Member Since: 19/01/2007
Band Website: www.amydickson.com
Band Members:
"This gentler sax will make you smile"
"Amy Dickson is a player with a difference, an artist who may well appeal to listeners who have virtually written off the saxophone as being part of the world of popular dance music and therefore not of great interest.
She has a individual and unusual tone, luscious, silky-smooth, sultry and voluptuous by turns; her phrasing is beautifully finished, her control of dynamic infinitly subtle. She plays very songfully, is often gentle and restrained, at times sounding like the chalumeaux of a clarinet. But she can rise to a passionate climax, as in Danza de la moza donosa, or slinkily respond to Debussy's La plus que lente.
She is very lucky to have an accompanist-partner with the musical affinity of Catherine Milledge who provides a perfectly balanced backcloth, one that the ear picks up as being pleasurable in its own right. How atmospherically she prepares the way for Dickson's beguiling entry at the beginning of the recital when she seduces the ear wih Chaplin's title number.
"One of the most fascinating duets here is Arvo Part's Spiegel im Spiegel, where the piano plays a series of gentle but pointed triplets, like falling rain, while the soloist ruminates, an unforgettable combination.
This is a disc of unusual musical interest: the programme includes Rachmaninov, Fauré, Elgar and even Finzi whose Elegy is particularly effective when played with such sophisticated rapture." - Ivan March
Gramophone Magazine, 2008
'The brilliant young Australian saxophonist Amy Dickson was soloist in Richard Rodney Bennett's Seven Country Dances, her flowing phrasing drawing a striking range of tones and colours.
Amy Dickson's late-night concert demonstrated again how much this gifted player is at one with her instrument...After hearing her give the premiere of the saxophone version of his Songs of Sea and Sky, with its release into sweet lyricism, Peter Sculthorpe told me how the experience has inspired him to make it the basis of a complete concerto for her.
Much rougher and visceral was Mark-Anthony Turnage's Two Elegies Framing a Shout, Dickson and pianist Catherine Milledge heroically combining in this harrowing and taxing musical experience.'
Birmingham Post, 2007
“This was the most exciting saxophone recital I've heard in England for a very long time. All performed from memory with a degree of intensity, maturity and panache to satisfy any audience…”
“The Pequena Czarda by my amigo, Pedro Iturralde…I have sent him a copy of the programme, saying that this was the most passionate performance of it I've ever heard!”
Clarinet and Saxophone Magazine, 2003
‘Ms. Dickson negotiated leaps from one end of the instrument's range to the other with aplomb. But nothing could prepare me for the rapid finger work that followed. Never have I heard someone play so many notes per second on the saxophone. And this wasn't mindless jazz doodling. It was note perfect and thrilling. Mr. Sax couldn't have asked for a better champion.'
‘An arrangement for saxophone and piano of Rachmaninoff's Vocalise followed. I have heard this haunting work played on many instruments, but none has sounded more like the human voice than did the saxophone in this performance by Ms. Dickson.'
‘For many listeners, the mention of the saxophone conjures up memories of the vulgar blatty sounds often produced by pop and jazz musicians. But Ms. Dickson's sound is a revelation. This was lyrical playing at its best, with beautiful tone color and sensitive phrasing.'
New York Concert Review, 2005