Matt Haimovitz has made a reputation by taking his cello into venues where it wouldn't normally be found on-stage -- rock clubs, for instance, or folk coffeehouses. With his disc Goulash! he makes a breakthrough from novelty to major young innovator: he puts his rock and pop leanings together with works more typical of the concert hall in a persuasive and original way.
Haimovitz's central decision is to structure the CD around two works by
Bartók, which both gives the music a unified feel and makes the intriguing proposition that the modern equivalent
Bartók's use of folk music is an investigation of popular repertoires.
Haimovitz moves forward in time from
Bartók's Romanian Folk Dances (arranged, as is Led Zeppelin's "Kashmir," for four cellos) and selections from the 44 Duos, to works by Ligeti (who felt
Bartók's influence strongly) and contemporary Romanian composer Adrian Pop. Teetering on genre borderlines are
Osvaldo Golijov's Oración Lucumí (featuring jazz guitarist
John McLaughlin) and an improvisation created by
Haimovitz himself along with the Turkish ensemble Constantinople. Vernacular electronic influences come to the fore in two pieces featuring
DJ Olive -- one of which, the album's title track, brings the whole enterprise full circle with a sample of
Bartók singing one of the songs he recorded in the field. The two
DJ Olive pieces are especially interesting. They don't have dance beats. Rather, they use electronic synthesis to create sounds that complement
Haimovitz's cello -- which enters some pretty strange territory itself over the course of the disc. "Kashmir" is sort of an attention-grabbing curtain-raiser, but it is related to the rest of the music through its unusual minor-second scale. In addition to making up a stew of Eastern European ingredients, the works included represent aspects of
Haimovitz's own familial and musical background. This is a remarkable collection of music that never sets out to shock or to proclaim itself as the new cool -- it simply tries to make a bit of sense of the bewildering variety of musical influences that surround us all, and it succeeds brilliantly.