Madera Vox: Madera Vox
(2009, Skinny Tie Records)

The first thing you may notice is that this ensembleโ€™s name consists of both Spanish and Latin wordsโ€”Madera (wood) and Vox (voice). Thereโ€™s your opening peek into the mixed bag youโ€™re about to receive: Madera Vox likes a twist, easing you in gradually and then thwacking you over the head with an oddball choice of repertoire. From this contemporary chamber groupโ€™s classically trained base it sets off into terra incognita with powerful and disciplined technique. A mosaic of originals and covers, this self-titled debut starts off easy with โ€œLa Douceur de la Vie,โ€ a gentle, rolling instrumental of oboe, bassoon, piano, percussion, and, eventually, operatic vocals that sounds straight off a movie score. Next are four unexpected instrumental childrenโ€™s songs by jazz fusion pioneer Chick Corea that range from gentle to dramatic.

At the core of this recording is the smoky cabaret of โ€œYoukaliโ€ and โ€œIโ€™m a Stranger Here Myself,โ€ both by composer Kurt Weill, the latter being a collaboration with poet Ogden Nash. Following a pensive piano tune, โ€œJeux dโ€™Eauโ€ by Ravel, and more Weill/Gershwin (โ€œMy Ship,โ€ โ€œThe River Is So Blueโ€), the CD wraps up with the boisterous and surreal โ€œLobster Telephoneโ€ by the ensembleโ€™s own composer and arranger, David Gluck. Word has it that Madera Vox also tackles Andre Previn, Thelonious Monk, and Kurt Cobain, so it seems this eclectic group of conservatory-level performers/academics leans toward composers as unconventional and kaleidoscopic as it gets. www.maderavox.org.

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