BELA FLECK, Nashville Symphony, Giancarlo Guerrero, Brooklyn Rider - The Impostor (2013) [Hi-Res]
Artist: BELA FLECK, Nashville Symphony, Giancarlo Guerrero, Brooklyn Rider
Title: The Impostor
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Mercury (Universal France)
Genre: Classical, Contemporary
Quality: 24-bit/96kHz FLAC
Total Time: 01:01:41
Total Size: 287 MB; 1.1 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
The worlds premiere banjo player, Bela Fleck, has always been one to stretch boundaries and explore new musical territory. On this all-new album, Bela gives world-premiere recordings of two original compositions: The Impostor and Night Flight Over Water.Title: The Impostor
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Mercury (Universal France)
Genre: Classical, Contemporary
Quality: 24-bit/96kHz FLAC
Total Time: 01:01:41
Total Size: 287 MB; 1.1 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
The Impostor a concerto for banjo and orchestra and is performed with the Nashville Symphony Orchestra and conductor, Giancarlo Guerrero. The recording taken from live performances in Schermerhorn Symphony Center in Nashville.
Night Flight Over Water is a new quintet for banjo and string quartet and here Bela is joined by the American quartet, Brooklyn Rider.
After writing a couple of these pieces with my genius pal Edgar Meyer, and one with he and Zakir Hussain(also a genius), it was time to see if I had anything musical to say without them, in this arena. Fortunately the folks at Deutche Grammophone thought I did, and put the record out. It’s released on August 13th, 2013. There’s an elephant on the cover of the cd, so if you are looking for banjo concertos and you want to get mine, look for the elephant.
After writing two concertos with Edgar Meyer (one in tandem with Zakir Hussain) I was starting to want some room to try out some of my own ideas, and also wondering if I had the stuff to create something like this on my own. I mentioned the idea of writing a stand alone banjo concerto to Alan and Giancarlo from Nashville Symphony, and got a terrifying response. They actually wanted me to do it! This is the most musically ambitious project I’ve ever taken on, writing and orchestrating for full orchestra and banjo. I dedicated myself to the task, and wrote the 36 minute long Impostor Concerto over a 6 month period. Now I needed to complete the album with something else. I decided to write a piece for string quartet and banjo for the great quartet Brooklyn Rider, called Night Flight Over Water; these two extended pieces make up the Impostor CD. The Impostor Concerto was commissioned by the Nashville Symphony, and Night Flight was commissioned by Butler University. I am thrilled that the premiere classical label Deutche Grammophon wanted to release this.
„The Imposter contains two recorded premiers. The first, the title piece, was commissioned in 2010 by the Nashville Symphony Orchestra and was banjo master Béla Fleck's first go at the form as a solo composer. He'd co-written a double concerto with bassist Edgar Meyer in 2007 and the pair collaborated on the celebrated Melody of Rhythm: Triple Concerto & Music for Trio with Zakir Hussain in 2009. This work presented a particular set of challenges and possibilities because Fleck's skills at reading -- let alone writing traditionally notated music -- were rudimentary; he reads tablature. Using computer software to aid him in notation, his own gifts for improvisation, expansive harmonic extension and arrangement, and his encyclopedic knowledge of various traditions, we hear more possibility than challenge on both works. On The Imposter, the symphony is under the direction of Giancarlo Guerrero. Fleck approaches the concerto form in three movements that address everyone from Stravinsky and Bartók to Copland, Gershwin, and Earl Scruggs. He also brings the rhythmic elasticity and harmonic palette of a jazz musician to the composition. Notable are the colorful and textural parlances between soloist and orchestra in "Infiltration," which allow Eastern European and Western folk musics into the flow of more classically oriented ideas. "Integration" contains long contrapuntal exchanges that are more speculative and intricate. Finally, "Truth Revealed" commences as an extension of the previous movement, but evolves into a dynamic and dramatic call-and-response dialogue led by Fleck. Jazz and bluegrass, 21st century classical, and crossover motifs become interchangeable and almost cinematic in their expressions, all the while avoiding overly familiar tropes and harmonic traps. The second work here, Night Flight Over Water, is a quintet for banjo and string quartet. It's much more complex -- and fascinating -- because of the built-in tensions between the five-string instruments in both ensemble and solo play. They allow not only for a unique exploration of the classical quintet form, as Fleck seeks to explore not only the possibilities for his own instrument as interloper and collaborator, but also as a tonal and harmonic inquiry at once playful and sophisticated. The last movement in particular is deeply satisfying. While it's hard to say who The Imposter might appeal to more -- classical or Fleck fans -- both should find more than enough here to hold their attention. But that's not even the point. This album represents yet another chapter in what Fleck's raison d'etre has been all along: to integrate and showcase his instrument as seamlessly as possible into virtually every form and genre he turns his attention to, and to prove that it belongs inside them, not as an exotic addition, but for its possibilities as a foundational element.“ (Thom Jurek, AMG)
Béla Fleck, banjo
Nashville Symphony
Brooklyn Rider
Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor
Tracklist:
1 01. Béla Fleck - Infiltration (12:17)
1 02. Béla Fleck - Integration (11:09)
1 03. Béla Fleck - Truth Revealed (12:31)
1 04. Béla Fleck - Tumbledown Creek (10:33)
1 05. Béla Fleck - Hunter's Moon (05:26)
1 06. Béla Fleck - The Escape (09:43)