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Limelight: Cutting Edge Beautiful Dystopia

Limelight: Cutting Edge Beautiful Dystopia

William Brittelle’s mini-album is a shock to the system – a relentless flood of synths, strings and saxophone, with warped vocals complemented by an artificial choir, and reprieves of lush pads and soft melodic fragments.

Gramophone: The Blind Banister - Editor's Choice

Gramophone: The Blind Banister - Editor's Choice

Wonderfully controlled and poised performance by cellist Inbal Segev in Upstate Obscura, Metropolis Ensemble under conductor Andrew Cyr in full control throughout, and the irrepressible Andres on top of his game in The Blind Banister and the solo piano piece Colorful History, I cannot recommend this album highly enough.

The Guardian: The Blind Banister – Original, Arresting and Eclectic

The Guardian: The Blind Banister – Original, Arresting and Eclectic

“These three works from Timo Andres showcase the US composer’s distinctive and accomplished musical language… It’s a highly accomplished disc all round.”

NPR: 50 Albums Coming Out This Spring

NPR: 50 Albums Coming Out This Spring

“Finally, we get a recording of Andres' piano concerto, The Blind Banister, shortlisted for a Pulitzer in 2016, with the composer at the keys. That the album contains the cinematic cello concerto Upstate Obscura, with Inbal Segev, makes it worth the wait.”

I Care If You Listen: Nostalgia Meets Sci-Fi Dystopia

I Care If You Listen: Nostalgia Meets Sci-Fi Dystopia

William Brittelle’s movements are fleeting and brief, like constantly shifting perspectives in dreams that dissolve into one another with a logic all their own.

The Big Takeover: Review - Alive in the Electric Snow Dream

The Big Takeover: Review - Alive in the Electric Snow Dream

The multi-part suite combines bits of freeform noise, mutated transmissions, seething strings, subliminal guitar, and ghostly singing into a lucid nightmare of oddly soothing sonic insanity.

New York Times: Best Classical Albums of 2023

New York Times: Best Classical Albums of 2023

“A vividly immersive thriller... not a word or note is without purpose, and both are captured, if not enhanced, in this richly produced recording.”

BBC Music Magazine: In A Grove Review

BBC Music Magazine: In A Grove Review

In A Grove is rendered in a taut, mesmeric soundworld featuring a strikingly expressive use of electronics. Eight characters are assigned to four excellent singers who, combined with a subtle-hued Metropolis Ensemble, bring the story grippingly alive within Cerrone’s lushly circular, almost ritualistic harmonic frame.

AnEarful: Monthly Listening

AnEarful: Monthly Listening

The way they create a soundscape in the recording really captures the mysterious and immersive spirit of Akutagawa’s work. It’s immersive, it's compulsively listenable.

Gramophone: In A Grove Review

Gramophone: In A Grove Review

In A Grove is an engrossing and complete experience... Cerrone evokes the fragility of memory from the outset... Metropolis articulates his economical writing for nine players with vivid nuance.

New York Times: Five Classical Music Albums You Can Listen to Right Now

New York Times: Five Classical Music Albums You Can Listen to Right Now

In A Grove is vividly produced… not a mere document of the premiere, but a creation of its own, carefully considered for the studio… commanding attention until the end.

Cultural Attaché: New In Music This Week

Cultural Attaché: New In Music This Week

Our top pick is “In A Grove.” This is an opera that will linger long in my memory. Now it can find a place in your memory with the release of this album. I love it and can’t wait to see a full production (hopefully sooner as opposed to later).

Textura: "In a Grove" Review

Textura: "In a Grove" Review

In A Grove provides further confirmation of Cerrone's singular gifts and why he's justly regarded as one of today's leading composers.

OperaWire: "In a Grove" Review

OperaWire: "In a Grove" Review

“A mesmerizing debut… In A Grove benefits from the meticulous playing of Metropolis… and imbues the album with a sense of fidelity to its creator’s vision.”

Gramophone: Telekinesis Review

Gramophone: Telekinesis Review

“Entering Telekinesis’ sound world, one feels like an explorer discovering a planet located at the far reaches of a distant galaxy… a journey that is at once exhilarating, terrifying and alienating.”

Record Collector: Telekinesis Review

Record Collector: Telekinesis Review

Telekinesis has a unique tonal quality characterised by thrilling juxtapositions between electronic and acoustic sounds. An astonishing tour de force that gives new meaning to the word epic. Four stars.

San Francisco Classical Voice: The Strange Highway Review

San Francisco Classical Voice: The Strange Highway Review

Metamorphosis is quite lyrical and beautiful, gathering steam and lusciousness until self-infatuated Narcissus disappears into the void.

New York Times: Best Jazz Albums of 2022

New York Times: Best Jazz Albums of 2022

Samora Pinderhughes’ Grief mixes gospel harmonies, simmering post-hip-hop instrumentals and wounded balladry, the music shudders with outrage and vision.

I Care If You Listen: The Computer Room Review

I Care If You Listen: The Computer Room Review

Phong Tran’s “The Computer Room” transports us back to the days of dial-up through the sounds of early synthesizers, which range from melancholic to ecstatic to warm, heartfelt nostalgia, even in the complete absence of acoustic sound.

NPR All Songs Considered: Grief Review

NPR All Songs Considered: Grief Review

It's fascinating listening to this record from Samora Pinderhughes, like how much softness there is to it at the same time. There's real grandeur and range and reach. Grief is a fantastic record.