The Indigone Trio + Strings recital was a resounding success. Thanks to Irwin Block for promoting the show in the Gazette (we were a Best Bet of the week, along with Eddie Palmieri and 
Chet Doxas). Of the three recitals I've done during my time at McGill, I think this one was the best, and not necessarily just in terms of execution, but in channeling and focussing the talents of the core trio (myself, Alex and Liam) into a bigger project. What follows is the program that was handed out at the recital, for those who couldn't be there. Andrew Mullin bravely recorded the recital - I should have a mix back shortly, and the highlights will go up on MySpace.    
We endeavor to play music without  fear - energetic, inventive, alive and awake. Beautiful and crazy. – Geoffrey  Keezer
Side A
  Visions (Stevie Wonder, arr.  Ryshpan) – An underrated song with a sentiment that rings far too true,  thirty-odd years after Stevie penned it. May we be fortunate enough to realize  such a vision in our own lifetimes? It’s looking like we’ll still have to grab  our wings and fly away. DRR
  Erghen Diado (Petar Lyondev, arr.  Ryshpan) – All instrumentalists attempt to recreate the power and immediacy of  the human voice. Transcribed from the first volume of Le mystere des voix  bulgares (a Bulgarian women’s radio choir), this piece’s beauty lies in its  deceptive simplicity. It sounds far more intricate than it actually is.  DRR
  Love Is the Reason (Alex Mallett) – For Lina.  AM
  Smacked (David Ryshpan) – The only  complete original piece of music I wrote out at Banff in the summer of 2005. Whether the  catalyst for creativity was Dave  Douglas’ sage advice or avian interference (or a combination of  the two), we’ll never know. Credit is due to bassist/composer Michael Bates, who  came up with integral arrangement ideas, as well as jokes at my expense.  DRR
   
   Side B
Piece for Open Strings  (Alex Mallett) – I wrote this as an  exploration of the natural beauty of stringed instruments. I was interested in  what could be created with the instruments’ barest potential.  AM
  Agua (Djavan, arr. Ryshpan) –  Another Banff  colleague, pianist/composer Kerry Politzer, turned me onto this Brazilian  singer-songwriter. When I first heard this song, I couldn’t get it out of my  head. I’m also a firm believer in the superstition of water guiding your entire  life, should you be born in rain. That is to say, most major events in my life  have been marked by precipitation in some way. It hasn’t failed me yet.  DRR
  Shahgely (trad. Egyptian, arr.  Ryshpan) – A truly multicultural experience; an Egyptian melody learned in the  Rocky Mountains from a Torontonian ex-pat living in Copenhagen. This melody is  always a blast to play, and the arrangement is an extension of what developed  rather organically at Banff. It’s a souvenir of the door of musical  perception that swung wide open. Thanks to Graig Earle and Dylan van der Schyff.  DRR
  Throughout (Bill Frisell, arr.  Ryshpan) – In tribute to a fallen comrade. This piece has had a recurring  presence over the past year, and represents the cycles of life and of  acceptance. In French, undergraduate and graduate studies are referred to as  cycles; and as one cycle ends, another one commences. I can’t think of a more  fitting conclusion to the concert. I dedicate this specifically to Chris  Driscoll, but additionally to all those who, in their absence, continue to  influence and inspire us. DRR
   This will be our reply to violence:  to make music more intensely, more beautifully, more devotedly than ever before.  – Leonard Bernstein