Bill Frisell: Disfarmer auf CD
Disfarmer
CD
CD (Compact Disc)
Herkömmliche CD, die mit allen CD-Playern und Computerlaufwerken, aber auch mit den meisten SACD- oder Multiplayern abspielbar ist.
Derzeit nicht erhältlich.
Lassen Sie sich über unseren eCourier benachrichtigen, falls das Produkt bestellt werden kann.
Lassen Sie sich über unseren eCourier benachrichtigen, falls das Produkt bestellt werden kann.
- Label:
- Nonesuch
- Aufnahmejahr ca.:
- 2009
- UPC/EAN:
- 0075597993080
- Erscheinungstermin:
- 21.7.2009
Ähnliche Artikel
+ Greg Leisz, Jenny Scheinman, Viktor Krauss
»Ich versuchte mir vorzustellen, was in Disfarmers Seele vorging. Als ich die Musik schrieb, stellte ich mir vor, seine Perspektive einzunehmen und seinem Blick durch die Linse einen Klang zu geben.«
Michael Disfarmer (eigentlich Mike Meyer, 1884–1959) war ein zurückgezogen lebender Mann in der ländlichen Gemeinde von Heber Springs, Arkansas …
Michael Disfarmers Leidenschaft bestand darin, seine Zeitgenossen in scharf kontrastierten Schwarz-Weiß-Fotografien zu porträtieren. Jahrzehnte nach seinem Tod fand man einen immensen Fundus an Fotografien aus den 40er und 50er Jahren, die dazu führten, dass Disfarmer als einer der bedeutendsten Fotografen der amerikanischen Moderne entdeckt wurde. Chuck Helm, Leiter des Instituts für Bildende Künste im Wexner Center Columbus, Ohio, machte den Gitarristen Bill Frisell mit dem Werk Disfarmers bekannt, in der Hoffnung, dass jener sich davon ebenso inspirieren ließe wie er selbst. Helm sollte recht behalten, und in der Folge entstand eine multimediale Live-Show mit dem Titel »Disfarmer Project«, die Projektionen von Disfarmers Fotos mit der Musik Frisells vereinte.
The late Michael Disfarmer was an odd, curmudgeonly character in the rural community of Heber Springs, Arkansas, who, despite his anti-social character, chose to record the stark images of his fellow townspeople, during the 1940s and '50s, in cheap black-and-white photographic portraits. Decades after the photographer’s passing, a cache of work made by this solitary and oft-reviled man was rediscovered, and he has come to be regarded as an important outsider artist. Among the many drawn to his plain yet deeply evocative pictures was Chuck Helm, Director of the Performing Arts at the Wexner Center in Columbus, Ohio, who introduced guitarist and composer Bill Frisell to Disfarmer’s oeuvre on the hunch that Frisell might be inspired by it.
Says Helm, the catalyst for Disfarmer, "To me, Bill Frisell is a uniquely American artist with a distinctive and singular musical voice, like that of Thelonious Monk or Aaron Copland. In his probing yet atmospheric evocations of American vistas I could hear parallels to the emotional truths of Disfarmer’s compelling photographs.”
As Helm suspected, Disfarmer’s work resonated with Frisell and led to the creation of a touring multimedia work, Disfarmer Project—featuring Frisell, lap steel guitar player Greg Leisz and violinist Jenny Scheinman, plus slides of Disfarmer’s photos, displayed on screens. The piece premiered on March 3, 2007, at the Wexner Center, on the campus of Ohio State University. The score was subsequently recorded in Seattle and Nashville, produced by Frisell’s longtime collaborator Lee Townsend and also featuring Viktor Krauss on bass. Along with the Frisell’s original compositions, he interpolates versions of such tunes as Arthur Crudup’s “That’s Alright Mama” and Hank Williams Sr.’s “I Can’t Help It (If I’m Still in Love with You)” into this subtly—yet stunningly—beautiful set.
In his liner notes, Frisell, who took a driving trip to Heber Springs to learn more about the area where Disfarmer chose to ply his trade, says, "Of course I was blown away when I saw his photos for the first time and started to learn a little about his life. What a fantastic story ... I kept thinking about the many other unsung and misunderstood artists who never had the recognition they deserved during their own time: Vermeer, Van Gogh, Charles Ives, Henry Darger, etc. ... I try to picture what went on in Disfarmer’s mind. How did he really feel about the people in this town? What was he thinking? What did he see? We’ll never know, but as I write the music, I’d like to imagine it coming from his point of view. The sound of him looking through the lens."
Michael Disfarmer (eigentlich Mike Meyer, 1884–1959) war ein zurückgezogen lebender Mann in der ländlichen Gemeinde von Heber Springs, Arkansas …
Michael Disfarmers Leidenschaft bestand darin, seine Zeitgenossen in scharf kontrastierten Schwarz-Weiß-Fotografien zu porträtieren. Jahrzehnte nach seinem Tod fand man einen immensen Fundus an Fotografien aus den 40er und 50er Jahren, die dazu führten, dass Disfarmer als einer der bedeutendsten Fotografen der amerikanischen Moderne entdeckt wurde. Chuck Helm, Leiter des Instituts für Bildende Künste im Wexner Center Columbus, Ohio, machte den Gitarristen Bill Frisell mit dem Werk Disfarmers bekannt, in der Hoffnung, dass jener sich davon ebenso inspirieren ließe wie er selbst. Helm sollte recht behalten, und in der Folge entstand eine multimediale Live-Show mit dem Titel »Disfarmer Project«, die Projektionen von Disfarmers Fotos mit der Musik Frisells vereinte.
Product-Information:
The late Michael Disfarmer was an odd, curmudgeonly character in the rural community of Heber Springs, Arkansas, who, despite his anti-social character, chose to record the stark images of his fellow townspeople, during the 1940s and '50s, in cheap black-and-white photographic portraits. Decades after the photographer’s passing, a cache of work made by this solitary and oft-reviled man was rediscovered, and he has come to be regarded as an important outsider artist. Among the many drawn to his plain yet deeply evocative pictures was Chuck Helm, Director of the Performing Arts at the Wexner Center in Columbus, Ohio, who introduced guitarist and composer Bill Frisell to Disfarmer’s oeuvre on the hunch that Frisell might be inspired by it.
Says Helm, the catalyst for Disfarmer, "To me, Bill Frisell is a uniquely American artist with a distinctive and singular musical voice, like that of Thelonious Monk or Aaron Copland. In his probing yet atmospheric evocations of American vistas I could hear parallels to the emotional truths of Disfarmer’s compelling photographs.”
As Helm suspected, Disfarmer’s work resonated with Frisell and led to the creation of a touring multimedia work, Disfarmer Project—featuring Frisell, lap steel guitar player Greg Leisz and violinist Jenny Scheinman, plus slides of Disfarmer’s photos, displayed on screens. The piece premiered on March 3, 2007, at the Wexner Center, on the campus of Ohio State University. The score was subsequently recorded in Seattle and Nashville, produced by Frisell’s longtime collaborator Lee Townsend and also featuring Viktor Krauss on bass. Along with the Frisell’s original compositions, he interpolates versions of such tunes as Arthur Crudup’s “That’s Alright Mama” and Hank Williams Sr.’s “I Can’t Help It (If I’m Still in Love with You)” into this subtly—yet stunningly—beautiful set.
In his liner notes, Frisell, who took a driving trip to Heber Springs to learn more about the area where Disfarmer chose to ply his trade, says, "Of course I was blown away when I saw his photos for the first time and started to learn a little about his life. What a fantastic story ... I kept thinking about the many other unsung and misunderstood artists who never had the recognition they deserved during their own time: Vermeer, Van Gogh, Charles Ives, Henry Darger, etc. ... I try to picture what went on in Disfarmer’s mind. How did he really feel about the people in this town? What was he thinking? What did he see? We’ll never know, but as I write the music, I’d like to imagine it coming from his point of view. The sound of him looking through the lens."
Rezensionen
S. Thielmann in stereoplay 9/09: "Ein kammermusikalisches Abenteuer der Extraklasse."-
Tracklisting
-
Mitwirkende
Disk 1 von 1 (CD)
-
1 Disfarmer Theme
-
2 Lonely Man
-
3 Lost, Night
-
4 Farmer
-
5 Focus
-
6 Peter Miller's Discovery
-
7 That's Alright, Mama
-
8 Little Girl
-
9 Little Boy
-
10 No One Gets In
-
11 Lovesick Blues
-
12 I Can't Help It (If I'm Still In Love With You)
-
13 Shutter, Dream
-
14 Exposed
-
15 The Wizard
-
16 Think
-
17 Drink
-
18 Play
-
19 I Am Not A Farmer
-
20 Small Town
-
21 Arkansas [Part 1]
-
22 Arkansas [Part 2]
-
23 Arkansas [Part 3]
-
24 Lost Again, Dark
-
25 Natural Light
-
26 Did You See Him?