In their “brilliantly inventive” (The New York Times) live recording,
clarinetist David Krakauer and cellist Matt Haimovitz’s AKOKA lift
Messiaen's transcendent 1940-41 work Quartet for the End of Time out of
the polite context of a chamber music performance, placing it in a
dramatic 21st century setting that drives home its gravity and impact.
AKOKA was inspired by the wartime experience of Jewish clarinetist Henri
Akoka, who premiered the Quartet for the End of Time with Messiaen
himself at the German prisoner-of-war camp in which they were both
interred. Henri Akoka's vibrant personality and the story of his
survival, with all its twists and turns, is the inspiration for this
recording, which brings out the human aspect of this composition, seen
through the eyes of one individual caught up in terrifying events beyond
his control. Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time is bookended by
Akoka, Krakauer’s highly improvisational, Sephardic-tinged piece, and
Meanwhile… a re-mix by hip-hop/klezmer artist Socalled, who joins the
ensemble on electronics. As the forces of fundamentalism, intolerance
and violence intensify in today's world, this mounting of Messiaen’s
great work is all the more timely.
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