Composed by David Lang, love fail is a meditation on the timelessness of love that weaves together details from the story of Tristan and Isolde with more modern sources. The recording also spotlights the singular and magical sound of the vocal quartet Anonymous 4,
whose longstanding commitment to medieval music and historical
scholarship has been acclaimed worldwide. The music and libretto pull
together narratives of love from such sources as Lydia Davis, Marie de
France, Gottfried von Strassburg, Béroul, Thomas of Britain and Richard
Wagner. love fail was commissioned by The Brooklyn Academy of
Music’s 2012 Next Wave Festival, The International Festival of Arts
& Ideas, The John F. Kennedy Center Abe Fortas Memorial Fund, The
Center for the Art of Performance at UCLA, The Wake Forest
University/Secrest Artists Series, and Hancher Performances at the
University of Iowa.
Reviewing the BAM performance for the New York Times, Anthony
Tommasini wrote: “It was Mr. Lang’s music, and the ethereal, pure-toned
singing of Anonymous 4, that claimed me in the first section of the
piece, which begins with the line ‘he was a blessed man.’”
In his liner notes, David Lang poses the question: “It’s ‘the greatest love story ever!’ But why? Of course, there is excitement,
drama, love, lust, shame, death, dragons. I think the real reason is
because the love of Tristan and Isolde begins by accident—they
drink a love potion. They didn’t mean to drink it, and they didn’t mean
to fall in love. They drink and—BAM!—it starts. It’s almost a laboratory
experiment into what love might be like without any of the
complications of how real love begins or works—without the excitement,
embarrassment, frustration, guilt or competition present in the
courtships of ordinary people.”
The recording of love fail was supported by New Music USA, the Aaron Copland Fund for Music, and the Doris Duke Performing Artists Awards, and was made possible by annual program support and / or endowment gifts from Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust.
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