2006 release ** "Savage Altars alternates rather abruptly between spooky and harrowing sections of rhythmic choral chanting and drop-dead gorgeous interlocking scalar passages that almost seem to float in suspended bliss. Its structure is somewhat episodic: one section begins and ends, followed by the next section, and so forth, which creates the feel of an unfolding procession or ritual (and does so more effectively in its concise 20 minutes than John Taverner's bloated The Veil Of The Temple does in several sprawling hours.) Some parts sound a little like Perotin, Arvo Part, or Carl Orff -- but Marshall never descends into trite eclecticism and maintains an original voice throughout. The electronics are very tastefully incorporated and unobtrusive, usually emulating bell and gemelan-like sounds that blend well with the voices, and the violin and viola parts add welcome warmth to the texture. Overall, a real sense of wonder, timelessness, and stark (okay, "savage") beauty is achieved in this striking work. In the same way I think that Rothko Chapel is Morton Feldman's masterpiece, Savage Altars may very well be Ingram Marshall's. Also included on this CD is the more recent solo piano work, Authentic Presence, performed by New Music pianist extraordinaire Sarah Cahill -- without any electronic bells and whistles. It's nice to hear Marshall's music in a more intimate, acoustic setting like this, and while this piece sounds a lot like Phrygian Gates by John Adams at times, it packs a bigger dramatic punch and has a lot more emotional contrast (not to mention many fewer notes.) Five Easy Pieces is a set of five miniatures for two pianos (also sans electronics) that Marshall tells us he wrote "just for fun." Well, it shows... there's not a lot of substance, but at least you get to hear Ingram's more capricious and rambunctious side for a change. The machines return in Soe-pa, for "classical guitar amplified with digital delays and loops." Marshall's previous forays into this kind of territory had a tendency to drift and wander aimlessly, but Soe-pa (which ironically means "patience" in Tibetan) follows a clear structure that anchors it well. The timbre of the guitar lends itself nicely to the layered electronic delay treatment and the sound never gets too dense and murky. Marshall also ventures into some adventurous harmonic territory, which keeps things interesting. (And I could swear I heard Pachelbel's Canon In D lurking at one point...)"