Kronos Quartet (album)

Kronos Quartet is a studio album by the Kronos Quartet, the first of their albums on Nonesuch Records. It contains compositions by Australian composer Peter Sculthorpe, Finnish composer Aulis Sallinen, American composer Philip Glass, and American/Mexican composer Conlon Nancarrow. The last track is Jimi Hendrix's "Purple Haze."[1]

Kronos Quartet
Studio album by
Released15 August 1986 (1986-08-15)
RecordedJune 1985
GenreContemporary classical
LabelNonesuch (#79111)
ProducerThomas Frost
Kronos Quartet chronology
Music of Bill Evans
(1986)
Kronos Quartet
(1986)
White Man Sleeps
(1987)

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."String Quartet No. 8, Mvt. I Con dolore"Peter Sculthorpe2:04
2."String Quartet No. 8, Mvt. II Risoluto"Sculthorpe3:49
3."String Quartet No. 8, Mvt. III Con dolore"Sculthorpe3:02
4."String Quartet No. 8, Mvt. IV Con precisione"Sculthorpe1:49
5."String Quartet No. 8, Mvt. V Con dolore"Sculthorpe2:07
6."String Quartet No. 3: Some Aspects of Peltoniemi Hintrik's Funeral March"Aulis Sallinen14:05
7."Company, Mvt. I"Philip Glass2:22
8."Company, Mvt. II"Glass1:36
9."Company, Mvt. III"Glass1:46
10."Company, Mvt. IV"Glass2:14
11."String Quartet, Mvt. I Allegro molto"Conlon Nancarrow2:18
12."String Quartet, Mvt. II Andante moderato"Nancarrow3:31
13."String Quartet, Mvt. III Prestissimo"Nancarrow5:17
14."Purple Haze"Jimi Hendrix, arr. Steve Riffkin2:52

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]

According to John Rockwell of the New York Times, "The best recorded anthology yet to capture the heady diversity of musical idioms that this San Francisco quartet espouses."[3] Joseph McLellan, for the Washington Post, commented in a similar vein: "This group is absolutely amazing-not merely because of the superb technique with which it tackles the challenging contemporary repertoire, but even more for the breadth of vision that matter-of-factly and quite correctly includes Jimi Hendrix. . . . Hearing this music is a mind-expanding experience."[4]

Credits

Musicians

Production

gollark: They can't kill me because that would be mean.
gollark: Anyway, we hit *those* limits ages ago, so we achieve our high clocks by extending the processors out into arbitrarily many orthogonal dimensions, ignoring the "speed of light", and patterning the logic gates directly onto underlying physical laws.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rapid_single_flux_quantum
gollark: Clock speeds are constrained mostly by CMOS processes as far as I know, lightspeed issues are secondary.
gollark: What? Superconducting logic circuits can easily hit tens of GHz.

See also

References

  1. Walsh, Michael (1986-11-17). "Once Upon A Time In America". Time. Retrieved 2009-01-24.
  2. Allmusic review
  3. Rockwell, John (1987-06-07). "50 More Top CDs to Tickle Your Laser". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  4. McLellan, Joseph (1988-01-10). "The String Masters; The Chamber Classics: Stenhammer to Shostakovich". Washington Post. p. G1.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.