André de Ridder / Copenhagen Phil. BRYCE DESSNER St. Carolyn by the Sea - JONNY GREENWOOD Suite from "There Will Be Blood"
Bryce Dessner – who composes “gorgeous, full-hearted music” according
to National Public Radio – seamlessly blends aspects of the classical
and the popular in his concert works, the compositions simultaneously
alive to past and present and the potential of the future. Dessner’s
scores, described as “deft” and “vibrant” by The New York Times,
draw on elements from Baroque and folk music, late Romanticism and
modernism, minimalism and the blues, as well as the inspiration of
iconic figures from Béla Bartók, Benjamin Britten and Henryk Górecki to
Morton Feldman, Terry Riley, Philip Glass and Steve Reich. Such
disparate American iconoclasts as John Fahey, La Monte Young and Glenn
Branca also figure into this young composer’s sonic world. All these
influences – not to mention his globetrotting experiences as a keenly
collaborative musician across genres – wind together to inform Dessner’s
organic and individual voice as a composer.
The most impressive document to date of Dessner’s art is the Deutsche Grammophon album St. Carolyn by the Sea, which features his debut recordings for the storied Yellow Label. To be released March 3, 2014, St. Carolyn by the Sea includes three luminous Dessner compositions – the title work, Lachrimae and Raphael
– performed by the Copenhagen Philharmonic under conductor André de
Ridder. The recordings also feature performances on guitar by Dessner
and his twin brother, Aaron. Born in 1976 in Ohio and now based in New
York City, Dessner first earned wide renown as a co-founding guitarist
(along with Aaron) of the Grammy Award-nominated rock band The National.
Yet, as WQXR New York has pointed out: “ ‘… Of The National’ is a
phrase that often follows Bryce Dessner’s name. It’s not too shabby a
suffix, but… listeners may find that title to be inadequate for his
talents, if they haven’t already.”
The stage was set for the release of Dessner’s DG debut by the enthusiastic reception for Aheym, a 2013 album by the ever-trailblazing Kronos Quartet devoted to his compositions. In the cross-cultural arts magazine Bomb,
veteran avant-garde composer-guitarist Elliot Sharp wrote about
Dessner’s compositional method in the title work: “a dramatic opening,
dark and insistent, then a breath, then an emerging melodic seed… The
seed ultimately grows… to a rousing climax.” The U.K’s Independent
singled out the title work, describing it as “an elegant braiding of
interlaced lines that pushes the music forward in waves.” WQXR’s
contemporary music site Q2 made Aheym an Album of the Week,
praising the music as “stunning, nostalgic and beautifully hypnotic.”
Pitchfork declared Dessner’s compositions to be “fierce, vivid music.”
St. Carolyn by the Sea presents Dessner’s works alongside a
suite by Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood, one of Dessner’s peers as a rock
guitarist and genre-bounding composer. For all his rock success, Dessner
was trained as a classical musician. He graduated with a master’s
degree in music from Yale University, having studied classical guitar,
flute and composition. Settling in New York City, he performed with such
contemporary-music ensembles as the Bang on a Can All-Stars, along with
co-founding the improvisatory instrumental group Clogs, which was
influenced by contemporary takes on early music. He worked with the
likes of Pulitzer Prize-winning composers Steve Reich and David Lang, as
well as with Philip Glass, Michael Gordon and Nico Muhly. In 2006,
Dessner founded the MusicNOW Festival, a celebration of contemporary
music that he curates annually to acclaim in his native Cincinnati. He
is currently composer-in-residence at Muziekgebouw Frits Philips in
Eindhoven, the Netherlands.
please could you reup?
ResponderEliminarthanks
f.