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Wadada Leo Smith: String Quartet No. 1-12 [7CD]

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Avant Jazz / Free Improvisation / Avant-Garde
premiera polska:
2022-06-17
kontynent: Ameryka Północna
kraj: USA
opakowanie: digipackowe etui
opis:

Editor's Info:
In 1965, I started what was to become a fascinating journey in my research and the practice of writing string quartet music.
I heard Ornette Coleman´s (1930-2015) music for string quartet performed and recorded at Town Hall in 1965; the six string quartets of Bela Bartok (1881-1945) and the six late string quartets of Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827).
I listened to Claude Debussy´s (1862-1918) String Quartet in G minor; John Lewis´ (1920-2001) music for string quartet; Anton Webern´s (1883-1945) 1938 string quartet.
In 2013, I started listening to the string quartets of Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975); all 15 of his works are a reservoir collection of great string quartet music.
Delta Blues masters B.B. King, (1925-2015), Howlin´ Wolf (1910-1976), Muddy Waters (1913-1983) and John Lee Hooker (1917-2001) have all had a major impact on my writing for strings, both as composers and as electric guitarists.
Composers Scott Joplin (1868-1917), William G. Still (1895-1978), Florence Price (1887-1953), Thomas J. Anderson (1928-), Ulysses Kay (1917-1995), Hale Smith (1925-2009), George Walker (1922-2018), Tania León (1943-), Olly Wilson (1937-2018) and Alvin Singleton (1940-) have been important as creative artists and for their courage and will to thrive in a concert music environment that, at the time, was mostly hostile in response to their compositional art.
It is because of these composers and composer-performers and their music that I cannot complete a composition unless I find its emotional range or the emotional identity in the music.
My compositions for string quartet have four periods. The 12 recorded string quartets consist of three periods: four string quartets composed from 1965 -2001; four string quartets from 2005-2011; and four string quartets from 1987-2019.
Compositions from the fourth period are yet to be recorded. It´s a collection of three string quartets - Nos. 13, 14 and 15 - music correspondent to the 13th,14th and 15th Constitutional Amendments passed during President Abraham Lincoln´s term in office.
The string quartet form and my ensembles have been major vehicles through which I have experimented with musical composition and philosophical ideas about performance and score. The ensemble as a unit required developing a language with the opportunity to apply research and dreaming-practice to reshape the terms in each new work I envisioned.
My aspiration was to create a body of music that is expressive and that also explores the African American experience in the United States of America. My music is not a historical account. I intend that my inspiration seeks a physiological and cultural reality.
I therefore construct a music that relies on non-traditional components and concepts that allows a shared responsibility for the horizontal flow of the music, including the creative ability to reshape recurrences of musical moments both with interpretations and expressions, to introduce new and different languages into a single work and use that language as a form of expansion and not as a development.
The create symbol is a command that allows the ensemble or the individual to investigate and explore both known and unknown musical materials in the music performance of the scores, and Ankhrasmation symbolic language scores.
Most of the pitched music events in the score have been reduced to long, short sonic relationships and are not metered or time-based events, and speed and mobility are an individual and collective act. A notion of invisible evolutionary forms and inspiration permeate the ritualized space.
New Haven, Connecticut, March 29, 2022
Wadada Leo Smith

WADADA LEO SMITH: STRING QUARTETS Nos. 1-12
Be here. Right away. It´s urgent that we convene and think and listen. That we rehearse alongside the higher frequencies, above the bar, the staff, the page. Our habits of assemblyare in need of renewal and we protect it by enacting it. We have fifty-four years of exquisite grace to consider. Let´s begin that which can only ever be a beginning.
Breath, rarified. Hold on. Antiblackness and medical neglect, malfeasance, fear, and enclosure take us away. I´ve always said the human being is the greatest threat to earth.Ten years ago they took our child in Florida; ten days ago, off that same coast, they stopped looking for thirty-nine missing brethren. Exhale. Find that something holding you up, holding you together. But inhale, too. Announce it as a start, one that is collective—one that means "Go." All together. During the first two months of the shutdown in 2020 I noticed a remarkable thing happened: The earth began to live again, water became pure, berries that people hadn´t seen for a long time began to pop up, and everything began to revitalize itself again, and that was happiness for me.
The strike of the violin moves us separately and as a unit, traveling towards something that we, perhaps, feel more than we understand, and that´s okay. It may even be right, for to feel together in this time is as revolutionary an assertion of beingness as we might imagine under the circumstances. Tight spaces; close sounds, bows near enough to touch, moving in perfect sync against the terms of this order, which is nothing if not dangerous. Then smoothed out, extended strokes of ocean´s edge awaiting the arrival of additional forms. Marronage systems of counter-mapping compose a lateral ledger against the ship´s manifest. Be bold enough to bow overboard.
A chase is underway and it´s furious, physical and figurative in its pursuit of something real. Or, perhaps, the running is away from something equally as real. In search of—joy, the Black Fantastic, something at some time called "home"—might dually be considered away from and toward, the push and pull, each demanding movement alongside the elements and histories that pace our steps. Slower here—lamplight to the sky—now quickquickquick. Move in color. We´ve not forgotten that they wrote operas with their backs, for feet and flowers, firsts for the uninitiated but inestimable for the rest. We know these things they carry and create, voices pitched and pointed like an arrow or saturated with spells.
Think with me, if you will, about other pursuits toward something that we want to have, but without possession. Those things that are cared for, considered, and made without all those things everybody has inherited. Release them. Up. Pluck. Pop. Scratch. Sirens and deep glissandos; a non-plagal meditation on what it is. A greeting and a goodbye. Fiddling techniques and sliding the pitch, propelling us past one another only to be reminded that the land can be unforgiving. Not all movements are easy, not all passersby safe. And then the harp, the harp! A fellow traveler who treads lightly but assuredly. Are you awake now? What has the world told you? And then four become more and we ask again: What did they tell you? Do you believe them?
I do. One chided, "Be deliberate. Cut fast but deep." Another held gravity in her hands. She never put it down. The third, a mountain, pulls measures apart, bar from bar, allowing all to escape into the morning. Boil. Tremble. Build. Show us again that the blues aren´t what we´ve been sold. Names are missing—remember, they often end in vowels—and their sounds fall like dandelion parachutes wherever the winds or trains blow. Breaking apart only to be reconstituted better and stronger, collaboratively decomposing in composition of impossible, which is to say more liberated, ends. If we know, then something must be learned and something must be done. So play. Invent a world fine and full, one of letters and myths and noise. Sing the names Ulysses, Louis, and Sarah, all of whom orbit a single note of infinite degree and duration. They come back and walk amongst us on occasion. May we be open enough to receive them.
New York City, February 7, 2022
Shana L. Redmond

muzycy:
RedKoral Quartet
with
Alison Bjorkedal harp (String Quartet No. 4)
Wadada Leo Smith trumpet (String Quartets Nos. 6 & 8)
Anthony Davis piano (String Quartet No. 6)
Lynn Vartan percussion (String Quartet No. 6)
Stuart Fox guitar (String Quartet No. 7)
Thomas Buckner voice (String Quartet No. 8)

utwory:
CD1: String Quartet No. 1 (1965-1982) Movements 1 - 4 30:55 / String Quartet No. 2 (1969-1980) 16:52
CD2: String Quartet No. 3 "Black Church: A First World Gathering of the Spirit" (1995) Movements 1 & 2 21:11 / String Quartet No. 4 (1987-2001) Movements 1 - 5 39:07
CD3: String Quartet No. 5 "In the Diaspora - Earthquakes and Sunrise Missions" (2005) 17:16 / String Quartet No. 6 "Taif: Prayer in the Garden of the Hijaz" (2007) 22:53 / String Quartet No. 7 "Ten Thousand Ceveus Peruvianus Amemevical" (2011) 14:38
CD4: String Quartet No. 8 "Opuntia Humifusa" (2011) 21:06 / String Quartet No. 9 (2001-2015) Movements 1 & 2 16:33 / String Quartet No. 10 "Angela Davis: Into the Morning Sunlight" (2007-2016) 13:47
CD5: String Quartet No. 11 (1975-2019) Movements 1 - 5 54:50
CD6: String Quartet No. 11 (1975-2019) Movements 6 - 9 43:55
CD7: String Quartet No. 12 (2016-2018) Movements 1 & 2 20:33

wydano: June 17, 2022
more info: www.tumrecords.com
more info2: wadadaleosmith.com

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Opis

Wydawca
Tum Records (FIN)
Kompozytor
Wadada Leo Smith
Artysta
Wadada Leo Smith
Nazwa
String Quartet No. 1-12 [7CD]
Instrument
trumpet
Zawiera
7CD
Data premiery
2022-06-17
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