Quartet San Francisco’s 2006 release Látigo, which gave passionate expression to the group’s devotion to tango, was honored last December with two Grammy nominations in the Classical Crossover field, including “Best Album.”
Their audacious new ViolinJazz Recordings CD Whirled Chamber Music ups the ante, presenting what violinist Jeremy Cohen calls “crossover music in its purest form.” Due for release September 25, the new disc draws from a wide variety of indigenous American forms – jazz, funk, rock, tango – that are imaginatively crafted by Cohen for string quartet. The CD’s title refers to the walls between genres coming down, with the Quartet offering, you might say, “a new whirled order.”
Quartet San Francisco, established in 2001, consists of Cohen and Kayo Miki on violins, Emily Onderdonk (viola), and Joel Cohen (cello). The quartet’s contemporary musical sensibilities combined with the sheer physical energy required to play these rich American styles of music provide fertile ground for the ensemble to present their unique version of World Music.
The repertoire on the new CD advances the crossover concept in stunning fashion. Seven of the tracks are by Raymond Scott (1908-1994), the iconoclastic composer, bandleader, inventor, and electronic music pioneer whose music was given its broadest exposure on Warner Bros.’ Looney Tunes cartoons in the 1940s and ’50s and whose centennial will be celebrated next year. “Scott’s whimsical melodies and swinging rhythms are ideally suited to string players with appetites for color and character,” notes Cohen.
Also included in the program are compositions by Chick Corea (“Spain”), David Grisman (“Dawg’s Bull”), Duke Ellington (“The Mooche”), and Leonard Bernstein (“Gee Officer Krupke,” from West Side Story). The Average White Band’s “Pick Up the Pieces” is rendered with attitude to spare, as is the CD closer “What Is Hip?” by Tower of Power – a statement of local pride from the Oakland-born-and- bred Cohen brothers.
“We feel passionate about this mixture of American genres,” says Cohen, “and we perform each work from within the style in which it was conceived. The tradition of chamber music has taught us to play from our hearts with the highest playing standards we can apply. So when the music says swing, we swing. When the music says groove, we groove.”
One thing Cohen has learned in his diverse musical experiences – from studies with Itzhak Perlman to his two years with Forever Tango to recording sessions with Carlos Santana and John Williams – is that “the walls between genres are in our heads. They don’t really exist unless we place them there. Quartet San Francisco bridges the gap between the styles that divide us musically.”
Like its predecessor Látigo, Whirled Chamber Music was recorded at Skywalker Ranch in Nicasio, CA by Leslie Ann Jones, who received a Grammy nomination for her contributions to Látigo (best engineered classical album).
The work of another American original, Jim Flora, is featured on the CD cover. His pulsating, riotously colorful illustrations adorned the album covers of many jazz and classical releases for Columbia and RCA Victor in the late 1940s and ’50s. Flora’s exuberant, genre-defying style is its own new whirled order.
My clarinetist and I performed my arrangement of your wonderful Tango Eight as the closing work on a concert Sunday - the audience loved it as much as we do.
LOVE the hocketing in that piece - and it holds up very nicely with the change in instrumentation.
a friend is like a flower that blooms just for you..and we can be our real selves when we see what's true..a friend is like a gentle rain when you thirst..and we are dancing rings around a rose called mother earth..a friend is like the moon choosing to reflect the light..and we couldn't see the beautiful stars unless it was for the dark of nights..a friend is like a flower we send to ourselves..a gift that just keeps on opening until the light of love is shown and felt.
Hello. Thanks for adding me. I like the pieces you have posted here on myspace. Great variety! Btw. I'm grew up in Mill Valley, just up 101 from you. I am sure the weather is better there than here in Michigan. Take care!
"Perhaps within the next hundred years, science will perfect a process of thought transference from composer to listener. The composer will sit alone on the concert stage and merely 'think' his idealized conception of his music. Instead of recordings of actual music sound, recordings will carry the brainwaves of the composer directly to the mind of the listener."
Just wanted to let you all know that I just LOVE what you guys are doing! You've inspired me so much and keep me dreamin of returning to San Francisco!! Love~Jazz:)
Congratulations on the Grammy Nomination!!! I got the email today- that's GREAT!!! I'm so happy for you guys!!! Love from NJ! See you next month in NYC!