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Aug

27

2010

A long-awaited release!

After many months of work, initially recording, then editing and mixing – plus a tremendous amount of time spent contacting poets and their publishers in order to get copyright permissions – my CD with Jeremy Harmer entitled “Touchable Dreams” is finally at the pressing plant ready for a September 1st release.

Live in Norwich

Because of the amount of time it took to get all the poetry permissions sorted – and we really only managed it due to some superb help from professional permissions person (what would be the correct title I wonder?) Rachel Thorne – and also due to a last minute refusal for what would have been our closing poem, we have been able not only to get the CD pretty well exactly as we would like, but were also able, while trying to find a replacement final track (and with some excellent inspiration from Jeremy!), to end the CD in a really (we hope) inspiring way.

I asked my son Chris to do the CD artwork and design for us, and he’s also taken some excellent photos at our most recent live show, some of which are now online on a new “Touchable Dreams” blog site – http://touchabledreams.posterous.com. Do take a look at it.

CD Cover

It’s now just over a year since we first did the show live, and it’s hard to stand back from it and view it objectively, but we feel that the CD is an exciting and fairly unique recording, mixing words and music in a way that we haven’t come across before. We certainly hope that others feel the same about it!

You can buy the signed, numbered limited edition “Touchable Dreams” CD from my online store. It will also be available for download from iTunes and other stores very soon (with just two poems missing where download permission was not forthcoming!).

Our next live “Touchable Dreams” show in the UK is in Ely on September 10th (details here), but we’re also doing it in Bucharest on September 4th!

Plans are also now afoot for a new show featuring the words of Charles Dickens. “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair…” (A Tale of Two Cities)

May

17

2009

What Fools These Mortals Be….

I’m pleased to be able to announce the release, as a download CD, of “What Fools These Mortals Be” – works by composer David Stoll.

David Stoll download CD cover

David writes “This new release combines five of the pieces from ‘The Shakespeare Suite’ with related works, including the first release of the third String Quartet, ‘Fools By Heavenly Compulsion’, based on King Lear. All this music explores the human tendency to deceive ourselves, particularly in matters of love, a major theme in Shakespeare. As the meddler Puck says, watching unnoticed: “Lord, what fools these mortals be!”

The Bingham Quartet recorded David’s third quartet for this download, and we’ve also premiered his fourth quartet.

For more details and audio examples, please visit www.creative-confidence.com.

Dec

3

2008

Ascension in Advent!

It’s finally arrived: Today, after several months of recording and preparation, 1000 copies of my new solo CD “Ascension” were delivered to my door. It’s an exciting feeling to open the first box and take the wrapping off "Ascension" CD coverthe first CD. Although the music is all exactly the same as it was when it was on my computer prior to going to the CD pressing plant, it somehow feels different as I put the first real copy of the CD into the CD player and start playing it…..

As I listen through to the CD, I reflect that the wide variety of music on the recording seems to aptly reflect the sort of week I’m having: Varied seems, actually, to be a bit of an understatement!

Yesterday I was in a London recording studio, sitting in the small recording room, headphones at a jaunty angle (to allow one side to be over my right ear to hear the track I was recording over, while the other sits away from the other ear, so that I can also hear my own playing properly!), playing music by composer David Stoll. These were instrumental lines added above sampled instruments, for a ‘library’ CD – a recording which can be used by companies looking for music for TV shows, adverts and the like. I followed this by an evening orchestral rehearsal in Cambridge playing Johann Strauss’s famous operetta “Die Fledermaus”

Today I was preparing for, and then conducting, a rehearsal with Ely Sinfonia for their forthcoming Christmas concert featuring Howard Blake’s “The Snowman” and Edward Watson’s “The Twelve Days of Christmas”; a wonderfully witty musical setting based around the clever words of John Julius Norwich – a series of letters detailing the possible response to receiving the presents listed in this famous carol.

Tomorrow (although as I write this tomorrow has just become today!) I will be in Colchester giving a duo recital with clarinettist Charles Hine. We’ve put together a fairly way out mixture of acoustic and electronic music which goes from serialism to George Harrison, minimalism to Coldplay and improvisation to live looping……A first for me will be a new piece for solo clarinet where I’ll be doing live manipulation of the sound using loops, delays and other effects. A first for Charles will be having to pluck some violin notes in an arrangement I’ve made of “Fratres” by the Estonian composer Arvo Pärt – it will be his violin debut! A first for everyone in the audience (and me!) will be watching Charles perform a piece written for two clarinets, but only one clarinettist….

All in all a varied week – and it’s only Wednesday.

I shall finish this blog post now and turn off the CD player: My “Ascension” CD has just got to track 8 – a short piece by the renaissance composer Susato, which I recorded using violins, recorders and percussion. Every time I hear it it makes me grin: I had such fun recording it. I’ve always enjoyed Renaissance dance music, and to be able to record some for my CD, in a very light-hearted arrangement, was a real pleasure.

You can buy “Ascension” directly from my online shop here. Both “Ascension” and my first solo CD “Duplicity” are available with 20% off for the whole of December.

Nov

9

2008

Ascension

September and October this year seem to have gone by in a rapidly-moving blur, and suddenly here we are in November and I realise that I haven’t written a post for two months!

I have, as you may easily guess, been keeping busy: September saw me coaching on a strings and woodwind course with the excellent Colin Touchin, as well as giving a workshop at Haileybury College, where I worked with some of the students on playing electric violin, and also demonstrated the looping techniques which I use in my solo concerts. This was also the month that my son Chris started at Lincoln University, a rather major change for all of us! He has still found time to design the artwork for my new CD though…

The major event in October was an Ely Sinfonia concert in Ely Cathedral where I conducted, among other works, the Elgar Cello Concerto, played superbly by the renowned Raphael Wallfisch. This was the culmination of my first season as Artistic Director of Ely Sinfonia, and we managed to draw an audience of over 600 for what was an excellent concert.

I also gave a couple of solo recitals in October, including playing for the 2nd Norwich Festival of Live Looping, where I met up with the person who got me into looping in the first place, bass guitarist Steve Lawson. Also on the bill was the excellent Per Boysen, all the way from Sweden, and the Festival organiser, guitarist Andy Butler. At the end of the month I travelled to Glasgow for 4 days with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, playing the huge Messiaen masterpiece “Des Canyons Aux Etoiles”. For those who might be interested the concert we gave of this piece will be broadcast on Radio 3 on the evening of December 12th.

However my main efforts over the last two months have been towards the completion of my new CD “Ascension”. It’s now finally finished and is off to be pressed this week, for release by the end of the month. An ideal Christmas gift, if I say so myself!

This CD has evolved a lot from my original idea of a short CD single with about 15 minutes of music on it. It’s ending up coming in at 55 minutes and, in true Bingham style, has everything from Renaissance dance music on violins, recorders and percussion, to Led Zeppelin on multi-tracked violins! In between there’s some more Bartok Duos, and excellent Telemann Canonic Sonata, a wonderful choral piece by Pablo Casals, which I’ve arranged for strings, an arrangement of a Jeff Beck number with double bass and African drums, and, the title track, my own composition “Ascension”. There are 3 remaining tracks, all recorded live: A light-hearted, jazzy encore from a concert I gave with guitarist Jason Carter in Cambridge a few years ago, and, from the more recent past, two live sections from the very first completely improvised performance I’ve ever given! The details of this concert are in my blog post “Improvizone” and I decided that some of the music would work well as the first and last tracks on the CD….

“Ascension” can be pre-ordered from my shop now, and will be available from the beginning of December.