Recordings
To Notice Such Things
Label: AVIE
Released: March 29, 2010
Catalog Num: AV 2190
Classically trained from the age of 7, composer and keyboard player Jon Lord was diverted for over 40 years with his involvement in the rock group Deep Purple during which time he penned such rock anthems as Smoke on the Water and Child in Time. He returned to full-time classical composing in 2002 and five years later achieved great acclaim and sales success for his Durham Concerto (AV 2145).

To Notice Such Things, the follow up album to Durham Concerto, is a collection of four newly-recorded orchestral works featuring Jon himself on piano. The title work is a six-movement suite for solo flute, piano and string orchestra. It is a poignant tribute to Jon's long time friend, the late Sir John Mortimer. Literary references abound, appropriately for the creator of Rumpole of the Bailey. The music emanates from the stage show, Mortimer's Miscellany, which Lord accompanied. To Notice Such Things is the last line of the Thomas Hardy poem "Afterwards", which ended Mortimer's show.

The first movement, As I Walked Out One Evening, from the W H Auden poem of the same name, opened the revue. The second movement, At Court, captures the 60s and 70s heyday of the free-speaking barrister, whilst Turville Heath, evokes the raconteur reposing in his well-loved garden. The peculiarly named The Stick Dance refers to the days when Mortimer's legs were failing him; he still loved a good jive but mainly observed the jiving of a female companion whilst supporting himself on his stick. The Winter of a Dormouse is a twist on Lord Byron's Summer of a Dormouse, which describes the indignity of ageing. Mortimer had chosen the diminutive creature to appear on his coat of arms when appointed a Knight of the realm. The work ends with Afterwards, a fitting mirror image to Mortimer's Miscellany.

Jeremy Irons who closes the album with his reading of the poem "Afterwards. This recording will serve as the lasting memento of a great, beloved English eccentric.

The album proceeds with a gorgeous instrumental arrangement of Jon's Evening Song - the original version appears on his best-selling album Pictured Within - here substituting the vocal line with the mellow strains of alto flute and horn conjuring a gentle summer sunset.

For Example, combines clever puns with heartfelt homage. Written for the Trondheim Soloists, it's a nod towards one of Jon's favourite composers, Edvard Grieg, whose initials provide the play on words of the title. An early piano teacher introduced Jon to the great Norwegian composer, whose charming and folksy Wedding Day at Troldhaugen is woven into the fabric of the work.

The album ends with Air on a Blue String, a blues-meets-Bach fusion delivered with heart and soul.

Jon's music easily joins a tradition of great English composition of the last century. It is visceral and direct, deeply touching to anyone who hears it. To Notice Such Things is a window into Jon's humanity, his observance of life's cycles, and his generous spirit which will spread far and wide through his compositions.

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Updated: Jul-21-2010
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