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CD
Kiss The Guitar Player | ||
| 1. | Gustav on the rocks, for guitar & string quartet 5:40 | |
| Composed by Peter Tiehuis | ||
| Performed by Peter Tiehuis and Gustav Klimt String Quartet | ||
| 2. | Into ecstasy, for guitar & string quartet 4:16 | |
| Composed by Bert Merlendijk / Piet Souer | ||
| Performed by Gustav Klimt String Quartet and Bert Merlendijk | ||
| 3. | Quintet for guitar & strings in D major ("Fandango"), G. 448 (arrangement of String Quintets, G. 270 & 341): Fandango 5:45 | |
| Composed by Luigi Boccherini | ||
| Performed by Eddy Koopman, Jim Schultz, Gustav Klimt String Quartet and Arturo Ramón | ||
| 4. | Beyond reminiscence-universal, for guitar, string quartet, double bass & percussion 5:04 | |
| Composed by Steve Gray / Leonardo Amuedo | ||
| Performed by Eddy Koopman, Jim Schultz, Gustav Klimt String Quartet and Leonardo Amuedo | ||
| 5. | Rumba de tuti, for guitar, string quartet, double bass & percussion 3:11 | |
| Composed by Arturo Ramón | ||
| Performed by Jim Schultz, Gustav Klimt String Quartet, Arturo Ramón and Udo Demandt | ||
| 6. | What is there to say?, song 4:45 | |
| Composed by Vernon Duke | ||
| Performed by Gustav Klimt String Quartet and Axel Hagen | ||
View all tracks on this disc | ||
Klimt!, otherwise known as the Gustav Klimt String Quartet, says in their booklet notes (in Dutch and English) that their aim with Kiss the Guitar Player was "to portray a kaleidoscopic view of the Dutch guitar scene." This they do, but, as often happens when something is done well, they also accomplish something beyond their original goal. The music is light, and the album title whimsical, but this album does nothing less than reflect on the relationship between the guitar and the bowed strings, in the past as well as the present. When you first hear the quartet playing funky music in the opening Gustav on the Rocks, by guitarist Peter Tiehuis, you may think this is another of the many attempts at Kronos Quartet cloning that have appeared in CD catalogues, but the program quickly becomes more diverse. The key is that most of the music was newly comissioned, from performing guitarists, and it set only a single condition: the composer was not to use a concerto-like texture, with the strings backing up the guitar, but rather was charged with creating the titular "dialogues." Put that together with the variety of styles these guitarist-composers play, and you've got a couple of intersecting axes that result in music falling all over the range. Bert Meulendijk's Into Ecstasy (track 2) sets rock electric guitar against high string duets. There is classic pop, jazz, more or less formal concert music, and flamenco influences at several points. The frame is perfectly set in place with the inclusion of a couple of movements of the conventional starting point of music for guitar and string quartet, the Quintet in D major for guitar and strings,, G. 448, of Luigi Boccherini. Let's just say these are heavily tweaked. A delightful release combining experiment and entertainment in a way that the Dutch seem to excel at. James Manheim, All Music Guide