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Moves in the Field

Moves in the Field in Franklin, TN

Current price: $31.99
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Moves in the Field

Barnes and Noble

Moves in the Field in Franklin, TN

Current price: $31.99
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Kelly Moran
's first few albums consisted largely of prepared piano and abstract electronics, resulting in a type of ambient-adjacent music that was often glimmering and beautiful but felt inherently experimental due to the uncommon, sometimes a-musical sounds it used. Her 2024 album
Moves in the Field
presents as less avant-garde at first, as the ten pieces here consist primarily of acoustic piano unaugmented by noisy treatments or extraneous weirdness. The experimental angle for
comes in the composition and execution of these pieces, which
Moran
wrote in part using a programmable piano instrument called a Disklavier. Throughout the album, she plays on top of sequences she wrote for the Disklavier, often utilizing the instrument's ability to play faster, more complicated, and more intricate piano parts than human hands are physically capable of.
introduces this concept tastefully, beginning the album with the free-floating beauty of "Butterfly Phase." The song is delicate and cautious, with thoughtful melodies floating on a bed of fluttering notes that bounce between registers and always land with laser-focused precision. The Disklavier's powers are more apparent on the aptly titled "Superhuman," where computerized arpeggios whirr by, sometimes getting so fast they register as glitches.
never pushes this sound so far that it feels gimmicky, however, instead keeping composition and emotional expression at the core of each song. The
Satie
-esque "Sodalis (II)" is patient and aching, while the reverb spirals that engulf "It's Okay to Disappear" cloak any potential showiness of the performance with a warm melancholy.
is more
Philip Glass
than
John Cage
(in fact,
Glass
' longtime engineer
Dan Bora
recorded and mixed the album), with
's thoughtful writing and restrained use of what could have been show-stopping technology creating an insulated world of understated, wintery elegance. ~ Fred Thomas
Kelly Moran
's first few albums consisted largely of prepared piano and abstract electronics, resulting in a type of ambient-adjacent music that was often glimmering and beautiful but felt inherently experimental due to the uncommon, sometimes a-musical sounds it used. Her 2024 album
Moves in the Field
presents as less avant-garde at first, as the ten pieces here consist primarily of acoustic piano unaugmented by noisy treatments or extraneous weirdness. The experimental angle for
comes in the composition and execution of these pieces, which
Moran
wrote in part using a programmable piano instrument called a Disklavier. Throughout the album, she plays on top of sequences she wrote for the Disklavier, often utilizing the instrument's ability to play faster, more complicated, and more intricate piano parts than human hands are physically capable of.
introduces this concept tastefully, beginning the album with the free-floating beauty of "Butterfly Phase." The song is delicate and cautious, with thoughtful melodies floating on a bed of fluttering notes that bounce between registers and always land with laser-focused precision. The Disklavier's powers are more apparent on the aptly titled "Superhuman," where computerized arpeggios whirr by, sometimes getting so fast they register as glitches.
never pushes this sound so far that it feels gimmicky, however, instead keeping composition and emotional expression at the core of each song. The
Satie
-esque "Sodalis (II)" is patient and aching, while the reverb spirals that engulf "It's Okay to Disappear" cloak any potential showiness of the performance with a warm melancholy.
is more
Philip Glass
than
John Cage
(in fact,
Glass
' longtime engineer
Dan Bora
recorded and mixed the album), with
's thoughtful writing and restrained use of what could have been show-stopping technology creating an insulated world of understated, wintery elegance. ~ Fred Thomas

More About Barnes and Noble at CoolSprings Galleria

Barnes & Noble is the world’s largest retail bookseller and a leading retailer of content, digital media and educational products. Our Nook Digital business offers a lineup of NOOK® tablets and e-Readers and an expansive collection of digital reading content through the NOOK Store®. Barnes & Noble’s mission is to operate the best omni-channel specialty retail business in America, helping both our customers and booksellers reach their aspirations, while being a credit to the communities we serve.

1800 Galleria Blvd #1310, Franklin, TN 37067, United States

Find Barnes and Noble at CoolSprings Galleria in Franklin, TN

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