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Floodplain (Kronos Quartet album)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Floodplain
Studio album by
Released19 May 2009 (2009-05-19)
RecordedAugust 2007 – October 2008
GenreContemporary classical, world music
Length78:50
LabelNonesuch (#518349)
ProducerDavid Harrington
Kronos Quartet chronology
Terry Riley: The Cusp of Magic
(2008)
Floodplain
(2009)
Rainbow: Music of Central Asia Vol. 8
(2010)

Floodplain is a studio album by the Kronos Quartet released in 2009. All twelve compositions were written or arranged for the quartet.

Concept

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The Kronos Quartet have a long record of commissioning compositions and of collaborating with musicians from around the world. The compositions for this album, all written or arranged for the quartet, hail "from cultures based in areas surrounded by water and prone to catastrophic flooding,"[1] ranging from Egypt and Serbia in the west to India in the east; from Central Asia in the north to Ethiopia in the south. According to Nonesuch Records, "The album was inspired by the idea that floodplains...will experience new life after a catastrophe, just as cultures that undergo great difficulty will experience creative fertility."[2]

Compositions

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External videos
video icon Kronos Quartet – Ram Narayan: Alap from Raga Mishra Bhairavi

Floodplain contains twelve compositions, some newly written for the quartet, such as "Tashweesh," a collaboration with the Ramallah Underground and the long piece by Serbian composer Aleksandra Vrebalov that concludes the album, "...hold me, neighbor, in this storm..." Other compositions are older pieces arranged for the quartet, such as "Nihavent Sitro," by Tanburi Cemil Bey; "Mugam Beyati Shiraz," arranged by Azeri composer Rahman Asadollahi from a song perhaps 700 years old; and "Lullaby," a traditional song from the descendants of slaves and Arab traders who inhabit Iran's southern coast. "Raga Mishra Bhairavi: Alap" is modeled after a recording of sarangi player Ram Narayan's interpretation of the alap of the popular raga Bhairavi.[3]

Instrumentation

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For these twelve compositions, the quartet and guest players employed a variety of instruments often traditional to the culture of the compositions. Besides the usual violin, viola, and cello, the album includes such instruments as the riq (heard on track 1), the shruti box (on track 5), the electric sitar (played by Wu Man on track 5), the tambura (played by Terry Riley on track 5), a scordatura violin (on track 8), the darbukka (on track 9), and the gusle and tapan (on track 12). Ramallah Underground provides "electronics" on track 2.[1]

On "Getme, Getme," the quartet is accompanied by the Alim Qasimov ensemble, an Azeri group whose bardic vocals are supported by daf and tar (a long neck stringed instrument), balaban (a double-reed wind instrument), kamancheh (a bowed string instrument), and nagara (a folk drum).

The most unusual instrumentation is found on "Tèw semagn hagèré (Listen to Me, My Fellow Countrymen)," a song by Alèmu Aga, the Ethiopian singer and composer who is also the master of the begena, an Ethiopian 10-string lyre. The quartet had instruments built by Walter Kitundu,[1] a MacArthur fellow,[4] inventor and builder of "phonoharps" and the "Kronos Instrument Builder in residence."[5] Inspired by the begena, he built an instrument he called the "Beguèna Maridhia," which is played by Jeffrey Ziegler, while Hank Dutt plays a modified viola suggestive of Aga's voice.[1][6]

Reception

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Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[7]
The Guardian[8]
The New York Times(not rated)[9]
The Oregonian(favorable)[10]
The Times[11]

Floodplain entered the Billboard Top World Albums chart in the week of June 6, 2009, on position six.[12] The album received positive reviews. David Stabler, writing for The Oregonian, notes that "'Floodplain' has a wildness about it that is especially impassioned and unpredictable. It feels unusually current, even politically current, with music from parts of the world we often only read about"; he recommends it highly.[10]

Track listing

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No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Ya Habibi Ta'ala (My Love, Come Quickly)" (Egypt)Midhat Assem, arr. Osvaldo Golijov & Kronos Quartet2:57
2."Tashweesh (Interference)" (Palestine)Ramallah Underground, arr. Kronos Quartet & Jacob Garchik3:22
3."Wa Habibi (Beloved)" (Lebanon)Traditional, arr. Stephen Prutsman3:11
4."Getme, Getme (Don't Leave, Don't Leave)" (Azerbaijan)Said Rustamov, arr. Alim Qasimov, string arr. Jacob Garchik12:05
5."Raga Mishra Bhairavi: Alap" (India)Ram Narayan, arr. Kronos Quartet, transc. Ljova7:13
6."Oh Mother, the Handsome Man Tortures Me" (Iraq)Unknown, arr. Ljova & Kronos Quartet3:01
7."Mugam Beyati Shiraz" (Azerbaijan)Rahman Asadollahi, arr. Kronos Quartet, transc. Ljova9:23
8."Lullaby" (Iran)Traditional, arr. Kronos Quartet & Jacob Garchik4:09
9."Nihavent Sirto" (Turkey)Tanburi Cemil Bey, arr. Stephen Prutsman3:17
10."Kara Kemir" (Kazakhstan)Kuat Shildebaev, arr. Kronos Quartet4:24
11."Tèw semagn hagèré (Listen to Me, My Fellow Countrymen)" (Ethiopia)Alèmu Aga, arr. Jacob Garchik4:03
12."...hold me, neighbor, in this storm..." (Serbia)Aleksandra Vrebalov21:46

Personnel

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Musicians

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  • David Harrington – violin
  • John Sherba – violin
  • Hank Dutt – viola
  • Jeffrey Zeigler – cello

Production

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  • Recorded August 2007 – October 2008 at Architecture, Los Angeles
    • Scott Fraser – engineer
    • Dann Thompson – assistant engineer
    • Jeanne Velonis – editing assistant
  • "Getme, Getme" recorded live at the Ramadan Nights Festival at the Barbican Centre, London, England, on 26 September 2008
    • Adam Whitford – engineer
  • "Raga Mishra Bhairavi" drone (cello, electric sitar, shruti box, and tambura) recorded at Skywalker Sound, Nicasio, California, August 2006
    • Judith Sherman – producer
    • Scott Fraser – engineer
    • Dann Thompson – assistant engineer
  • "Tèw semagn hagèré" recorded at Whip Records, Berkeley, California, October 2008
    • David Landon – assistant engineer

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Tsioulcas, Anastasia (2009). Floodplain (CD booklet). Kronos Quartet. Nonesuch Records. #518349.
  2. ^ "Kronos Quartet, Floodplain". Nonesuch Records. Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  3. ^ Maycock, Robert (2005-10-12). "Asha Bhosle / Kronos Quartet, Barbican, London". The Independent. Retrieved 2009-06-19.[dead link]
  4. ^ "2008 MacArthur Fellows: Walter Kitundu". John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  5. ^ Whiting, Sam (2008-09-23). "MacArthur Awarded to Walter Kitundu". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  6. ^ For photographs of some of Kitundu's instruments, see "Kronos Quartet's Walter Kitundu Instruments". Archived from the original on 2009-08-20. Retrieved 2009-07-29.
  7. ^ Eddins, Stephen. "Floodplain". Allmusic. Retrieved 2009-06-22.
  8. ^ Walters, John L. (2009-05-22). "Kronos Quartet: Floodplain". The Guardian. Retrieved 2009-06-22.
  9. ^ Kozinn, Allan (2009-05-29). "Two Pulitzer Winners and One Eclectic Mix". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-06-22.
  10. ^ a b Stabler, David (2009-05-13). "New Kronos CD: Wild Beauty". The Oregonian. Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  11. ^ Davis, Clive (2009-05-24). "Kronos Quartet: Floodplain". The Times. London. Archived from the original on June 17, 2011. Retrieved 2009-06-22.
  12. ^ "Top World Albums – Floodplain – Chart Listing for the Week of Jun 06 2009". Billboard. Retrieved 2009-06-06. [dead link]