Cover LutosAir Quintet 5[+2]

Album info

Album-Release:
2019

HRA-Release:
01.04.2022

Label: CD Accord

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Chamber Music

Artist: LutosAir Quintet & Nate Wooley, Tomasz Żymła

Composer: Paul Preusser (1974), Nikolet Burzynska (1989), Nikola Kolodziejczyk (1986)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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FLAC 96 $ 14.50
  • Paul Preusser (b. 1974): 5[+1]:
  • 1 Preusser: 5[+1]: I. — 05:05
  • 2 Preusser: 5[+1]: II. — 05:05
  • 3 Preusser: 5[+1]: III. — 05:20
  • Nikolet Burzyńska (b. 1989): The Oak Crown:
  • 4 Burzyńska: The Oak Crown: I. Twinning 04:55
  • 5 Burzyńska: The Oak Crown: II. Ghosts of the Forest 03:19
  • 6 Burzyńska: The Oak Crown: III. Twinning 01:54
  • 7 Burzyńska: The Oak Crown: IV. Devas, Oaks 04:21
  • 8 Burzyńska: The Oak Crown: V. Twinning 03:40
  • Nikola Kołodziejczyk (1986): Wingover:
  • 9 Kołodziejczyk: Wingover: I. Wingover 09:53
  • 10 Kołodziejczyk: Wingover: II. Flettner 05:58
  • 11 Kołodziejczyk: Wingover: III. Pugachev’s Cobra 03:36
  • 12 Kołodziejczyk: Wingover: IV. Sebastian Kawa over Annapurna 04:49
  • Total Runtime 57:55

Info for LutosAir Quintet 5[+2]

Listening to music performed live at a concert is radically different from experiencing music at home. Live listening is listening in public, together with others, at the same time and place. Listening at home is private, often done alone. It takes place in the comfort and intimacy of your own space, on your own terms; perhaps this is what makes home listening more sincere and direct. Then the relationship we create with the music can become more personal and long-lasting.

Listening at home, on the one hand, frees us from the obligation to listen sitting, in complete silence and concentration, often while holding our breath, and on the other hand, it is possible to return to the recorded music many times, getting to know it closer and closer, making it familiar. We can listen differently each time, noticing newer and newer details and nuances of colour, form or musical language. We can recognize and enjoy the multitude of references and contexts, both musical and non-musical, which would certainly not be possible with a one-off listening to a live performance.

The album in your hands is an invitation to create such a personal, intimate relationship with music. You can take it with you for a walk in the forest or on a long journey. I hope that the music of Paul Preusser, Nikolet Burzynska and Nikola Kolodziejczyk – superbly performed by LutosAir Quintet and its guests – will give you a lot of pleasure and encourage you to come back to it many times. (Monika Zyla)

Nate Wooley, trumpet (tracks 1–3)
Tomasz Żymła, bass clarinet (tracks 9–12)
LutosAir Quintet:
Jan Krzeszowiec, flute
Karolina Stalmachowska, oboe
Maciej Dobosz, clarinet
Alicja Kieruzalska, bassoon
Mateusz Feliński, horn




Nate Wooley
was born in 1974 in Clatskanie, Oregon, a town of 2,000 people in the timber country of the Pacific Northwestern corner of the U.S. He began playing trumpet professionally with his father, a big band saxophonist, at the age of 13. His time in Oregon, a place of relative quiet and slow time reference, instilled in Nate a musical aesthetic that has informed all of his music making for the past 20 years, but in no situation more than his solo trumpet performances.

Trumpeter and composer Nate Wooley has been building the size and scope of this project through numerous iterations over the last decade, incorporating taped sections from previous versions into each successive installment. Last year he released the sixth and most impressive recording. The aim is always the same more or less, constructing a momentous structured improvisation that aspires to an ecstatic climax followed by a cathartic release, and “Seven Storey Mountain” achieves this goal brilliantly. Within the dramatic atmosphere of the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, Wooley presents the latest version of this epic with a knock-out line-up featuring some of his regular New York cohorts including violinist C. Spencer Yeh, and pedal steel guitarist Susan Alcorn, with an impressive bunch of European fellow travelers such as pianist Håvard Wiik and drummer Steve Heather. Through a series of time-blocked sequences, the music grows from ambient calm into cycling post-Terry Riley minimalism, careening and building into a dense wall of freely improvised, almost psychedelic mayhem. The piece features several female voices, including section leader Megan Schubert, interpolating the words and melody from the proto-feminist Peggy Seeger song “Reclaim the Night”, and offering the haunting, defiant coda, “You can’t scare me”, borrowed from the Bobbie McGhee folk tune “Union Maid”.

Tomasz Żymła
graduated Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music in Katowice (Poland) in 2010. After that he came to the Netherlands to study bass clarinet at the Royal Conservatory The Hague. In 2010 he won Grand Prix in soloist category the Competition in Szczecin (Poland). He played as a guest player in Asko / Schönberg Ensemble, Orkest van het Oosten, Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra and many other Polish Orchestras. Since 2008 Tomasz is a principal clarinetist of the New Music Orchestra in Poland. During his Master studies, he participated in Orchestra Master program as clarinetist in Residentie Orkest, which is part of his study specialization. He gratuated in May 2013. Interested in all kind of music, Tom is playing since 2013, in the multi-style folk band, La Mythomanie.

LutosAir Quintet
Founded in 2013 on the centenary of Witold Lutosławski’s birth, LutosAir Quintet is one of the National Forum of Music resident ensembles. It is made up of the soloists of the NFM Wrocław Philharmonic: Jan Krzeszowiec, Wojciech Merena, Maciej Dobosz, Alicja Kieruzalska and Mateusz Feliński. At present LutosAir Quintet is one of the most active and versatile Polish wind ensembles. It has performed at the most important Polish festivals, such as the Warsaw Autumn, Wratislavia Cantans, Music on the Heights in Zakopane, Jazztopad, Poznań Music Spring, HMG Festival, and La Folle Journée (Warsaw National Opera). The LutosAir Quintet has also performed in England, Germany, Egypt (Cairo, Alexandria Library), and Denmark during Rudersdal Sommerkoncerter and Bornholms Musikfestival.

Recent highlights in the LutosAir Quintet history were concerts with the Wayne Shorter Quartet bringing together extraordinary jazz players (Wayne Shorter, John Patitucci, Brian Blade, and Danilo Pérez). During Jazztopad Festival and London Jazz Festival, both ensembles performed Wayne Shorter’s The Unfolding written specially for this occasion. The quintet has also collaborated with excellent Polish musicians: Piotr Sałajczyk, Maciej Frąckiewicz, and the Lutosławski Quartet. LutosAir Quintet’s repertoire includes, inter alia, new music. It also focuses on promoting Polish music. The quintet has performed several lesser-known pieces in the international repertoire and participated in world premieres of several works by Polish composers, such as Wojtek Blecharz, Paweł Hendrich, Nikolet Burzyńska, Marcin Stańczyk and Mikołaj Majkusiak. Rafał Augustyn dedicated his Rondeau to LutosAir Quintet.



Booklet for LutosAir Quintet 5[+2]

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