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Music Pointers: Dreamscapes Review
Exciting, skilfully put together music with many exoticisms.
Sequenza 21: Vivian Fung's "Dreamscapes" Review
“What sets Fung apart is her ability to take over the subconscious of the listener, to build a world so captivating that even the strangest of transitions happen seamlessly. “
SF Gate: Album Review: Vivian Fung, 'Dreamscapes'
“The year-old Violin Concerto that leads off the disc boasts a certain winsome charm, especially in the fluid performance of soloist Kristin Lee.”
Philadelphia Inquirer: Dreamscapes Review
At every point in the disc, Fung has a strong sense of thematic control and structural overview that suggests more great things to come.
San Francisco Chronicle: Dreamscapes Review
Here at last is music of dramatic urgency and depth, in which Fung draws on ideas from gamelan while also adding plenty of her own original material - clangorous, dissonant harmonies, off-kilter rhythms and a sense of wild unpredictability.
The WholeNote: Dreamscapes Review
All three of the works presented here are based on gamelan motifs and melodies giving the disc a wonderful continuity.
HipHopDX: Undun Review
The remainder of undun speaks through the instrumentals, where innocent pianos and violins turn into reckless percussions that fade into searing strings suggesting Redford has died.
New York Times: The Roots: 2 Albums, One Quest
The album has an instrumental coda… an elegiac string quartet and a last dissonant piano chord, an unpeaceful final rest.
The Guardian: Undun Review
Undun is also a mirror held up to present-day America, where ambitions are more likely to die than prosper. It's a downer, but timely and affecting, with moments of beauty.
Chicago Tribune: Undun Review
A gorgeous neo-classical suite closes the album… If an album can be both chilling and beautiful at once, "Undun" is it.
Time: The Roots Have Made A Concept Album. And It’s Good!
“All told, the story undun tells is sometimes chilling, often thrilling, and always illuminating.”
Rolling Stone: "Undun" Review
“The Roots’ 13th release is a concept album with a bravura twist: It narrates the story of a bootstrapping hustler in reverse, from death to birth.“
Pitchfork: "Undun" Review
“The Roots' 13th album, which includes a brief, four-part orchestral suite that builds off a Sufjan Stevens piece, is definitely their most downbeat.“
NPR: First Listen: Undun
Finally, credits roll over a sublime string quartet, mercifully for Black Thought's black thoughts — at least for a moment, before ?uestlove's meticulously arranged strings are silenced by the chilling, deathly growl of a struck piano.
Forward: Concertos Review
Dorman has an eclectic approach—borrowing elements from jazz, pop, and Middle Eastern musical idioms—that makes his music surprisingly accessible.
Winnipeg Free Press: Concertos Review
The performances by the superb soloists and hair-trigger orchestra are stunning. Grab this and enjoy.
Sequenza21: Concertos Review
While no one will mistake it for the mature voice found in the Mandolin Concerto, the youthful exuberance of the Piano Concerto is frequently charming.
Dallas Morning News: Concertos Review
For all their eclecticism, these pieces reveal a strong common profile—with tragic ferocity lurking under the sparkling surfaces.
San Francisco Chronicle: Concertos Review
The music of Israeli composer Avner Dorman is so vivacious and so technically proficient that it’s hard to resist… most rewarding is the Mandolin Concerto, which fuses Baroque and Middle Eastern gestures in unusual ways, and which ends with a surprising flourish.
CD HotList: Concertos Review
This wonderful program of three concertos and one concerto grosso, all beautifully performed and recorded, is nearly enough to restore the confidence of the most hardened pessimist in the future of classical music.

