Best known, if at all, as avant-garde director Robert Wilson's most frequent musical collaborator (no, not
Philip Glass,
Tom Waits, or
David Byrne), Louisiana-born violinist/composer
Michael Galasso has not been much of a presence on recordings. Indeed High Lines follows his previous album, Scenes, by a good 23 years -- and from the evidence here, you can infer without any derogatory inplications why he has stayed away from the spotlight all that time.
Galasso's forte is incidental music, background scores that mainly support other artistic idioms, often content to set just a single mood -- in other words, made to order for a Wilson production but not necessarily for a self-contained album. The CD unfolds like a soundtrack album, a series of mostly brief cues with a minimalist ethic underpinning the repetitions. At times, the album resembles a
Glass soundtrack, but
Galasso is not as predictable as
Glass, freely roaming around various world cultures for inspiration, varying his bowing techniques to suit the mood, enlisting the versatile help of guitarist
Terje Rypdal, percussionist
Frank Colon, and bassist
Marc Marder. The CD opens with a stunning mood piece, "Spheric," with percussive noises resembling rushing water.
Rypdal contributes deliciously noisy distorted guitar to "The Other" and "Swan Pond"; the latter gets a funky berimbau beat going over a walking bass. "Chaconne" is the tail end of a much-longer work for solo violin, a simplified nod to one of
Galasso's original influences,
J.S. Bach. It's hard to predict how these mostly slight compositions will stand up to repeated listening, but they are beautifully recorded in the best ECM fashion. ~ Richard S. Ginell