STEPHEN PERILLO: Requiem for a Goldfish - also: Lullaby for Orchestra; Crushed Tomatoes; Brass Symphony - Russian Festival Orchestra/ Yuval Waldman - Centaur CRC 2445:

Who says contemporary symphonic music can't be lots of fun?

I simply had to ask for this one when I saw the title of the album (the Requiem). The composer studied

 

with David del Tredici (the Alice in Wonderful fixated composer), but composing is just his leisure time activity. He is head of an international travel tour company. So going to Moscow for this recording session was nothing that unusual for Perillo. His strictly instrumental Requiem honors the only pet he's had as an adult, and as its title implies, "things turned out badly." The goldfish on the cover is not floating at the top of the bowl, and neither is the bowl's sunken castle the expected architecture - it's St. Basil's Cathedral in Red Square! Perillo describes his style as pop music poured into classical molds, and that about tells the story of these four symphonic poems. The Brass Symphony began as a brass quintet and Perillo practiced his orchestration techniques on it. He learned a few things in the process: the first trumpeter accused him of writing clarinet music for his part. Good natured light symphonic fun completely free of the corny or hackneyed. Begone Carter, Berio, Stockhausen - bring on Perillo and Torke!

— by John Sunier

 

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