Rising w- The Crossing (Live) The Crossing & Donald Nally

Cover Rising w- The Crossing (Live)

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2020

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
11.12.2020

Label: New Focus Recordings

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Vocal

Interpret: The Crossing & Donald Nally

Komponist: David Lang (1957), Joby Talbot (1971-), Eriks Esenvalds (1977), Dieterich Buxtehude (1637-1707), Paul Fowler, Alex Berko, Santa Ratniece

Das Album enthält Albumcover Booklet (PDF)

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Formate & Preise

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FLAC 44.1 $ 14,50
  • David Lang (b. 1957):
  • 1 Lang: Protect Yourself from Infection 05:31
  • Joby Talbot (b. 1971):
  • 2 Talbot: Lost Forever (Live) 03:46
  • Ēriks Ešenvalds (b. 1977):
  • 3 Ešenvalds: Translation (Live) 04:26
  • Dieterich Buxtehude (1637 - 1707):
  • 4 Buxtehude: Membra Jesu nostri, BuxWV 75 (Excerpts): No. 4, Ad latus [Live] 08:11
  • Paul Fowler (b. 1978):
  • 5 Fowler: Songs from Rosemerry: No 1, First Pink (Live) 03:55
  • David Lang:
  • 6 Lang: The National Anthems (Excerpts): No. 1, Our Land with Peace [Live] 05:18
  • Alex Berko (b. 1995):
  • 7 Berko: Lincoln (Live) 05:46
  • David Lang:
  • 8 Lang: The National Anthems (Excerpts): No. 4, Keep Us Free [Live] 04:10
  • Ted Hearne (b. 1982):
  • 9 Hearne: What It Might Say (Live) 04:35
  • Dieterich Buxtehude:
  • 10 Buxtehude: Membra Jesu nostri, BuxWV 75 (Excerpts): No. 2, Ad genua [Live] 08:01
  • Ēriks Ešenvalds:
  • 11 Ešenvalds: Earth Teach Me Quiet (Live) 07:19
  • Santa Ratniece (b. 1977):
  • 12 Ratniece: Horo horo hata hata (Live) 09:57
  • Total Runtime 01:10:55

Info zu Rising w- The Crossing (Live)

Grammy award-winning, Philadelphia-based new music choir The Crossing releases its 22nd commercial recording, Rising w/ The Crossing. This unusual collection of live recordings from the ensemble’s extensive archive was selected by conductor Donald Nally for the ensemble’s 60-part series of daily releases, launched in March 2020 as an immediate response to the 2020 pandemic. That series is now archived by The Library of Congress as “an important part of the historical record” and lives on through this album of twelve remarkably varied and polished performances that capture the urgency and immediacy of The Crossing in concert. Featuring music by David Lang, Joby Talbot, Êriks Ešenvalds, Paul Fowler, Ted Hearne, Santa Ratniece, Alex Berko, and movements from Dieterich Buxtehude’s Membra Jesu nostri, the album is an expression of solidarity and community in the time of COVID. The Crossing is joined by the International Contemporary Ensemble for movements of Lang’s the national anthems, and early-music ensemble Quicksilver for the Buxtehude tracks.

Of the album's conception, Nally says, “‘We really love singing together.’ Those are the words that came to me when viewing a Zoom screen of faces of my colleagues, as we let them know we couldn’t sing together in March. Singing had been determined an unsafe activity at the outset of the coronavirus pandemic. Our response to this grief was to ask how we can continue expressing and gathering, how we can hold the community together, how we can ensure artists can pay their rents, how we can use what resources we have to rethink who we are at this moment. One of those resources is an archive of 15 years of live concert recordings, musical moments in our history that stand out as special or loved or fun or challenging or just calm at a time when calmness stands in relief against a background of chaos moving into the foreground at the beginning of the Great Shut Down. We wanted to feel like we were walking through this together, waking up and starting our day together, Rising w/ The Crossing. So, we began sharing these archived moments on March 16, each accompanied by my thoughts on why we love singing together, and why we love singing that day’s music.

“Summer passed, and, with it, the promise of our 2020-21 Season. We found ourselves a part of social uprising, of a national reconciling, a previously unimaginable political contest, and a pandemic that had hold of the country and would not let go. As we looked at a completely re-imagined Fall and Winter, we wanted to ensure we remember this time, a time when routines and rituals like Rising w/ The Crossing felt like rudders in stormy seas, when communication was a gift, and when music…That time when music reminded us that we must never take it for granted. It is the bread by which we commune and the wine by which we are reminded that truth matters, words matter, Black Lives Matter, and singing together matters.”

David Lang’s protect yourself from infection, the inspiration for this collection, was commissioned by Blast Theory for the Mütter Museum of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia to remember the names of thousands of victims of the influenza pandemic of 1918 due to the ill-fated Liberty Loan Parade.

Êriks Ešenvalds’ Translation, Ted Hearne’s What it might say, and Paul Fowler’s First Pink were commissioned for The Crossing’s 2016 project Jeff Quartets, in memory of Jeff Dinsmore, co-founder of The Crossing. Though The Crossing has focused on contemporary music almost exclusively, they commissioned a project of responses to 17th-century composer Dieterich Buxtehude’s oratorio Membra Jesu nostri in 2016, when the group partnered with Quicksilver and the International Contemporary Ensemble for Seven Responses. Included on this album are two cantatas of Buxtehude’s masterpiece that underscore the common links of contrapuntal writing and natural color between contemporary and early vocal repertoire, a rare glimpse at the background of the artists and art that led to The Crossing.

David Lang’s the national anthems is the result of his investigation into many national anthems to find common links. In “our land our peace,” Lang begins with a simple, transparent statement of solidarity and accumulates intensity by layering texts and stacking rich, chordal verticalities. “Keep us free,” in contrast, has the feel of a folk dance – short, direct ideas lead to layers that evolve into declamatory statements over which a soprano solo drives the message: ‘our land will not die.'

The text for Alex Berko’s Lincoln appears on the dedicatory inscription in the Lincoln Bay at the Washington National Cathedral. A variety of pointed articulations leads to a more expansive final section, moving through a journey of conflict to healing, while capturing the righteousness of Lincoln’s conviction and the poignancy of his personal experience of leadership.

The Crossing
Donald Nally, direction



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Booklet für Rising w- The Crossing (Live)

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