Show results for

Explore

In Stock

Artists

Actors

Authors

Format

Condition

Theme

Genre

Rated

Label

Specialty

Decades

Size

Color

Deals

Empty image
Quotation of Queries
  • Composers: Various
  • Label: Navona
  • UPC: 896931005784
  • Item #: 2279833X
  • Genre: Classical
  • Release Date: 4/10/2020
CD 
List Price: $16.99
Price: $12.05
You Save: $4.94 (29%)
loading image
Get it between Thu. Mar 20 - Fri. Apr 4
Deliver to

You May Also Like

Description

Quotation of Queries on CD

Fresh from Navona Records comes QUOTATION OF QUERIES, featuring the students of Hong Kong Baptist University under the direction of Professor John Winzenburg. This collection of choral music explores notions of culture throughout the course of human civilization. It features traditional compositions, recent works, and even three debut recordings by prominent composers from Hong Kong and the United Kingdom. The album opens with "Prelude," the first movement of Quotation of Queries by composer Chan Hing-Yan. We hear the knocking of a piano, and the sudden, vigorous vocalizations of the Cantoría Hong Kong. The music, which is set to classical Mandarin poetry, pairs Chinese folk traditions with dissonant modern sonorities. The translations of these "queries" include "What do you think human life is like here or there?" and "When can I just ignore the encumbrance?" Next comes John Browne's setting of Aeschylus's The Suppliant Woman, which borrows from both classical Greek drama as well as modern theater, with the chorus assuming the role of the story's protagonist. Later on, we hear excerpts from Brahms's 11 Zigeunerlieder (Gypsy-Songs), Op. 103, which offers a 19th century take on the challenge of blending of cultures through music. These are just a sampling of the album's stylistic range. Those who listen to QUOTATION OF QUERIES will find themselves immersed in a deep pool of cultural and musical traditions, as curated by Professor John Winzenburg. These recorded expressions of powerful emotion told through a myriad of musical scales and languages, perhaps counterintuitively, confront the listener with our common humanity across time and space. Listeners should be warned, however, that they too may be left with more questions than answers.