety of sounds Anderson got was quite enough of a good thing.
The opening solo was something that Bill Harris of the old Thundering
Herd would have admired, wild and full..."
-William Glackin, Sacramento Bee-
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"Earlier in the same adventurous program (1989 Huddersfield
), was David Felder's CROSSFIRE described as 'a music
and video virtuoso performance project for solo musician and
video projection'. Part 1, ANOTHER FACE featured a dazzling
violin solo while two banks of over thirty video screens reflected
images of a performer dancing. Part 2, BOXMAN concerned
itself with a supra-real, Gothic-sized trombonist; described
in the program as 'entirely self-referential' it also represents
a curious and massive ego trip for the performer who is both
heard live and seen in many dimensions on the screens."
-Lynne Walker, The Scotsman-
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"Charm is not the word that springs immediately to mind
when contemplating the powerful visions of David Felder's
CROSSFIRE. Karen Bentley's elegant and powerful violin, and
trombonist Barrie Webb's awesome stunning power coupled with
the stark video images made a powerful impact...'What a Show!'"
-Yorkshire Post-
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"Felder's THIRD FACE alternates between a muscular,
interlocking quartet of instrumental jeremiads, and more delicate
alignments in whispering harmonics. It's a tense, hard-fisted
work, extravagant in its rhetoric, full of howls and leering
virtuoso licks."
-Robert Everett-Green, Toronto Globe and Mail-
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"One of the most ambitious programs of the season was that
heard at a Group for Contemporary Music concert last week. It
consisted of four very demanding- and rewarding- string quartets
by Jonathon Harvey, Wayne Peterson, David Felder, and Stefan
Wolpe... The four works were very different from one another;
in idiom, technically, emotionally, in musical purpose. But in
common they demonstrated the continuing vitality of the medium
to which for more than two centuries composers have entrusted
some of their highest, strangest, noblest thoughts... Peterson
and Felder are American composers unknown to American Grove Dictionary,
but not to American audiences; and Felder and Cage were the American
composers honored at last year's Huddersfield Festival... Felder's
THIRD FACE was given its first performance by the Arditti,
at the 1988 Buffalo new music festival. I was struck by it then;
after further hearings of it I admire it even more. It is lucid,
but with a controlled wildness in its making. Written for virtuosi,
it challenges them by presenting its fierce, fertile ideas with
almost reckless rhythmic and dynamic exuberance."
-Andrew Porter, The New Yorker-
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"THIRD FACE, by David Felder, a composer on the faculty,
was brief - ten minutes- and eventful. I have not heard much
Felder music, but what I have heard has been exciting; the (New
York) Philharmonic should look at his THREE LINES FROM TWENTY
POEMS, which the Buffalo Philharmonic played last year. After
the concert, I was tempted to follow the Arditti across the border
to hear the Felder again when it was played in Toronto that evening..."
-Andrew Porter, The New Yorker-
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"Felder was conductor in his COLECCION NOCTURNA after
a poem by the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda in which the composer
felt 'powerfully evocative images of a surreal nocturnal landscape...'
He scored the work for clarinet/bass clarinet and piano soloists,
tape and orchestra. Neruda's poem contains a phrase, 'I am rent
by the shock of my dreaming', which reflects the quality of this
music. The clarinet is alternately lyrical, then used as the
shrill leading edge of massed sonorities. Orchestral textures
are generally quite dense but the strings were often given surprisingly
consonant supporting chordal passages. Four loud speakers bracketed
the hall, the tape tracks used not as a major element but to
shadow the solo instruments or for heightening effect. It seemed
a series of advancing and receding waves which reached for and
achieved the same kind of ecstatic ambiance, at its peaks, that Ruggles' "Men and Mountains" is capable."
-Herman Trotter, Buffalo News-
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"Mr. Felder's powerful COLECCION NOCTURNA, a 1983
work for piano and clarinet was the polar opposite of the Feldman.
Extroverted and kinetic, sometimes harmonically spiky sometimes
sweetly lyrical, it demanded a more conventional virtuosity.
Jean Kopperud's agile clarinet playing and her ability to move
easily between graceful, song like lines and brash passages full
of leaps and incongruities served Mr. Felder's music well."
-Allan Koznin, New York Times-
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"Felder's THREE LINES FROM TWENTY POEMS was excellently
crafted and very communicative, opening with quietly descending
orchestral sighs in bitonal language followed by a long diatribe
of heaving, brass-topped cacophony from which the anguished bursts
of trombone sound could be repeatedly heard within the tumultuous
orchestral texture. This gradually trailed off to a few plaintive
and bare solo cello lines answered by percussive popping sounds."
-Herman Trotter, Buffalo News-
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"ROCKET SUMMER, a solo piano work slightly more difficult
in approachability than the remainder of the concert, was full
of close-knit, furiously accelerating and crescendoing interwoven
trills and repeated notes, very dense; contrasted with crystalline
sounds, cold and stabbing, seeming almost a study in light rather
than sound. Yvar Mikhashoff played it wonderfully."
-Kenneth Young, Buffalo News-
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