Nashville Symphony & Giancarlo Guerrero - Terry Riley: The Palmian Chord Ryddle & At the Royal Majestic (2017) [CD-Rip]
Artist: Nashville Symphony, Giancarlo Guerrero
Title: Terry Riley: The Palmian Chord Ryddle & At the Royal Majestic
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Naxos
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, artwork)
Total Time: 01:09:18
Total Size: 320 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Terry Riley: The Palmian Chord Ryddle & At the Royal Majestic
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Naxos
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, artwork)
Total Time: 01:09:18
Total Size: 320 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
The Palmian Chord Ryddle (2011)
01. I. Starting from here
02. II. Iberia
03. III. Slow drag
04. IV. Towards the clouds
05. V. For Maresa
06. VI. Ghandi-Ji's Danda
07. VII. Wedding music
08. VIII. The afterglow
At the Royal Majestic (2013)
09. I. Negro Hall
10. II. The Lizard Tower Gang
11. III. Circling Kailash
Giancarlo Guerrero is a versatile conductor who has served as music director of the Nashville Symphony since 2009. He has guest conducted the Cleveland and Philadelphia orchestras, and a long list of others in the Americas, including the major orchestras of Boston, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Detroit, Milwaukee, Houston, Dallas, Sao Paulo, and the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela. In addition, he has led ensembles overseas like the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and Lisbon-based Gulbenkian Orchestra. Guerrero has also conducted opera at the Costa Rican Lyric Opera and at the Adelaide Festival in Australia. His repertory is broad, taking in works by Mozart, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Tchaikovsky, Mahler, Prokofiev, Bartók, and, in opera, Verdi, Bizet, Puccini, and others. But he has also been active in performance of much contemporary music, including works by American composers Adams, Corigliano, Daugherty, Danielpour, Higdon, Riley, and South Americans Osvaldo Golijov and Miguel del Aguila. Guerrero has recorded for the Naxos label.
Giancarlo Guerrero was born in Managua, Nicaragua, on March 14, 1969. Raised in Costa Rica, he played in the Costa Rica Youth Symphony and in his teens became a percussionist with the Costa Rican National Symphony Orchestra. Guerrero earned a bachelor's degree at Baylor University in percussion, though he also studied conducting there with Michael Haithcock and Stephen Heyde. Guerrero then studied conducting at Northwestern University, where he was awarded a master's degree. His teachers there included Victor Yampolsky.
By the 1990s Guerrero was active as a conductor and his first professional post was as music director of the San Cristobal, Venezuela-based Tachira Symphony Orchestra. From 1999-2004 he was associate conductor of the Minnesota Orchestra. His debut subscription concert there in March 2000 made a splash with the world premiere of Corigliano's Phantasmagoria on themes from the Ghosts of Versailles.
From 2002-2008 Guerrero served as music director of the Oregon-based Eugene Symphony Orchestra. In 2004 he was given the Helen M. Thompson Award by the American Symphony Orchestra League, an honor presented to outstanding young conductors. 2005 saw two important debuts for Guerrero: at the Casals Festival with Yo-Yo Ma and the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra, and at the Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires with the Filarmónica de Buenos Aires.
Guerrero had return engagements at the Casals Festival in 2006 (in Verdi's Requiem) and 2007. In 2008 he garnered much acclaim for his presentation of Golijov's opera Ainadamar at the Adelaide Festival, which was an Australian premiere. In the 2008-2009 season Guerrero served as music director designate of the Nashville Symphony Orchestra. After assuming music directorship in 2009 Guerrero scored numerous successes in the post, most conspicuously for his 2009 Naxos disc of Michael Daugherty's Metropolis Symphony, which won three Grammy awards in 2011: Best Orchestra Performance, Best Classical Composition, and Best Engineered Classical Album. From 2011 Guerrero has served as guest conductor of the Cleveland Orchestra at its Miami residency. In 2012 Guerrero won a second Grammy, for Best Classical Instrumental Solo, for his Naxos disc of Schwantner's Concerto for percussion. -- Robert Cummings
Giancarlo Guerrero was born in Managua, Nicaragua, on March 14, 1969. Raised in Costa Rica, he played in the Costa Rica Youth Symphony and in his teens became a percussionist with the Costa Rican National Symphony Orchestra. Guerrero earned a bachelor's degree at Baylor University in percussion, though he also studied conducting there with Michael Haithcock and Stephen Heyde. Guerrero then studied conducting at Northwestern University, where he was awarded a master's degree. His teachers there included Victor Yampolsky.
By the 1990s Guerrero was active as a conductor and his first professional post was as music director of the San Cristobal, Venezuela-based Tachira Symphony Orchestra. From 1999-2004 he was associate conductor of the Minnesota Orchestra. His debut subscription concert there in March 2000 made a splash with the world premiere of Corigliano's Phantasmagoria on themes from the Ghosts of Versailles.
From 2002-2008 Guerrero served as music director of the Oregon-based Eugene Symphony Orchestra. In 2004 he was given the Helen M. Thompson Award by the American Symphony Orchestra League, an honor presented to outstanding young conductors. 2005 saw two important debuts for Guerrero: at the Casals Festival with Yo-Yo Ma and the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra, and at the Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires with the Filarmónica de Buenos Aires.
Guerrero had return engagements at the Casals Festival in 2006 (in Verdi's Requiem) and 2007. In 2008 he garnered much acclaim for his presentation of Golijov's opera Ainadamar at the Adelaide Festival, which was an Australian premiere. In the 2008-2009 season Guerrero served as music director designate of the Nashville Symphony Orchestra. After assuming music directorship in 2009 Guerrero scored numerous successes in the post, most conspicuously for his 2009 Naxos disc of Michael Daugherty's Metropolis Symphony, which won three Grammy awards in 2011: Best Orchestra Performance, Best Classical Composition, and Best Engineered Classical Album. From 2011 Guerrero has served as guest conductor of the Cleveland Orchestra at its Miami residency. In 2012 Guerrero won a second Grammy, for Best Classical Instrumental Solo, for his Naxos disc of Schwantner's Concerto for percussion. -- Robert Cummings