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CRITICS VIEWS
MICHAEL BOOTHMAN: It took a while for the steel band
movement to accept a composition from a fellow pan player. So guys
like Ray Holman, who was one of the pioneering arrangers, who composed
music for pan to be played on Panorama, had to do it for about three
or four years before he was able to make an impact.
PAT BISHOP: Ray Holman is, has, his popularity
has to do with the fact that he innovated, that he started diversing
the bands from his music, from the music of the streets. But so
far he hasn’t, in this mode, won a Panorama. And that must
tell you something about the extent to which innovation can carry
the popular opinion.
KNOLLY MOSES: All bright and optimistic, his
compositions reveal thoughtful design. Structures are understated
but precise, moods are carefully defined and style is studiously
lyrical. His logic from note to note is exquisite.
Ray’s playing is as easy as his personality and as restrained
as the silence he so artfully slips into critical places. Caressing
an instrument particularly percussive in its response, his performance
here shows flawless technique. His solos have the pacing of American
jazz great Lester Young and the purpose of Rupert Clemendore, an
accomplished Trinidadian jazz musician of the 1950s.[FULL
LINER NOTES]
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