
END
OF THE MATTER
PREMIERES
FOR TRUMPET
ERIC BERLIN
EDUARDO
LEANDRO percussion
LYNN
KLOCK saxophone
NADINE SHANK
piano
$14.95 ~ MS1199
"Eric
Berlin has all the elements one expects from a trumpet player - boldness, big
sound, impressive technique - as well as the things that make a complete
musician: tonal variety, ability and willingness to blend, and expressiveness.
Eduardo Leandro is a superb percussionist...Lynn Klock is a very good player..."
American Record Guide ~ January
/ February 2008
"I
can say from the outset that Mr. Berlin…has a wonderfully lyrical tone and a
very solid technique—high notes pose no problem for him… Brass players of
all stripes should marvel at Mr. Berlin’s sound, and others desiring to spice
up their collections might find much of interest here also. The recorded sound
is of very high quality."
Audiophile
Audition ~ February 2008
"Eric Berlin...leads
a musical life devoted to exploration and diversity. His technical virtuosity
and rich and robust sound have been heard in many world premieres. This exciting
disc is devoted to such works, as all were given first performances by Mr.
Berlin."
H&B
Direct ~ February 2008
"Each
piece on this disc received its premiere performance by Eric Berlin and this
collection of pieces speaks to Mr. Berlin’s flexibility of technique and
comfort level with a wide variety of styles. Each work has its own demands,
strengths, and pitfalls. Mr. Berlin and all of the performers on the CD have put
together an incredibly strong and compelling program. The Vingettes by
James M. Stephenson III is a strong opener for the disc. Each of the seven brief
movements fixate on a limited soundworld in both trumpet and percussion parts.
Most often, the percussionist is limited to a single instrument. The end result
is an energizing kaleidoscope of musical potential. I love this piece. It makes
me want to compose!
Charles
Bestor’s Concerto Piccolo is, as one might guess, a brief work. During
the ten minutes, the live trumpet soars through most of the piece while the
electronic accompaniment slides through various manipulations of the trumpet’s
sound. The general tone of the work is ambient, with some diversions into more
driving rhythmic territory. ... the composer does a fine job orchestrating in
and out of the ghost versions of the trumpet.
The
End of the Matter is a cyclic
arch dialog between the trumpet and the mallet instruments. The melodic
materials in the trumpet part are sinuous, sustaining a longer dramatic
structure. The vibes and marimba parts provide great punctuations as the piece
unfolds. Ideas, timbres, and texture revolve through the work without ever
seeming repetitive or meandering.
The
short Elegy for trumpet, saxes, and mallets, is an excellent outgrowth
from the sound world of The End of the Matter. This somber work emerges
from the dying sounds of the previous piece and, on first listening, I thought
it was another section of Macchia’s composition. The saxophones provide
excellent lyrical and contrapuntal contrast to the trumpet line.
Evan
Hause’s Street Jam is a delightfully crisp and punchy work. The two
forces, trumpet and bongos, work together at times, against each other at times,
and upstage each other at times. The title is a perfect visual image to put with
the music. Hause has wonderful energy and drive in this piece. Both performers
really throw down, too!
The
Sonata by Robert J. Bradshaw could be considered the most conventional work on
the CD being the only "sonata" and the only work for trumpet and
piano. The four movements of the piece follow the typical sonata plan, each
filled with a lush sense of harmony and a lyrical sense for melodic writing. The
faster movements contain plenty of sparkle and drive in addition to the
pervasive lyricism... the piece and the performance are quite strong.."
Sequenza
21 ~ February 2008
"
'Always begin with energy' was the poet David Wagoner's advice on assembling an
oral program. By beginning End of the Matter: Premieres for Trumpet with James
M. Stephenson's Stravinsky-influenced Vignettes for Trumpet and Percussion
(giveaway title of the second vignette: Chasing Igor), Eric Berlin apparently
concurs. Not that the energy flags during the three pieces that follow --
indeed, Stravinsky, although never mentioned in the eight-page liner notes,
haunts the album's entire 71 minutes. But the energy is re-distributed,
sometimes into futuristic effects (Charles Bestor's Concerto Piccolo for Trumpet
and Electronics), sometimes into melodies and instrumentation requiring no
Stravinsky familiarity to apprehend (Robert J. Bradshaw's Sonata for Trumpet and
Piano). At the risk of succumbing to too much optimism, one can imagine the
"spacey" feel of Berlin's performances introducing progressive-rock
fans arrested by the gimmick-laden but musically accomplished likes of Keith
Emerson, Isao Tomita and Walter/Wendy Carlos to the deeper, wider worlds to
which those performers' more serious moments point. Rating: Four switched-on
firebirds out of five."
World Magazine ~ January 2008
*
* *
Trumpeter
Eric Berlin
leads a musical life devoted to exploration and diversity, from solo engagements
to chamber and orchestral music to pedagogy. His technical virtuosity, magnified
by a rich and robust sound, has been heard in many world premieres of solo and
chamber music works. Following the premiere of Evan Hause's Trumpet Concerto, a
work commissioned by the Albany Symphony Orchestra for Mr. Berlin, one reviewer
wrote that "his fluency and gorgeous sound were both amazing."
Mr. Berlin's acclaimed solo performances have spanned, and augmented, the range
of trumpet repertoire. In addition to the Hause Concerto, which he has also
performed with the Brooklyn Symphony Orchestra, Prism Chamber Players, and
University of Denver Wind Ensemble, Mr. Berlin recently premiered Charles
Bestor's Concerto Piccolo at the conference of the International Trumpet Guild (ITG).
Other premieres given by Mr. Berlin include Howard Buss's Skylines, and Pasquale
Tassone's Fanfare and Three Dances. His dedication to contemporary music has
also led to collaborations with several leading new music ensembles, including
the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, Musica Viva, Harvard Group for New Music,
and Dogs of Desire, a new music program of the Albany Symphony Orchestra. In
other solo appearances, Mr. Berlin was featured as soloist in John Williams's
music from "Born on the Fourth of July," conducted by the composer,
has appeared with the University of Massachusetts Wind Ensemble and the Nashua
Chamber Orchestra, and was the First Prize Winner of the Streitweiser Cornet
Competition. In May of 2005, he performed Arutunian's Concerto for Trumpet on
tour with the Helsinki University Symphony Orchestra throughout Finland. In June
of 2005, he performed a full recital of works commissioned by him with
percussionist Eduardo Leandro at the ITG Conference in Thailand.
Mr. Berlin has been Principal Trumpeter of the Albany Symphony Orchestra since
1998 and has also appeared with the Boston Symphony, New York Philharmonic,
Baltimore Symphony and Boston Pops. With the Albany Symphony and conductor David
Alan Miller, he can be heard on several acclaimed recordings, including those of
works by William Schuman, John Harbison, Morton Gould and Roy Harris. In
addition, Mr. Berlin holds positions of Principal Trumpet of the Boston
Philharmonic Orchestra and Associate Principal Trumpet of the Colorado Music
Festival in Boulder. The Majestic Brass Quintet, founded by Mr. Berlin in 1988
and ensemble-in-residence at Northeastern University, is one of Boston's most
prominent brass ensembles. Mr. Berlin maintains a studio as Artist-Teacher of
Trumpet at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
A native of Pennsylvania, Mr. Berlin attended the New England Conservatory of
Music, where he was a student of Mr. Charles Schlueter, former Principal Trumpet
of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Robert Nagel of the New York Brass Quintet.
He has also studied extensively with Vince Penzerella, former Second Trumpet of
the New York Philharmonic, Tom Rolfs, Principal Trumpet of the Boston Symphony,
and Frank Kadarabek, former Principal Trumpet of the Philadelphia Orchestra.
Eric Berlin is a Yamaha Artist.