On his first solo acoustic guitar album, Wolfgang Muthspiel couples eleven self-penned concert etudes with others of diverse character, including a tribute to jazz legend Bill Evans, a partly improvised elaboration on material by drummer and one-time Evans associate Paul Motian, and a treatment of a sarabande by Johann Sebastian Bach. In keeping with the basic idea of the etude, Muthspiel’s eleven were conceived as exercises designed to help the developing student refine specific skills. Their focal points are identified in titles that variously reference tremolo, triplets, chords, arpeggio, and the like; they’re never one-note exercises, however, when the Austrian guitarist smartly builds them into full-fledged compositions, despite being only two to three minutes at a time. “Etude Nr. 10 Sixths” illustrates the idea when it builds on the technical foundation to become a pretty, folk-styled expression.
It’s an interesting album for its trajectory too, as Muthspiel sequenced it to reflect his own path from violinist to classical guitarist to jazz musician, and it therefore makes sense that it culminates in the Motian and Evans settings. Muthspiel was first trained to play classical music on violin before switching to guitar at the age of thirteen and in the years that followed developed the ability to improvise in addition to read from a score. While elements of both classical and jazz surface during the album, it never organizes itself into clear-cut divisions between the styles; instead, the dimensions blur together in the performances such that drawing lines of demarcation becomes impossible. Recorded with care at the Vienna Radiokulturhaus, the material sparkles with pristine clarity.
Being a solo guitar recording, Etudes / Quietudes is naturally intimate, but it’s not always quiet and neither is it restful. The opening “Etude Nr. 1 Tremolo” moves at light-speed as Muthspiel drapes slow melodic lines across a torrential base that morphs into an even more dazzling picking episode. “Triplet Droplet,” “Etude Nr. 6 Triplets,” and “Etude Nr. 11 Vamp” similarly awe for the precision with which he executes challenging exercises with such seeming ease. Flowing gracefully, the lilting tapestries crafted for “Etude Nr. 8 Melting Chords” and “Etude Nr. 13 Arpeggio” are wondrous to behold.
Styles regularly change, with the lovely “Etude Nr. 4 Pedal” exuding a soothing folk-meditation character and Motian’s “Abacus Theme” receiving a deep bluesy reading. Muthspiel’s classical side moves to the fore for the gentle “Etude Nr. 7 Brahms Minor” and Bach’s stately “Sarabande” (the adjoining “Between Two Sarabandes” retains that classical quality whilst extending it into improvisational territory). In being titled after a scenic place in Austria, “Etude Nr. 9 Schildlehen” is one that less references a technique and more focuses on nostalgically evoking a scenic locale. Speaking of affection, Muthspiel’s admiration for Evans comes through loud and clear in the heartwarming tribute that ends the release, “For Bill Evans.”
Throughout the recording, the guitarist’s virtuosity is called upon but necessarily so in order to realize and demonstrate the skill in question. One comes away from the recording as impressed by Muthspiel’s versatility and the ease with which he performs in different stylistic contexts and articulates a range of moods. Adding to the project’s appeal for developing guitarists, Etudes / Quietudes is available in CD and LP formats, but the score for the eleven etudes can also be purchased as a download or in the form of a printed music book that includes the CD.
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