A piano improvisation from 10th February 2022. Named for Clava Cairns, a complex of neolithic burial chambers near my home town of Inverness. They evoke, for me, an unusual mixture of strangeness, beauty, sadness and yet familiarity. I didn’t know the piece was going to be called that when I improvised it, but when I listened back I was reminded of the place somehow.
Images: lichen on rock (detail); stones inside one of the Clava cairns. For me, the repetitive nature of the simple minor-chord music relates to the timelessness of the cairns, changing only incredibly slowly over millennia, while the uncertain direction of the eventual musical resolution (major or minor?) is a reflection of the uncertainty of our own lives – and ends.
I release my first album of improvisations earlier this year, and I’m planning to release a second one later this year – this is an early track from it. More to follow, when it comes…S
2 thoughts on “Clava – piano improvisation”
Thank you Stuart for sharing this improvisation. I found it calming and evocative and can see how you were inspired to name it after the cairns.
Thanks for listening, Richard – I’m glad you enjoyed it! Have you ever been there?