MIT Wind Ensemble & MIT Festival Jazz Ensemble - Infinite Winds (2015)

  • 14 Jul, 17:28
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Artist: MIT Wind Ensemble & MIT Festival Jazz Ensemble
Title Of Album: Infinite Winds
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: SUNNYSIDE
Genre: Classical, Jazz
Quality: 320 / FLAC
Total Time: 58:28 min
Total Size: 137 / 318 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01 Guillermo Klein - Solar Return Suite - Terrenal
02 Guillermo Klein - Solar Return Suite - Pulmon
03 Guillermo Klein - Solar Return Suite - Cataros
04 Guillermo Klein - Solar Return Suite - Between
05 Guillermo Klein - Solar Return Suite - Platense
06 Guillermo Klein - Solar Return Suite - Camello
07 Guillermo Klein - Solar Return Suite - (gracias que hay viento) Solar Return
08 Chick Corea - From Forever (Suite for Big Band Dedicated to Herb Pomeroy)
09 Don Byron - Concerto for Clarinet and Wind Ensemble - Tarantella
10 Don Byron - Concerto for Clarinet and Wind Ensemble - Ballade
11 Don Byron - Concerto for Clarinet and Wind Ensemble - Fast Stuff

Personnel:
Frederick Harris, Jr. - conductor
Guillermo Klein - composer (Tracks 1-7)
Bill McHenry - tenor saxophone soloist (Tracks 1-7)
MIT Wind Ensemble - wind ensemble (tracks 1-7, 9-11)
Chick Corea - composer (Track 8)
MIT Festival Jazz Ensemble - jazz ensemble (Track 8)
Don Byron - composer (Tracks 9-11)
Evan Ziporyn - clarinet soloist (Tracks 9-11)

Music composition has long been the home of brilliance and discovery. Many composers prove their genius by bending sound, rhythm and texture into new concepts in aural art. It is no surprise that the illustrious Massachusetts Institute of Technology hosts two of the best student driven ensembles in the country, the MIT Wind Ensemble (MITWE) and the MIT Festival Jazz Ensemble (FJE).

The FJE was established by the great trumpeter/bandleader/educator Herb Pomeroy in 1963, while the MITWE was established in 1999 by Dr. Frederick Harris, Jr., who now directs both ensembles. The groups are made up of undergraduate and graduate students from MIT and have been instrumental in performing new compositions from a broad range of composers.

On their new and musically diverse release Infinite Winds, the MIT Wind Ensemble and the MIT Festival Jazz Ensemble present three long form compositions by three innovative and highly regarded composers: Guillermo Klein, Chick Corea and Don Byron. The Corea and Byron pieces are world première recordings on this Sunnyside release. Klein s Solar Return Suite and Byron s Concerto For Clarinet and Wind Ensemble feature special guest soloists, saxophonist Bill McHenry and clarinetist Evan Ziporyn, respectively.

Klein s involvement with Dr. Harris began in the mid-1990s when Klein was living in Boston, collaborating with big bands and even a string ensemble. It was only natural that Harris would reach out to Klein and commission a piece for the MITWE. Klein provided a work in seven movements entitled Solar Return Suite, his first and only composition for wind ensemble, which was recorded live in May 2006. The piece also features a beautiful, largely improvised saxophone performance from McHenry, a regular collaborator with Klein.

Solar Return Suite drew inspiration from a number of sources. Klein utilized a symmetrical diminished mode (or octatonic scale) that he found repeatedly in the work of one of his favorite composers, Olivier Messiaen. The same mode can be found in composers as diverse as Duke Ellington, Charlie Parker , and Rimsky-Korsakov. Lastly, Klein drew inspiration from the Cátaros (or Cathars), a heretical Christian movement with roots in Byzantine Anatolia that was viciously suppressed by the Roman Church. The Cathars believed there were two principles, good and evil. Good was represented by the God of the Old Testament, while evil was represented by Satan and his creations, including the human body. Salvation was achieved through consolamentum, a ritual baptism by fire instead of water, allowing the spirit to escape the body.

Pianist/composer Chick Corea has had a long and illustrious career as a jazz performer and conceptualist. His MIT connection goes back to his teen years in Massachusetts when Corea played trumpet and piano in a jazz sextet he formed with MIT students. It was Herb Pomeroy who offered Corea his first professional club gig as a bandleader, opening for the Herb Pomeroy






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