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Klap Ur Handz CD

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Lark Quartet: "Klap Ur Handz"

Maria Bachmann, Violin
Deborah Buck, Violin
Kathryn Lockwood, Viola
Astrid Schween, Cello
with special guest
Yousif Sheronick, Percussion

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The Lark Quartet, Maria Bachmann and Deborah Buck violins; Kathryn Lockwood, viola and Astrid Schween, cello, are featured on Klap Ur Handz, a new Endeavor Classics recording. The CD of all American composers features world premieres by Daniel Bernard Roumain (DBR) and Paul Moravec, a quartet by Peter Schickele, as well as never before recorded arrangements of five Gershwin songs.  

This Klap Ur Handz recording of an American musical landscape represents the Lark Quartet’s long-time association with new music and adventuresome programming. The recording includes traditional string quartet performances and explores a fresh innovative style with contemporary music including a remix of Daniel Bernard Roumain’s (DBR) Quartet No. 5 with a hip-hop drum track.

Performing with a unique blend of excitement, individuality, technical brilliance and an unusually sonorous quartet sound, the Lark Quartet is critically acclaimed for a strong presence of each member of the quartet.  These performers have combined to form a “polished and warmly communicative ensemble” that delivers “a performance of grace, proportion, and burnished brilliance,” according to Tim Page of the Washington Post.

Program:

SCHICKELE:
Scherzo from Quartet No. 2 “In Memoriam”

MORAVEC:
Atmosfera a Villa Aurelia
Vince & Jan: 1945

GERSHWIN (arr. Silverman):
He Loves and She Loves
Fascinatin’ Rhythm
Do It Again
Clap Your Hands
Sweet & Low Down

ROUMAIN:
Quartet No. 5 “Rosa Parks”
Klap Ur Hands [Remix with Percussion]

http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&token=&sql=43:140419~T1
"Like other chamber groups in the line descended from San Francisco's Kronos Quartet, the women of the Lark Quartet set out to mix concert music with contemporary vernacular materials, and the chief attraction of this album is that they choose interesting examples of each and play them with accuracy and vigor. Their program succeeds in being diverse, unexpected, and logical, all at the same time. The presence of one of the "serious" works of P.D.Q. Bach creator Peter Schickele is a surprise, yet the kinetic, Slavic scherzo of his tring Quartet No. 2, "In Memoriam" is an ideal overture. The quartet gets the personal lyricism of current critical favorite Paul Moravec just right. The arrangements of Gershwin songs for quartet by Broadway composer Stanley Silverman stress Gershwin's mastery of contrapuntal fundamentals, and the Lark players let the music speak for itself rather than adding the mannerisms of musicals. It is the final work, by the widely publicized young Haitian American composer Daniel Bernard Roumain, that may attract the most attention to this disc. Roumain has attempted to incorporate hip-hop influences into his music, and in the opening movement of his &Quartet No. 5, "Rosa Parks"), bearing the "Klap Ur Handz" title, he instructs the players to do just that in order to create a semblance of a big hip-hop beat. But that is not the only weapon in Roumain's arsenal; his second movement, "I made up my mind not to move," suggests Rosa Parks' act of defiance not with ponderous dignity but with a sharp ostinato that suggests stubbornness and confrontation. It is the final "Isorhythmiclastionistc" movement that brings sustained notes and a tragic mood. The Lark gives the work a straightforward performance that one suspects the composer, who is pictured in the cover art, must have liked a good deal. As for the general listener, anyone interested in the broad chamber music trend toward engagement with audiences will find much to enjoy in this well-executed recording." -All Music Guide

 
 

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