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Kronos Quartet - Early Music (Lachrymæ Antiquæ) (1997)

Kronos Quartet - Early Music (Lachrymæ Antiquæ) (1997)

BAND/ARTIST: Kronos Quartet

  • Title: Early Music (Lachrymæ Antiquæ)
  • Year Of Release: 1997
  • Label: Nonesuch
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log)
  • Total Time: 01:08:39
  • Total Size: 323 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Kyrie I (Guillaume de Machaut, arr. Kronos Quartet)
2. Rachell's Weepinge (Christopher Tye)
3. Långdans efter Byfåns Mats (David Lamb)
4. Lachrymae Antiquae - John Dowland
5. Psalom - Arvo Part
6. Two Studies on Ancient Greek Scales - Harry Partch ( arr. Ben Johnston)
7. Long-Ge - Jack Body
8. Totem Ancestor - John Cage (arr. Eric Salzman)
9. Kyrie II - Guillaume de Machaut (arr. Kronos Quartet)
10. Brudmarsch frå Östa - Traditional-Sweden (arr. Mikael Marin)
11. Using the Apostate Tyrant As His Tool - Kassia (arr. Diane Touliatos)
12. Synchrony N°2 - Louis Hardin a.k.a. Moondog
13. Quodlibet - John Cage
14. Viderunt Omnes - Perotin (arr. Kronos Quartet)
15. Kyrie III - Guillaume de Machaut (arr. Kronos Quartet)
16. Four Part Fantasia No. 2 - Henry Purcell
17. O Virtus Sapientie - Hildegard von Bingen (arr. Marianne Pfau)
18. Uleg-Khem - Traditional-Tuva (arr. Steve Mackey)
19. Farwell My Good I. Forever - Christopher Tye
20. Collected Songs Where Every Verse is Filled with Grief - Alfred Schnittke (arr. Kronos Quartet)
21. Bells

Performers:
Kronos Quartet
with guest artists:
Marja Mutru harmonium
David Lamb bagpipe
Wu Man zhong ruan & da ruan
Olov Johansson nyckelharpa
Huun-Huur Tu vocals, igil, byzaanchi, & toschpuluur

What's interesting about the latest outing from this prolific chamber group is not so much that they've chosen to create string quartet adaptations of music from the late Middle Ages and early Renaissance -- after all, these are folks who have commissioned arrangements of Jimi Hendrix and Bo Diddley, so we've learned not to be shocked -- but rather that they've chosen to juxtapose the works of Machaut, Pérotin and Tye with pieces by John Cage, Moondog and Harry Partch, among other twentieth-century notables. But maybe that shouldn't come as a surprise, either. It certainly makes lovely musical sense: the stark and static beauty of Arvo Pärt's Psalom fits perfectly with John Dowland's Lachrymae Antiquae (did that man never cheer up?) and John Cage's Quodlibet sounds just right next to Pérotin's "Viderunt Omnes." Was Cage poking fun at his composition teachers with a parody of the raw, open harmonies of the twelfth century? If so, the Kronos folks have turned his intent on its ear in a way that he himself would probably have loved. Puckishness, however, is not really on the agenda here: the overriding mood is one of sadness and devotion, as the album's subtitle (Latin for "ancient tears") makes clear. Like most of Kronos' best work, this is dark, lovely, eerie stuff.





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  • jojo5
  •  wrote in 12:34
    • Like
    • 0
Happy new year and thanks.