I am often asked what music I like or what I listen to in my down-time. The simple answer is not much. Being saturated in music means that the sponge is often full when I sit down to listen to something, so I tend not to explore music very often. Sometimes I am lucky enough to stumble on a song or an album that catches my interest, and this post contains some of these. Note that the "old" stuff may only have been recent finds, As to whether any of these albums or songs have influenced my compositions, well who cares? We all absorb from our record collection whether we like it or not.
Alfie [sung by Cilla Black - Bacharach & David]
I’ve been aware of this song for years, but only realised how amazing it
is when I caught a documentary on Burt Bacharach where we saw the
actual recording of it. The Liverpudlian Cilla Black performs this with a power that I
have rarely heard elsewhere. It catches aspects of the English psyche
that fuse to Bacharach’s sublime music, and David’s simple and
passionate lyric. I can’t think of another one of their songs [other
than "Say a Little Prayer" as sung by Aretha Franklin] that has this
amount of a kick.
Giù la Testa [Ennio Morricone]
I saw the film "A Fistful of Dynamite" many, many moons ago. The film is a bit dated, but this piece appears in the middle of the show, and stuck in my head. By stuck, I mean is lodged there. This was in the days before having access to anything we wanted on the internet. I bought a compilation of sountrack pieces by Morricone and there it was. Not sure why this one of all of his brilliant music sticks, but it does. My kids call it "Shon, shon", as these are the only words in it. These are supposed to be the name "Seán", as the character they relate to is "Oirish" - i.e. James Coburn with a dreadful brogue [which in Irish means "shoe", not accent as is supposed, and probably more appropriate as a description]. Morricone is a genius and his music is touched by something very special indeed.
Kyrie [György Ligeti] and much of the soundtrack of 2001 : A Space Odyssey
I first heard this excerpt from Ligeti's "Requiem" while I was baby-sitting some family friend’s
children at the age of around fifteen. It appears on the soundtrack of
“2001 : A Space Odyssey” without the returning Kyrie section. It took me
some years in out-of-the-way Dublin to find the entire recording, and it still has the capacity to shock me when I listen to it. It isn’t the
harmonic language that hits me between the ears, its the timbre of the
singers who are almost shouting against an elastic orchestral
accompaniment. The entire "Requiem" has this wildness inherent in it, and is not an easy sing by any means. Study of the vocal score [and I have a signed copy...]
reveals the tight contrapuntal structure that coheres the whole "Kyrie"
together. I met the composer in 1999 at the Classical Brit Awards, and
blubbered out some rubbish about his music changing my life and he just
listened and laughed, offering me his Brit award after my long speech.
He was just massive.
Secrets of the Beehive [David Sylvian]
The best album of non-classical music I own is “Secrets of the Beehive”.
This beautiful CD truly deserves the description “timeless”. There is a
stasis to all the tracks, a heart-stopping sense of melancholy, allied
to some of the best lyric writing I am aware of. The opening track “September” is just under one minute and twenty seconds long. In
that space of time we enter into Sylvian’s personal landscape in
the smoothest fashion imaginable. Strings, piano and soft-low vocal –
“sipping Cokes and playing games” in the late summer sun. Profound,
complete and beautiful. "Orpheus" has the longest silence in it that I know in a song that grazed the charts. Every track is a gem - a jewel to be savoured slowly.
Grace [Jeff Buckley]
I first saw him perform this on “The Late Show” on BBC2 just after the
album “Grace” was released, and he tore the screen apart singing this
impossibly difficult song live. I went straight out and bought the
album, not something I do often [well, actually ever]. A few months
later I was invited by Elvis Costello to sing some lute songs at the
Queen Elizabeth Hall for the Meltdown Festival in 1995 and saw that Jeff
was singing in the same gig. I got a chance to meet him in the
rehearsal, and we had a singing competition in the QEH toilets to see
who could sing the highest in full-voice. He won easily. His performance
for the concert was unbelievable, and we went out on the town afterward
in London. It was a memorable night and I got to know him just a little
bit. The man and the singer were linked together, and this performance
displays the part of him that I saw. I can’t really tell you what it is
like, you just have to hear it. He dedicated this to me from the stage
in the QEH when I requested it, and proceeded to improvise with solo
guitar. Just amazing… I dedicated “Where All Roses Go” to him after his
death – rest in peace.
Light Flight [The Pentangle]
I suspect that Pentangle don’t consider this to be their best track, and
maybe it isn’t, but it hit me between the ears when I heard it first.
The alternating rhythms relentlessly drive this song forward. The
virtuoso band glitter and shine with Jacqui McShee’s almost disconnected
vocal dancing over the resulting brilliance. Probably their best-known
track, this one offers a window into one of the most important and
influential groups for traditional and folk musicians everywhere.
Scherhererzade [Renaissance]
This group were never very fashionable. The lead singer, Annie Haslam, was the single greatest
influence on the vocal sound of the women in Anúna when I started it. If you look her up
or "Goggle" her on the interpork, you’ll
hear all about her vast range and the style of Renaissance [were they
ever actually in fashion?]. What you won’t hear said is that she was
born with a gift, and her voice is it. At her best she had a unique timbre to her voice
that is closer to the singing of a classical singer than a rock singer
and that is touches me when I hear her sing. The sound is out-of-time,
so could never have been truly fashionable. I will admit that Renaissance are a very
acquired taste, but this voice has haunted me for many years.
Madrigals Book V [Carlo Gesualdo]
Just look this composer up on the web and then ignore everything you
read and listen to this track. You can’t? Well that is probably because
the man and his music are inseparable. I heard him first in college after being fascinated by a
lecture given by my professor in UCD. He played Gesualdo’s work and
everyone sniggered, in the same way that people sniggered at a
performance given some years ago by the Beijing Opera here in Dublin. It
really is that odd to the classical ear. It is pretty obvious that this
music was a creative dead-end, but that doesn’t negate its beauty.
Twisted chordal motion echoing the tortured text. Phrases that shift
dramatically from one thing to another without reason. Sparse, atonal
solo lines. It isn’t surprising that Stravinsky set this for orchestra
[rather pointlessly I think]. Listen to The Consort of Musick doing this
and get a copy of the music.
Archandroid [Janelle Monáe]
Well, this young lady is smokin'... I don't mean that she smokes, I mean that she is fashionable and not on fire, as the phrase suggests. Anyway this album is the most interesting thing I've heard in ages. Not a perfect album by any means, it has some lovely vocal work, and some songs that are just, well, brilliant. Some aren't so brilliant, being over-produced and repetitive to a lesser rather than a greater extent. Too many fingers in the pie I suspect, but she really is an original. I suspect that she will be shatteringly huge. Saw her interviewed recently and there is more than a touch of David Bowie there I think - studied responses to questions, but I suspect that she is being very careful with the message she puts out. One of the most positive role-models for young women in music I have come across. My kids love "Wondaland" obsessively, and this...
Heroes [David Bowie]
This album rattled the socks off me in 1977 when I bought a cassette of it. The title track is superb, but there are so many things on it to explore - I love "Joe the Lion" and "Beauty and the Beast". Its great to say that I still listen to this album today and get something from it. Like Monáe, Bowie's gift doesn't lie in his own musical ability, rather in the ability to collaborate with the best of the best, guiding the finished product to completion.
Vespertine [Bjork]
This album is bloody marvellous. Icy, rich, imaginative, wondrous, sensual, feminine and bonkers. Just great. Favourite track is "Pagan Poetry". This is "Aurora", and just listen to the words. She is one of the few non-native English speaking artists that uses the language deliberately in a non-idiomatic way just to prove, I think, how messy it is. Nuff said...
Metamatic [John Foxx]
An enigmatic character. While the sound of this record is now dated, the influence at the time was huge. Foxx is a poet, like Sylvian, but deals with the relationship of the modern existence to the world around it. The landscapes are romantic but isolated. Vast, clinical expanses are traversed by figures hiding their humanity. The best-known track is the fabled "Underpass", which, to the Irish ear, gained a degree of notoriety because it sounds like Foxx is shouting "Underpants". However the song "Plaza" and "Blurred Girl" are aural science fiction. This piece below "He's a Liquid" is a pretty accurate description of the differences between men and women. Actually, I wonder if there is anything in common between us.
Claude Debussy [Virtually Everything]
This man influenced my music more that I can say. A deep, shimmering pool of sound. Vastly influential, he sparked my love for France. I remember travelling there in my early teens and all I could hear was snatches of music superimposed over the beautiful landscape. If I had anything that I would say you must hear, then I would suggest starting with the "Nocturnes" and "Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune" through the piano music and earlier songs, to "La Mer" and the orchestral "Images" and finally resting with the the Cello Sonata and the wonders of "Jeux".
This is only a rough selection of music I listen to, and I hope you take away some suggestions from this posting.







