Lullabies for Piano and Cello Gabríel Ólafs

Album info

Album-Release:
2023

HRA-Release:
09.06.2023

Label: Decca Records US

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Classical Crossover

Artist: Gabríel Ólafs

Composer: Gabriel Olafs

Album including Album cover

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  • Gabríel Ólafs (b. 1998): Fantasía:
  • 1 Fantasía 02:37
  • Sálmur:
  • 2 Sálmur 02:53
  • Noktúrna:
  • 3 Noktúrna 02:16
  • Eldur:
  • 4 Eldur 02:01
  • Vísa:
  • 5 Vísa 03:03
  • Mamma:
  • 6 Mamma 03:12
  • Barnkind:
  • 7 Barnkind 01:33
  • Frost:
  • 8 Frost 02:05
  • Bambaló:
  • 9 Bambaló 02:41
  • Draumheimar:
  • 10 Draumheimar 03:32
  • Total Runtime 25:53

Info for Lullabies for Piano and Cello

A Collection of Instrumental Works Inspired by Icelandic Folk Melodies: The prolific composer’s international reputation has been growing since his 2019 album Absent Minded. The new ten-track set is inspired by an 1880 collection of melodies that Gabríel unearthed at an antique bookshop in his home city of Reykjavik. On the original composition “Fantasia,” he is accompanied by his close friend and collaborator, cellist Steiney Sigurðardóttir, on a song that exemplifies the essence of the stripped-back album, with a simple piano motif playfully ebbing and flowing amidst moments of airy cello.

“Steiney is someone with whom I can communicate nonverbally through music,” says Ólafs. “We recorded the latter half of the album right after Steiney had given birth. The piano is the foundation of the album and the opening of the conversation with the cello, which is very much the mother’s voice, sometimes speaking, sometimes singing.”

The mood of the album was informed by the Ravel quote “music must be emotional first, intellectual second,” with Ólafs restricting his tonal palette to piano and cello, with which he feels a direct emotional access, creating space in his music for emotion and reflection.

Ólafs, who is just 24 years old, has the ability to respond to ancient Viking folk songs from the perspective of a postmodern Gen Z composer. In challenging himself to compose contemporary lullabies, he explores a fantasy world rooted in the history and mythology of the Icelandic people.

“I have faith in the power of melody, and lullabies encapsulate both history and nostalgia,” he says.”When I’m writing music, nostalgia is my favorite feeling to capture. It’s a complex emotion, because it evokes both sadness and happiness at the same time. Lullabies are core musical memories for all of us, and with Lullabies for Piano and Cello I hope to unlock them for you.”

"Lullabies for Piano and Cello is beguiling. Compared to much of modern-day classical composition, the pieces are very short, yet none are perfunctory. More so, it is completely emptied of electronics and field recordings. It is a work of simplicity. The melodies are short-lived and never reprised. Even more beguiling is the origins of this album: Ólafs chancing upon a collection of melodies in an antique bookshop. It beggars the question as to how many unplayed lullabies are lying unthumbed and unturned in bookshelves elsewhere in our world." (Andrew C. Kidd, monolithcocktail.com)

Gabríel Ólafs, piano, conductor
Steiney Sigurðardóttir, cello
Reykjavík Recording Orchestra



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