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Lavender
Dreams
Steven Cravis
2004/Steven Cravis Music
CD Review By
Mead
Notkin
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Steven Cravis’s new album Lavender Dreams is a digital masterpiece that delivers the profound satisfactions of a perfectly realized work of art.
On previous albums Cravis has given us poignant melodies within a context of sensuous acoustic piano playing that at times verges on the sentimental. In Lavender Dreams the sensuality we have come to expect from the Amazing Piano Magician has a new depth and marks the arrival of a mature composer who has thoroughly mastered his medium.
That medium is the emerging genre of computer-based electronic music that in the past has been diminished by the mechanical quality of the sound, a shortcoming entirely absent in Cravis. In his new album every instrument sounds as if it were played by hand, so that while the origin of every sound is his keyboard, the music is marked by a craftsmanship as consummate as it is spontaneous. Like Todd Rundgren, Cravis performs every note on his recordings and is equally at home on an animal skin drum as he is on a Mediterranean mandolin, albeit a digital one.
Lavender Dreams is a landmark album. It is what fusion tried to be but wasn’t a journey into the musical unconscious. Fusion’s failure is partially attributable to a commercial mandate to overwhelm its audience with a pseudo-mountain of sound. Cravis unpretentiously takes up the tools of electronica’s loudest experiment and uses them to paint shimmering thought-dreams like a musical Miro.
Steven Cravis has found his mature voice. This, his latest album, is a tour de force of technical virtuosity and musical inventiveness that pushes the envelope of what can be achieved on an electronic keyboard. It is a cornucopia of compelling voices and rhythmic invention that ebbs and flows in the imagination with the subtlety of a tidal basin.
In addition to being a technical innovator, Steven Cravis is a serious composer. In Lavender Dreams he has fused New Age and Electronic music in a way that transcends both genres and points the way to the unlimited possibilities of digital music.
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The
Sound of Light
Steven Cravis
1995/Steven Cravis Music
CD Review by Kathy Parsons, Mainly
Piano
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Steven Cravis' second album is an excellent
collection of thoughtful and peaceful piano solos. Many of the
pieces are more classically structured than the music of other
artists in the genre, and indicate a very well-trained and creative
pianist-composer (he attended the prestigious Berklee School
of Music). The music is peaceful, but is complex enough to allow
the listener to hear something new after repeated hearings.
The quiet tone of the CD makes it suitable for a lovely backdrop,
but many of the songs deserve to be given ones full attention
to hear and appreciate the beauty of this music.
The CD opens with "Through
The Kaleidoscope", a sparkling and swirling piece, full
of musical colors. One of my favorite pieces on the CD is "Dancing
Spirits". It opens in the upper registers of the piano,
and works its way down, gently building momentum on the way.
The improvisation in the middle section suggests the freedom
of a spontaneous dance. "The
Shining Star" and "My
Precious One" are beautiful and tender love songs. "Reunion"
is a bit more impassioned and turbulent - the strength of the
emotions comes through loud and clear, making it a very powerful
piece. "Holiday
Slumber" is a cozy and delicious depiction of those wonderful,
lazy days when it feels so good to just keep snuggling under
the covers and dozing back to sleep.
"The
Sound of Light" is a very fine solo piano CD, and is currently
available from soundclick.com/stevencravis
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True
Reflections
Steven Cravis
1992/Steven Cravis Music
CD Review by Kathy Parsons, Mainly
Piano
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Steven Cravis' debut CD is very appropriately
titled "True Reflections". A beautiful series of reflective
and introspective piano solos, these pieces are both intensely
personal and easily accessible. Cravis attended The Berklee
School of Music and has supported himself as a Yoga instructor.
His understanding of music and the human spirit are a wonderful
union, and he has stated that his goal with his music is to
take people to the relaxing state he has come to know through
yoga and meditation.
Some of the music on "True Reflections" is darker and perhaps
deeper than several of the pieces on Cravis' later "The Sound
of Light". "True
Reflections" seems more improvised and less structured,
and I really enjoy the freedom of pieces like "Earth
Journey", a longer piece (almost seven minutes) that meanders
where it will at a peacefully lazy pace. The title track is
a wonderful, moody piece, full of questions as well as poignant
memories. This piece also sounds mostly improvised over a basic
structure. "Father"
is very sad and deeply personal - possibly composed during or
after a family crisis. I also really like "Heart
of Hearts" - again questioning and reflective with a lovely
flow.
"True
Reflections" is an excellent solo piano album, and I highly
recommend it. It is available from sounclick.com/stevencravis
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review by Queenie |
Through the Kaleidoscope by Steven Cravis
is a piano-only New Age track that sounds a lot like the George
Winston seasons tracks. It is very pleasant music, watery and
Impressionistic, and harmonically simple. Lovers of Celtic music
will be sure to enjoy this track, it has a folky air about it.
The harmonic textures/changes of this piece are simple, the
harmonies remind me of Bruce Hornsby and the Range when they
were popular in the eighties. Being a pianist myself, I can
appreciate Steven's playing, it is very natural, legato, and
free flowing. I am rather A.R. about pedaling, my one suggestion
would be is that he lets the pedal breathe a little more, his
natural legato stands fine on its own without needing too much
down pedal.
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