In honor of groundbreaking American composer Terry Riley’s 80th birthday, Nonesuch Records releases One Earth, One People, One Love: Kronos Plays Terry Riley—a
five-disc box set of four albums of his work composed for, and
performed by, his longtime friends and champions Kronos Quartet—as well
as a new disc called Sunrise of the Planetary Dream Collector: Music of Terry Riley,
on June 23, 2015, in North America and July 10 for the rest of the
world. Riley and Kronos met more than 35 years ago, and since then, the
quartet has commissioned 27 works from him, more than from any other
composer in the group’s history.
Sunrise of the Planetary Dream Collector includes a new
recording of the title piece, which was Riley’s first for Kronos, as
well as previously unreleased recordings of Lacrymosa – Remembering Kevin and One Earth, One People, One Love from Sun Rings; Cry of a Lady (originally released on A Thousand Thoughts); and G Song and Cadenza on the Night Plain (both originally released on 25 Years). Sunrise of the Planetary Dream Collector also is available for individual purchase.
Kronos Quartet continues its celebration of its friend with the KRONOS PRESENTS: Terry Riley Festival, June 26–28 at the SFJAZZ Center in San Francisco. The festival, the first project in the new KRONOS PRESENTS
series, features some of Riley’s most significant and rarely-performed
works, plus several world premieres composed in his honor, with special
guest performers including Zakir Hussain, Wu Man, Riley’s son Gyan, and
Riley himself.
Kronos’ violinist, founder, and artistic director David Harrington
says of the Quartet’s remarkably fruitful relationship with Terry Riley,
which began in the late 1970s at Mills College in Oakland, California:
“There is no other composer who has added so many new musical words to
our vocabulary, words from so many corners of the musical world. Terry
introduced Kronos to Pandit Pran Nath, Zakir Hussain, Bruce Connor, La
Monte Young, Anna Halprin, Hamza El Din, Jon Hassell, and Gil Evans.” He
continues, “In a crazed world laced with violence and destruction he
has consistently been a force for peace. Through his gentle leadership a
path forward has emerged. Terry sets the standard for what it means to
be a musician in our time.”
Riley says of his 35 years of working with Kronos: “Each of our
projects together was launched by conversations with both David and me
riffing on ideas. I always came away from these planning sessions
feeling exhilarated, and these energies would soon get my pen moving
toward a melody or a rhythmic pattern—or, in the case of Salome Dances for Peace,
a five-quartet cycle. David has this gift, a unique catalytic effect on
so many collaborators. Because of this gift, we have this astounding
body of work created for Kronos over the past four decades.”
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