Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Kronos plays Holmgreen
Paul Hillier (baritone) Kronos Quartet & Danish National Symphony Orchestra / DR, Thomas Dausgaard Pelle Gudmundsen-Holmgreen (b. 1932) is one of the leading Scandinavian composers, an outstanding and insistent voice from the generation born in the inter-war years. This CD is the culmination of the composer’s unique collaboration with the world-famous American Kronos Quartet, which has been commissioning specially tailored works from the Danish composer for over 20 years. 2008 is the Kronos Quartet’s 35th anniversary year. “They're up onstage and they're playing the right instruments, but these people do not look like the members of a string quartet. Instead of wearing tuxedos or evening gowns, they're dressed in black spandex. They're the Kronos Quartet—classical music's own Fab Four.” Rolling Stone magazine | 
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| Golijov - Oceana
Dawn Upshaw (soprano) Atlanta Symphony Orchestra & Kronos Quartet, Robert Spano | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mugam SayagiMusic of Franghiz Ali-Zadeh
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| |  | Terry Riley: Salome Dances For Peace
Joan Jeanrenaud, Terry Riley, Hank Dutt, David Harrington Kronos Quartet | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Pieces of Africa
Addy: | Wawshishijay for vocals, Donno, Brekete, Pretia, Gidi & Aketse "Our Beginning" | El Din: | Escalay for tar & string quartet "Waterwheel" | Hakmoun: | Saade for voice, sintar, oud, bander & string quartet ("I'm Happy") | Maraire: | Mai Nozipo, for ngoma, hosho & string quartet ("Mother Nozipo") Kutambarara, for vocals, mbira, hosho, chorus & string quartet ("Spreading") | Suso: | Tilliboyo for kora & string quartet ("Sunset") | Tamusuza: | Ekitundu Ekisooka for string quartet | Volans: | String Quartet No. 1 - White Man Sleeps |
David Harrington, Dumisani Maraire, Joan Jeanrenaud, John Sherba, Hank Dutt Kronos Quartet | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Early Music
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Kronos Quartet, The American Composers Orchestra, Theatre of Voices, Paul Lustig Dunkel, Paul Hillier | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Kronos Quartet: In Formation
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| |  | Lou Harrison - Chamber and Gamelan Works
Daniel Kobialka (violin), Machiko Kobialka (tack piano I), James Barbagallo (tack piano II), Patricia Jennerjohn (celesta), Don Marconi (percussion), Jerome Neff (percussion), Scott L. Hartman (French horn), Susan Bates (violin) & Lou Harrison (suling player) Gamelan Sekar Kembar, Kronos Quartet & The Manhattan Percussion Ensemble, Robert Hughes & Paul Price Lou Harrison (1917–2003) believed fervently in music’s power to create cultural bridges. To this end he
applied his prodigious skills and creative energies to creating syncretic works that link diverse musical
languages. Faulted at times for his eclecticism, Harrison responded with a vibrant defense of hybridity,
cultivating a musical multiculturalism long before that term—or even the concept—held the currency it now
enjoys.
Harrison’s major contributions to twentieth-century American music lie in three main areas: (1) the
development of the percussion ensemble as a viable performance medium; (2) the linkage of Asian and
Western musical styles; and (3) the exploration of just intonation tuning systems. All three are represented in
the works on this disc.
The influences manifest in the works on this disc remained with Harrison for the rest of his career. He
ultimately composed over three dozen gamelan pieces and the estampie became one of his favorite forms
(he used it in a dozen works, ranging from solo keyboard to full orchestra). Nor did his advocacy of just
intonation systems diminish: he called for pure intervals in works in all genres. But the most distinctive
characteristic of Harrison’s music lies in its inherent plurality. He was drawn to community, both in
performance groups such as the gamelan and the percussion ensemble, and in the compositions
themselves, which unite elements from various times and places. Harrison’s originality lay in the way he
creatively combined these elements to produce novel syntheses. His fervent advocacy of hybridity led to a
type of transethnic music that truly foreshadowed the post-modern celebration of diversity. | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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