American Rage Conrad Tao

Cover American Rage

Album info

Album-Release:
2019

HRA-Release:
25.10.2019

Label: Warner Classics

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Instrumental

Artist: Conrad Tao

Composer: Frederic Rzewski (1938), Julia Wolfe (1958-), Aaron Copland (1900-1990)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Frederic Rzewski (b. 1938):
  • 1 Rzewski: Which Side Are You On 15:45
  • Aaron Copland (1900 - 1990): Piano Sonata:
  • 2 Copland: Piano Sonata: I. Molto moderato - Allegro 09:11
  • 3 Copland: Piano Sonata: II. Vivace 04:48
  • 4 Copland: Piano Sonata: III. Andante sostenuto 12:09
  • Julia Wolfe (b. 1958):
  • 5 Wolfe: Compassion 06:46
  • Frederic Rzewski:
  • 6 Rzewski: Winnsboro Cotton Mill Blues 10:32
  • Total Runtime 59:11

Info for American Rage

„Auf welcher Seite stehst du?“ Conrad Tao und sein Album American Rage.

Wenn der Pianist Conrad Tao ein neues Album vorlegt, dann kann man sich auf eines verlassen: Das Programm hat nichts mit den üblichen Recital-Abfolgen zu tun. Tao, der auch als Komponist hervorgetreten ist und achtmal in Folge den ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer Award gewann, kreiert Konzeptalben, die Themen vielschichtig beleuchten, wobei Tao den Finger in so manche Wunde legt: So auch bei American Rage – einer musikalischen Auseinandersetzung mit der amerikanischen Linken mit Kompositionen von Frederic Rzewski, Julia Wolfe und Aaron Copland. Als Konzertaufführung gewann das Programm den Preis als einer der „Best Performances of 2017“ der New York Times.

Conrad Tao, Klavier




Conrad Tao
The only classical musician on Forbes’ 2011 “30 Under 30″ list of people changing the world, 18-year-old Chinese-American pianist Conrad Tao was found playing children’s songs on the piano at 18 months of age. Born in Urbana, Illinois, he gave his first piano recital at age 4; four years later, he made his concerto debut performing Mozart’s Piano Concerto in A Major, K. 414. In June of 2011, the White House Commission on Presidential Scholars and the Department of Education named Conrad a Presidential Scholar in the Arts, while the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts awarded him a YoungArts gold medal in music. Later that year, Conrad was named a Gilmore Young Artist, an honor awarded every two years highlighting the most promising American pianists of the new generation. In May of 2012, he was awarded the prestigious Avery Fisher Career Grant.

In January of 2012, Conrad’s performance of Saint-Saëns’ Piano Concerto No. 2 with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra was hailed by the Detroit News as “a blazing debut…a performance no less seductive in its lyrical beauty than hair-raising in its technical brilliance.” Following a recital at Carnegie’s Weill Hall in February of 2012, the New York Times wrote of the “lovely colors and poetic nuances” of his Liszt, and the eloquence and “fiery panache” of his Prokofiev. Later that year, in June, a writer for All Things Strings attended Conrad’s performance at the Montréal Chamber Music Festival and noted that “Tao is ready for his own TV show: he plays music as if the composer were at his side, with color, joy, and spontaneous poetry. He composes, studies, researches, writes…like that whiz kid on the West Coast, Conrad Tao should be licensed to operate by the time he’s 21.”

Sporting a truly international career, Conrad has appeared as soloist in the United States with the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Russian National Orchestra, and the Baltimore, Dallas, Detroit, and San Francisco Symphonies, among others. He has made multiple tours of Europe, giving solo recitals in Paris, London, Munich, Berlin, and Verbier, and performed with orchestras in Brazil, China, Hong Kong, Mexico, Moscow, and Singapore. Highlights of his 2012-2013 season include two more tours of Europe, including a concerto debut at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam and a third reëngagement at the Louvre in Paris, appearances at the Mostly Mozart and Aspen Music Festivals, debuts with the National Arts Centre Orchestra in Canada and a return to Asia with the Hong Kong Philharmonic, and performances of all five Beethoven piano concertos in the United States.

As an accomplished composer, Conrad has won eight consecutive ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer Awards since 2004; he also received BMI’s Carlos Surinach prize in 2005. For the 2012-2013 season, Conrad has been commissioned by the Hong Kong Philharmonic to write a concert overture ringing in their new season – frequent collaborator Jaap von Zweden’s inagural season there as music director – as well as celebrating the region’s annual China Day. He was also asked by the Dallas Symphony to compose a work observing the 50th anniversary of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, which will be performed in November of 2013.

As an award-winning violinist, Conrad has performed with orchestras in Pennsylvania and Florida; in 2009, he gave nine performances of Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto in E minor (followed by Mendelssohn’s Piano Concerto No. 1 in G minor in the second half) with the Symphony of the Americas in Boca Raton. Conrad’s violin prowess was featured on Jackie Evancho’s Dream With Me PBS special, on which Conrad also traded spots with David Foster behind the piano.

Conrad is an exclusive EMI recording artist. His first album, released as an iTunes exclusive in February of 2012 as part of the “Juilliard Sessions” series, comprised works by Debussy, Stravinsky, and Conrad himself. His second record will also prominently feature Conrad’s own compositions, and is expected for release in 2013.

Conrad currently attends the Columbia University/Juilliard School joint degree program and studies piano with Professors Yoheved Kaplinsky and Choong Mo Kang at Juilliard. He studies composition with Professor Christopher Theofanidis of Yale University, and studied violin with Ms. Catherine Cho for five years at Juilliard’s Pre-College Division.

Gordon Getty
was born in Los Angeles in 1933, and has lived in San Francisco since 1945. He graduated in English literature from the University of San Francisco in 1956. His first published piece was an a cappella chorus on Tennyson’s “All Along the Valley,” written while he was working for his father in the Middle East. He then studied theory at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music under Sol Joseph in 1961 and 1962. Five piano pieces he wrote there, now collectively the Homework Suite, were published in 1964.

Meanwhile he married, went back to work for his father, and com- pleted nothing new for 18 years. Then compositions came steadily. His song cycle The White Election set 31 poems by Emily Dickinson for soprano and piano. It was recorded by Kaaren Erickson and Armen Guzelimian on Delos in 1986, and by Lisa Delan and Fritz Steinegger on PentaTone in 2009.

Plump Jack, meanwhile, grew piece by piece. Part of what is now the Boar’s Head Inn scene was premiered by the San Francisco Symphony in 1984. A fuller version was repeated there in 1986, along with the newly written Shallow’s Orchard, Banishment and Off to War. The same four scenes were soon heard in the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion and at the Spoleto Festival. The complete opera, again in concert version, premiered in London in 2002.

Most of Getty’s compositions are for voice. His work for chorus and orchestra includes settings of Tennyson and Housman in Victorian Scenes (1989), ending with a reworked “All Along the Valley,” and of Poe in Annabel Lee (1990). Orchestral choruses setting mostly or wholly his own texts include Three Welsh Songs (1998) and Young America (2001). His cantata Joan and the Bells (1998), also to his own text, is for the same forces with soprano and baritone soloists. All have been recorded by PentaTone. His second opera, Usher House, to his own libretto after Poe’s short story, is due release by PentaTone in 2013.

Of his compositions Getty has said: “My style is undoubtedly tonal, though with hints of atonality, such as any composer would likely use to suggest a degree of disorientation. But I’m strictly tonal in my approach. I represent a viewpoint that stands somewhat apart from the 20th century, which was in large measure a repudiation of the 19th, and a sock in the nose to sentimentality. Whatever it was that the great Victorian compos- ers and poets were trying to achieve, that’s what I’m trying to achieve.”

Booklet for American Rage

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