NodopianoCamicie.com - Instruments, Music, Piano and more.

 Search
 Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Music Instruments » Chamber Music » Harry Partch: U.S. HighballJuly 4, 2008  


Categories
Music Instruments
Music Stand
Folk & World Instruments
Instrumental
Piano
Guitars & Basses
Drums
Keyboards
Band & Orchestra
Instrument Accessories
Harry Partch: U.S. Highball
Harry Partch: U.S. Highball
enlarge

Other Views:
Artists: Kronos Quartet, Composer: Harry Partch
Label: Nonesuch
Category: Music

List Price: $10.98
Buy New: $6.49
You Save: $4.49 (41%)
Buy New/Used from $4.97

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars(5 reviews)
Sales Rank: 203210

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.7 x 0.5

UPC: 075597969726
EAN: 0075597969726
ASIN: B0000AN4FH

Release Date: August 19, 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Leaving Carmel, Californi-el
  • Leaving Imlay, Neva-day
  • Wait For The Next Drag
  • Crossing Great Salt Lake, U-take
  • There Are Rides On The Highway At Green River
  • Did I Ever Ride Freights? Huh!
  • Leaving Little America, Wyo-ma
  • North Platte, Nebras-katte

Editorial Reviews:

Album Description
U.S. Highball is one of the first underground masterpieces in American music. Partch's work explores what, decades later, would be called a 'subculture' - the hoboes, who traveled across the U.S. in search of work or new experience, defying social conventions and the strictures of civilized society. The recording on this CD is not U.S. Highball in any of Partch's (three) versions, but an arrangement for voice and string quartet made for Kronos in 1997 by Ben Johnston, a composer who studied and worked with Partch and with whose own music Kronos has had a long and fruitful relationship. Slipcase. Nonesuch. 2003.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A Rebuttal and Praise   January 6, 2007
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

There have been comments and concerns with this CD in saying that it may not be in keeping with the original composition. What has been egregiously overlooked in previous complaints is the simple fact that Harry Partch was never actually in keeping with his OWN original compositions. Though most people think of an ensemble of Harry Partch instruments and performers as the true rendition of this piece, it must be realized that it first came out simply for microtonal guitar and voice--Harry traveled around to colleges and did solo performances of it! It then took on several various iterations, expanding up to, at one point, ten individual performers. Harry Partch was constantly reworking this piece, and, had he never died, would probably still be rearranging it. This particular arrangement was a commission written specifically for the Kronos Quartet, and was arranged by a former protege of Partch's. It remains as true as possible to Partch's original notes, styles and intentions. Seeing how faithfully this has been converted to string quartet is truly inspiring.

The Kronos Quartet does an absolutely incredible job managing all of the subtleties of this work. Microtonality is not easy!

I highly highly recommend this CD.



3 out of 5 stars small reservations, but that's only because I'm biased   August 3, 2006
  6 out of 6 found this review helpful

I cringe a little whenEVER I see a Partch transcripted for something other than his original instrumentation. I think that's because Partch's work at creating his own music and theatre for that music was so creative and unique that I never tire of it and want to see newer recordings using those wonderful music machines just so I know that Partch's ideas won't fade in time and remain only in some select recordings.

I'm still getting over Kronos taking my favorite Partch piece, Barstow, and stringifying it on Howl, USA, but in all honesty Kronos does justice to Partch. It shouldn't seem too suprising--Kronos has made their reputation by doing string quartet work that doesn't always sounds like string quartet. Since they've reinvented the string quartet, it would seem feasible that they could reinvent Partch FOR string quartet.

I'm not wholly buying into it yet, but I also know that far worse could have been done to Partch in this recording, so I credit Kronos for the efforts they took to keep the spirit of the original composition alive. A central connection here seems to be the common desire to make truly American music that doesn't just glom off of European traditions. In doing this, Partch set to music notes of his own hobo trip, to put American experience to music. Though Kronos will always in the end sound a little too polished for the raw nature of Partch's work, I thank them for keeping his name relevant in contemporary music.

Thank you, Kronos.



1 out of 5 stars This should be the post-ultimate thing you hear.   October 1, 2005
  3 out of 24 found this review helpful

Can't really criticize the performance because the composition was so terrible. Often one can say that one's musical purchases are simply a matter of taste. In this case, I can say that this music is bad on an absolute scale. Really, if you like this kind of stuff, hang out with some homeless people. I think I've seen this performed live outside the methadone clinic. You can check there, too.


5 out of 5 stars Harry Partch CD US Highball Kronos Quartet   September 20, 2005
  0 out of 9 found this review helpful

The whole deal was top notch. Price, speed and quality. Could not have asked for more. Very, very pleased.


5 out of 5 stars David Barron and Kronos do justice to a masterpiece   November 19, 2003
  14 out of 15 found this review helpful

The performance by David Barron and the Kronos Quartet of Harry Partch's landmark "US Highball" provides an experience of precise abandon. This entertaining, demanding, and thoroughly original work is given a performance in which the highlight is certainly Mr. Barron's expressive reading of Partch's gem of a text, in which vignettes narrating the hobo's life appear as brief scenes, sometimes hilariously funny, as in the statement by an old man emerging from a piano crate, who tells the gathering of hobos who have just arrived in his train yard, "I used to be a bum once"; or the hobo who observes concerning the passing motorists, "They don't stop much, do they?" Mr. Barron's ability to modulate his inflection, accent, and tone with the greatest flexibility, while still articulating the words so that they are always intelligible, bring a vitality to the performance which Partch clearly intended, and it is this vitality which, supported by the Kronos' standard excellence, makes this performance an experience to be treasured. This reviewer has driven across the country on several occasions, and the performance captured wonderfully the sense of changing vistas and conditions characteristic of such journeys.


Powered by Associate-O-Matic