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Be Still Your Beating Heart

We hope you spent last night whisked away in the arms of an admirer and thinking of nothing else. However, in case you woke in the middle of the night, shuddering: "How can I sleep when I don't know what A Far Cry is up to?" never fear, darling. This one's for you.

JORDAN HALL SHOW! "HEARTBEATS" Yes, our next show will be in Jordan Hall, and will feature the power of the human heart - seat of empathy, fervent devotion, sentimental swooning, and strongest muscle in our body. Check out an emotionally rich program featuring John Adams' modern classic "Shaker Loops," Shostakovich's Quartet No. 8 (arranged for string orchestra), and a concerto for fiddle and bass by Kip Jones, featuring Kip and Crier bassist Karl Doty.

Here are the program notes by our fabulous resident musicoloist, Kathryn Bacasmot and composer Kip Jones:

Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975) :: Chamber Symphony, op. 110a Dmitri Shostakovich’s work gained unfettered interpretational freedom through the sequestering of its truthful origin. Secrets and whispers lie at the heart of his music. He kept no diary, save what he revealed in his scores. Suffering habitual manipulation at the hands of the government, he did what he needed to do in order to survive. Fear drove him to protect himself and his family and friends from bans on performances of his music, and public verbal lashings (such as the one he sustained during the Stalinist regime against his opera Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District). In some ways it could appear he was numb to his reality, agreeing to join the Communist Party, allowing himself to be paraded around on a visit to the United States as the prize of government sanctioned artists—the compliant jewel in the Party’s crown. But what would you do if the alternative option meant divorcing yourself from the country you love—your homeland? His non-verbal outlet was “...inner liberation, by means of the power of creative thought,” as David Fanning observed. The inner life of Shostakovich is so shrouded in mystery that even the book, Testimony by Solomon Vokov, that claims to be his memoirs has been questioned as to authenticity. Thus, the truth of his music lies far beyond our reach, because as Michael Mishra has wisely cautioned, “any answers, as obvious as some of them may appear to be, remain speculative.” Not surprisingly then, opinions regarding the String Quartet no. 8 run rampant, stretching across the board from extremely sentimental to blandly pragmatic. According to them he was either writing his own eulogy with suicide as the ultimate conclusion (a widely disclaimed theory, yet it has been suggested), simply throwing together a pastiche of past works that meant something to him at some time or another, or sending a concealed message regarding his true feelings of involvement with the Party. Where is the truth? We can start with what Shostakovich wrote in a letter Isaak Glickman, dated July 19, 1960, five days after finishing the Quartet (written between July 12-14) in Dresden during a research trip for Five Days, Five Nights, a film for which he was composing the score: Instead [of Five Days, Five Nights] I wrote this ideologically flawed quartet which is of no use to anybody. I started thinking that if some day I die, nobody is likely to write a work in memory of me, so I had better write one myself. The title page could carry the dedication: ‘To the memory of the composer of this quartet.’ He continued, armed with his typically sardonic sense of humor: It is a pseudo-tragic quartet, so much so that while I was composing it I shed the same amount of tears as I would have to pee after half-a-dozen beers. When I got home, I tried a couple of times to play it through, but always ended up in tears. This was of course a response not so much to the pseudo-tragedy as to my own wonder at its superlative unity of form. But here you may detect a touch of self glorification, which no doubt will soon pass and leave in its place the usual self-critical hangover. The “superlative unity of form” is a result of seamlessly weaving together quotes of his own material including the Symphony no. 1 (I. Largo), the Piano Trio no. 2 (II. Allegro molto), the Cello Concerto no. 1 (III. Allegretto), the revolutionary song Zamuchen tyazholoy nevoley (literally, “Tortured by grievous unfreedom”) and themes from Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District (IV. Largo), and a return to the Symphony no. 1 in the finale (V. Largo). Bonding them together are his initials D-S-C-H (the Germanized spelling with “Sch”) musically represented through the notes D, E-flat, C, B. Famously dedicated “To the Victims of Fascism and War,” the title was not written on the manuscript by the composer, nor did it appear in the first publication of the piece, though it eventually made its way into print. Rather, the composer reportedly uttered the phrase the week before its premiere during a discussion of the work. It stuck. Shostakovich biographer Ian MacDonald eloquently observed that the composer “Committed to producing an art of honesty in a culture of lies,” and had “long ago made the decision that what people thought of him was less important than ensuring they had the chance of being emotionally confronted by his music.” Perhaps that is the key to this controversial music. Shostakovich is telling us everything we need to know, and all we have to do is listen. Rudolf Barhsai arranged this version of the quartet expanded for string orchestra, “and approved by Shostakovich.” -Kathryn J Allwine Bacasmot

Kip Jones: Three Views of a Mountain - Concerto for Violin, Double Bass, and String Orchestra Three Views of a Mountain is a concerto in three movements, arranged fast-slow-fast, that highlights the common ground between the two most disparate members of the string instrument family. It opens with the soloists, together as a speeding train, dodging large blocks of harmony from the orchestra. The entire first movement is a study of permutations, twisting and manipulating its stark themes in an overt and simple way. For me, it is childlike anticipation. The second movement is based on a twenty-two beat clave, ticking away silently in the musicians’ minds underneath a folk song, played against its own skeleton; the effect is a many- layered, untrustworthy environment: fearing no evil but still, after all, walking through the valley of the shadow of death. Whereas the first movement is anxiety and expectation, this is the experience itself, skipping a beat every so often to remind the consciousness: This Is Really Happening. The third movement, to be symmetrical, is the hike down from the summit. Retrospect, not necessarily accurate, creates an emotional framework through which we understand and redefine past experience. It opens with the soloists, both pizzicato, commenting on a new theme played pianissimo by the violas. Back at the tempo of the opening, multiple metric puzzle-pieces are fit together to foreshadow the final hocketing relationship between the soloists and orchestra. Ultimately, our present self is hurled forward out of the past, against our will, contrary to the famous last sentence of The Great Gatsby. It’s a real joy to present this work with A Far Cry, whose integrity, dedication, and sound are a great inspiration to me. It’s another joy to perform it with Karl Doty, who in addition to being a superlative double-bassist is also a true friend. A hearty thank-you goes to both of them, as well as to you, listener, for your time and attention. -Kip Jones

John Adams (b. 1947) :: Shaker Loops Shaker Loops had two previous lives. In 1976 John Adams presented a work titled Wavemaker for three violins. He was absorbed by the principle of waveforms both “acoustical waves” and “even the formal structures, with their repeated patterns and periodic modulations.” Two years later, in 1978, Adams revisited Wavemaker in a version for string quartet that “crashed and burned” (in the composer’s words) at its premiere. Nevertheless, the obsession with waveforms persisted. Later that year the work was expanded further, and renamed as Shaker Loops, first for string septet (3 violins, 1 viola, 2 celli, 1 bass) and then eventually for string orchestra in 1983. Adams notes that the title is something of a double entendre, referring both to the physical manufacture of the sound, “’Shake’ in string-player parlance means to move the bow rapidly across the string, thus causing a tremolo, or fast buzzing sound,” and also to his personal memories of a New Hampshire childhood growing up by a disbanded Shaker colony. In his 2008 book, Hallelujah Junction, Adams recalls: “As a child I’d heard stories, probably exaggerated, of the ‘shaking’ ceremonies. ‘Shaker’ had originally been a term of mockery. In fact, these church members called themselves the United Society of Believers. But the image of their shaking dance caught my attentions. The idea of reaching a similar state of ecstatic revelation through music was certainly in my mind as I composed Shaker Loops.” The compositional style with which Adams is associated, Minimalism, provided the “loops” from “the era of tape music where small lengths of prerecorded tape attached end to end could repeat melodic or rhythmic figures ad infinitum.” In the preface to the score, Adams elaborates on the mechanics of the loops as well as the overall structure: The “loops” are melodic material assigned to the seven instruments, each of a different length and which, when heard together, result in a constantly shifting play among the parts. Thus, while one instrument might have a melody with a period of seven beats, another will be playing one with eleven while yet another will repeat its figure every thirteen beats, and so one. (This is most easily perceived if one counts the beats between the various plucked notes in Hymning Slews.) The four sections, although they meld together evenly, are really quite distinct, each being characterized by a particular style of string playing. The outside movements are devoted to “shaking,” the fast, tightly rhythmicized motion of the bow across the strings. The “slews” of Part II are slow, languid glissandi heard floating within an almost motionless pool of stationary sound (played senza vibrato). Part III is essentially melodic, with the cellos playing long, lyrical lines (which are nevertheless loops themselves) against a background of muted violins, an activity that gradually takes on speed and mass until it culminates in the wild push-pull section that is the emotional high point of the piece. The floating harmonics, a kind of disembodied ghost of the push-pull figures in Part III, signal the start of Part IV, a final dance of the bows across the strings that concludes with the four upper voices lightly rocking away on the natural overtones of their strings while the cellos and bass provide a quiet pedal point beneath. -KJAB

Rockin' Out - AFC Style

Just a quick post to spread the word that AFC is taking part in a very exciting project on Feb 8th and 9th. We're collaborating with two amazing bands - This Will Destroy You, and Slow Six - and putting on shows in both Boston and New York! Take a quick look at the links below, and join us for two nights of genre-bending, soulful, enthralling music-making.

Rockin' Out, AFC Style

A Far Cry at the Ecstatic Music Festival In collaboration with This Will Destroy You and Slow Six

February 8, 2012 8 pm The Royale BUY TICKETS 279 Tremont St, Boston, MA 617-338-7699

February 9, 2012 7:30 pm Merkin Concert Hall @ The Kaufman Center BUY TICKETS 129 W. 67th St. New York, NY 212-501-3330

New Album!


We Have a New Album!

A collaboration between A Far Cry, brilliant Bandoneon-player Julien Labro, and consummate guitarist Jason Vieaux, our new CD includes the premiere recording of Labro's new arrangement of Piazzolla's Four Seasons in Buenos Aires as well as Piazzolla's Concerto for Bandoneon and Guitar!

Available on iTunes, Spotify, amazon.com, and our own website.

We're proud that the album is receiving rave reviews via word of mouth and the mainstream press: "The irresistible performances and crystal-clear sound ... make this a don't-miss disc. Grade: A" - The Cleveland Plain Dealer

"A Far Cry is every bit as exciting and imbued with the spirit of adventure as Mr. Piazzolla's music itself. In both Mr. Labro's arrangement of "Las Cuatro Estaciones Portenas" and the double concerto "Hommage a Liege" the soloists and orchestra bob and weave around each other as though they'd been playing together for years. The result is music at once challenging and beautiful; if Thelonious Monk had written modern jazz tangos for Argentine folk instruments and chamber orchestra, it might have sounded something like this." - Oscar O. Veterano, an Amazon.com reviewer

2011 Young Artists Competition

“I felt like this was a taste of a professional musical career...The Criers were fun to be with, but also very serious about what they do...I can say that it was one of the best musical experiences of my life so far.” -AFC Young Artists Competition Winner

High school violinists, violists, cellists and bassists enrolled in the NEC Preparatory School! Have you ever seen A Far Cry perform in Jordan Hall, and wondered what it must be like to be a part of the group? Now's your chance.

Auditions will be held December 4, 2011 from 1pm to 6pm. Students selected will perform Shostakovich's Chamber Symphony Opus 110a, adapted form the String Quartet No. 8, in A Far Cry's concert in Jordan Hall on February 24th, 2012.

Competition flier YAC flier 11-12 Application YAC application 11-12 Excerpts: Violin DSCH 110 - Violin Viola DSCH 110 - Viola Cello DSCH 110 - Cello

* Important: When printing these excerpts be sure to select the "Document and Markups" and "Fit to Printable Area" options in the print menu.

Free Music Popping Up Near You!

That's right! Huge thanks to the Free For All Concert Fund, for awarding us a generous $25,000 grant to expand our presence in the Jamaica Plain Community! We are using every last drop of this grant to bring you more free music! This season, we will be offering:

1) A series of "Pop-Up" chamber concerts throughout everyday spaces in JP 2) Several larger special events involving the entire ensemble!

Thank you so much to Free For All for their wonderful generosity!

We're looking forward to seeing you at these events. Follow us on facebook or twitter for live updates from the events, pics, and maybe even a video or two!

Friday, September 16, 2011: 6-7 pm Free Pop-Up Chamber Concerts in the Community Sponsored by Free For All Concert Fund El Oriental de Cuba (416 Centre St.) & Center Street Park Jamaica Plain

Saturday, September 17, 2011: 6-7 pm Free Pop-Up Concerts in the Community Sponsored by Free For All Concert Fund Tacos el Charro (349 Centre St.) & Stop and Shop, Centre St. Jamaica Plain

Monday, September 19, 2011: 7:00-9:00PM Open Rehearsal A Far Cry Storefront Space 146A South Street, Jamaica Plain, MA

October 8, 2011: 4-6PM Free Concert with the Full Ensemble! St. John's Episcopal Church 1 Roanoke Ave, Jamaica Plain, MA

December 15, 2011: 6:30-8:30PM Annual Holiday Concert and Party Bonanza! A Far Cry Space 146A South Street, Jamaica Plain, MA

First Light Notes

Our favorite musicologist-at-large Kathryn Bacasmot has done it again, supplying poetic and illuminating program notes for A Far Cry's upcoming "First Light." Read up after the break!This is your shovel. The music is your earth. Dig in.

At this point we should remember that the idea of the world as composed of weightless atoms is striking just because we know the weight of things so well. So, too, we would be unable to appreciate the lightness of language if we could not appreciate language that has some weight to it.

~Italo Calvino

George Frideric Handel (1685-1759) spent the majority of his compositional career in the spotlight, but he recognized the Italian Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713) as a prominent figure casting a very long shadow. The two actually met each other for a brief period around 1707 when Handel, a twenty-something, visited Italy during his last years in Hamburg.

The Baroque was basking in the glow of the seconda pratica (“second practice”), the era of purposeful dissonances, heralding the use of music as illustrator of abstract emotions, and Corelli had the corner on the market, coining the term “Corelli Clash” (what we know today as essentially the rub and release of dissonance and its resolution) in the process. He was distinct, notes Michael Talbot, for “being the first composer to derive his fame exclusively from instrumental composition.”

Among the beloved collections from Corelli were his Concerti Grossi, Op. 6, of which there were 12. Handel very likely intended his 12 Concerti Grossi, Op. 6, as a tip of the hat to the man who outsold him – even in England.

Unlike Corelli, Handel’s oeuvre extended deep into vocal territory. Today he is best remembered for anthems, oratorios, and operas while his other most recognizable works are instrumental pieces meant for accompanying royal outings (usually of the explosive or aquatic variety). His Op. 6 appear to be a concerted effort on his part (executed with tremendous speed between September and October of 1739) to produce a literal set of purely instrumental pieces meant to be played in succession (his Op. 3 Concerti Grossi appear to be a pastiche put together to sell copies by his publisher, John Walsh).

Concerti Grossi are about textures and depth perception. The interplay of concertino (smaller groupings of instruments or true solo passages) and ripieno (the entire ensemble) shift the entire focus like a watching a film go from wide establishing shots to zeroing in and highlighting a specific conversation. The overall tone of No. 11 is something like a regal country picnic, complete with a fashionable basket containing rich delicious harmonies packaged within delicate staccato articulations that snap like puff pastry, and Waterford sparkling in the abundant sunlight.

Osvaldo Golijov (b. 1960) explains: "I wrote Tenebrae as a consequence of witnessing two contrasting realities in a short period of time in September 2000. I was in Israel at the start of the new wave of violence that is still continuing today, and a week later I took my son to the new planetarium in New York, where we could see the Earth as a beautiful blue dot in space. I wanted to write a piece that could be listened to from different perspectives. That is, if one chooses to listen to it "from afar", the music would probably offer a "beautiful" surface but, from a metaphorically closer distance, one could hear that, beneath that surface, the music is full of pain. I lifted some of the haunting melismas from Couperin's Troisieme Leçon de Tenebrae, using them as sources for loops...The compositional challenge was to write music that would sound as an orbiting spaceship that never touches ground."

Namesakes to Golijov’s composition are the three Tenebrae (Latin for “darkness”) services, on Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday of Holy Week in the Christian faith. Each night begins in light and ends in shadow as fifteen ceremonial candles are extinguished one by one following the reading of each Psalm. Eventually all candles in the church are put out and the congregation are engulfed utter darkness – save for one light of one candle representing hope. The people then dismiss into the night.

The tension of the shadow lands sustains this haunting music in mid-air, caught between darkness and light and their metaphorical doubles of despair and hope in prolonged meditation.

Arnold Schönberg (1874-1951) isn’t often grouped with his “Impressionist” contemporaries, Claude Debussy (1862-1918) or Maurice Ravel (1875-1937), and his devotion to Johannes Brahms (“The Progressive,” as he heralded him in his famous essay) is frequently overlooked. He is best remembered for building a ladder to the Modern viewpoint via rows of 12-tones.

Verklärte Nacht balances on a thread Schönberg ran through (so-called) Impressionism, Brahms, and Wagner, transfiguring their elements just as the emotional landscape of the poem is transfigured. Rather than programmatic, descriptive of the action, it sets out to describe something more ambiguous: mood. Here his musical language has the syntax of Wagner with compound chords teetering on the edge of tonality, perpetually land sliding key centers, but the delivery is more deliberate and clarified – magnificently amplified versions of the complex harmonics of Brahms’ late works for piano solo.

Embodying the emotions of Richard Dehmel’s poem, Verklärte Nacht (“Transfigured Night”), the heart of Schönberg’s score beats in rhythm with the dialogue in five stanzas. A woman (represented by the viola) and a man (represented by the cello) journey physically and spiritually, as individuals and as a couple, when she offers her lover a stunning and risky confession in the moonlight. Illumination in the dark is the metaphorical center of this “Bright night.” This is a work about events and outcomes: the weight of searing guilt and the buoyant balm of mercy, balancing on the razors edge between terror and beauty. Abated is a dark night of the soul.

Inaugurating the “How to Cause A Scene” chapter in the Strauss & Stravinsky Riot Playbook, Verklärte Nacht for string sextet had a rather eventful premiere on March 18, 1902: “was hissed and caused riot and fist fights,” documented the composer. Fifteen years later, in 1917, Schönberg expanded its textures for string orchestra (which is now the most frequently performed version).

Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904) transferred the idea of what would eventually be known as the Nocturne in B major for String Orchestra, Op. 40 so many times it can be like attempting to follow the route of a marble being tossed under various cups. From its inception in 1870 (just as Dvořák’s career was about to launch out with the help and approval of Johannes Brahms) through the majority of that decade it changed opus numbers four times (Opp. 9, 18, 77, 40) as it shuffled around as a movement in various string quartets and quintets. Finally it stood on its own as Notturno, Op. 40.

The Irish pianist/composer John Field (1782-1837) is responsible for inventing the “style and name Nocturne for short pieces,” which was subsequently picked up and developed further by Chopin. Historically a Notturno might have been performed in the evening, like many Serenades, but by the late 19th century it simply denoted a work evoking the mysterious romance of dusk deepening into night.

Summoning an atmosphere of majestic blue, the music meditates on a simple lyrical melody that twists and bends quietly like a dark lazy river meandering through memory and emotion. Out of seemingly nowhere a brisk waltz-like theme flies through like a Nightingale improvising an evening song, recalling the words of the poet John Keats:

Away! away! for I will fly to thee, Not charioted by Bacchus and his pards, But on the viewless wings of Poesy, Though the dull brain perplexes and retards: Already with thee! tender is the night, And haply the Queen-Moon is on her throne, Cluster'd around by all her starry Fays But here there is no light, Save what from heaven is with the breezes blown Through verdurous glooms and winding mossy ways.

But Dvořák’s night is not dark enough to stain; it promises morning, its first light burning through the morning mist, illuminating all that is possible.

Robert Schumann (1810-1856) spent his life wandering in and out of shadows. Like many artists, reality was the pin to burst the bubble, the sun to melt the wings of Icarus: fly in its face once too often and it will burn you.

Joy and misery were winnowed so thoroughly that the distance between the two seemed impassable to Schumann by the time he thrust his body into the icy Rhine in February of 1854. Or perhaps it was the opposite; each fading into the other until the edges wore down into a single, indecipherable, dulling numbness that clouded over.

It had been a mere four years prior in 1850 that he and his family enjoyed a happy and promising time marked by his appointment as music director of the Allgemeiner Musikverein in Düsseldorf. For Schumann, a man always placed a little off to the edges of popularity, the festivities, dinners, performances of his compositions, and general pomp greeting him must have ruffled a refreshing breeze of confidence his direction. Within two weeks of the move he had begun and completed the luminous Cello Concerto in A Minor (presented here in arrangement for violin by Orlando Jopling).

Emerging from the shadow of Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827), the symphonic/sonata form revolutionary, meant a generation of composers had performance anxiety about following in his footsteps. As such, Schumann (though he wrote wonderful symphonies) focused on a genre nearly untouched by Beethoven: smaller sets and collections, and (like Schumann’s Papillons, Op. 2) charming miniatures. When he returns to the larger, more traditional, forms he brings with him the same method of distillation resulting in pieces – like the Cello Concerto – that are incredibly potent. In one long continuous sequence of gestures the three movements never break character or mood with the addition of space to delineate their divisions. Nicht zu schnell (not too fast) relaxes with the reminiscence of a waltz into Langsam (slowly), the short melancholic path leading to the effusive Sehr lebhaft (very lively).

Schumann apparently only knew of Franz Schubert (1797-1828) by the time the Austrian was nearly gone. Together they represented the flip side of the Franz Liszt (1811-1886) and Richard Wagner (1813-1883) fame coin. There is an emotional urgency present, especially in the last works, likely weighted by a similar psychological burden expressed so poignantly by Schubert in the final song of his Winterreise cycle: “will you play the music to my songs?”

The parties and dinners were long gone by the time Schumann was pulled from the Rhine. He had been unceremoniously replaced as conductor in Düsseldorf following a disastrous string of erratic behavior toward his musicians. He would pass away in 1856 after two years in an asylum. His beautiful Cello Concerto of 1850 would not be enlightened by performance until its premiere in 1860.

A New Series of A Far Cry videos!!!

We teamed up with a brilliant, local JP writer (Mary Lincoln) & an Emmy winning producer & editor (Debbie Dorsey) of Cambridge Studios and started filming for a new kind of "Webisode" to show more of the candid workings of A Far Cry. Check out the first of its installments, which actually ended up turning out to be more of a promo video for our upcoming concerts this weekend & our impending tour next week through Colorado & Florida. We are thrilled at the attention & the expert skills of our new friends. Please re-post the video as much as you like & can & please keep referring all your friends and family to the new YouTube Channel, The39Bus. Hope to see you all at our concerts this weekend & next week and hoping that everyone is staying warm amidst the "When is it gonna stop!!" snow storms.. Check out the video here:

A Far Cry tackles An Andean Walkabout