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Michael Quell: Chamber Music

Quell / Roth / Ott / Ifrim / Pons / Zaldua
Release Date: 04/26/2011 
Label:  Neos   Catalog #: 11046   Spars Code: DDD 
Composer:  Michael Quell
Performer:  Jürgen RuckMartina RothBeverley EllisJessica Rona,   ... 
Conductor:  Alistair Zaluda
Orchestra/Ensemble:  Ensemble Aventure (Germany)
Number of Discs: 1 
Recorded in: Stereo 
Length: 1 Hours 7 Mins. 

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Notes and Editorial Reviews



QUELL Ekstare. Temps et couleurs I 1. String Trio, “Le Son d’un monde secret et couvert.” _Anisotropie-[vier] [aggregat]-zustände. Anchronon 1,2. _Anamorphosis II-[Polymorphia] Jürgen Ruck (gtr); 1 Olivia Steinmel (acc); 2 Alistair, Zaldua, cond.; Aventure Ens NEOS Read more 11046 (66:54)


German composer Michael Quell (b.1960) has devised a methodology, apparently based upon philosophical beliefs involving existence, the complex and variable nature of relationships, and seemingly infinite states of perception, that allows him to manipulate a wider-than-usual range of sounds in meticulous, albeit unconventional, ways. He often involves micro-intervals of various degrees, which emphasize the blending and contrast of unusual tonal colors, and uses speed (not merely tempo fluctuations, but exaggerated phrasing and durations) to affect the density and internal tension of his music in ways somewhat reminiscent of Elliott Carter. For the most part, the instruments in these chamber pieces exhibit their own individual characteristics, and attempt to co-exist—if not necessarily always in agreement—with their partners in an unsettled environment. For example, the accordion and guitar in Achronon (2008–09) and flute and guitar in Temps et couleurs I (1995) include microtones in their vocabulary along with a “micro-polyphonic compositional technique” that translates into contrasts of nearly static, sparse interplay with agitated, dense activity; at times in the earlier work there’s a resemblance to Japanese or Korean music (the flute as shakuhachi or piri, the guitar as koto or kayagum), but there’s also little if any audible evidence that the piece is a distortion of a medieval hymn until it briefly appears in its natural state toward the end.


The String Trio, “Le Son d’un monde secret et couvert” (1994), features compressed details, sharp attacks, and a bristling texture as the three parts overlap, collide, and separate. Similar inter-ensemble activity motivates Ekstare (1988–90, for flute, oboe, violin, viola, and cello) and Anamorphosis II [Polymorphia] (2002–03, for chamber ensemble), but their expanded tonal palettes incite a more attractive and surprising surge of details. Limited to the sonorities of a piano, Anisotropie—[vier] [aggregat]—zustände (2001) employs rapid figuration, silence and resonance, and inside-the-piano and percussive effects to suggest a sequence of relationships associated on a molecular level.


The members of Ensemble Aventure are experienced in all manner of modern and contemporary music, and they are strong and persuasive advocates for Quell’s complex, ear-catching scores.


FANFARE: Art Lange
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Works on This Recording

1. Ekstare, for flute, oboe, violin, viola & cello by Michael Quell
Orchestra/Ensemble:  Ensemble Aventure (Germany)
Period: Contemporary 
Written: 1988-1990 
Venue:  Elisabeth Schneider Stiftung Freiburg 
Length: 7 Minutes 13 Secs. 
2. Temps et couleurs 1, for flute & guitar by Michael Quell
Performer:  Jürgen Ruck (Guitar), Martina Roth (Flute)
Period: Contemporary 
Written: 1995 
Venue:  Elisabeth Schneider Stiftung Freiburg 
Length: 12 Minutes 52 Secs. 
3. Streichtrio ("Le son d'un monde secret et couvert"), for violin, viola & cello by Michael Quell
Performer:  Beverley Ellis (Cello), Jessica Rona (Viola), Friedemann Treiber (Violin)
Period: Contemporary 
Written: 1994 
Venue:  Elisabeth Schneider Stiftung Freiburg 
Length: 8 Minutes 59 Secs. 
4. anisotropie - (vier) (aggregat) -zustände, for piano by Michael Quell
Performer:  Akiko Okabe (Piano)
Period: Contemporary 
Written: 2001 
Date of Recording: 05/04/2009 
Venue:  Schloßbergsaal, SWR-Studio Freiburg 
Length: 12 Minutes 8 Secs. 
5. Achronon, for accordion & guitar by Michael Quell
Performer:  Jürgen Ruck (Guitar), Olivia Steimel (Accordion)
Period: Contemporary 
Written: 2008-2009 
Date of Recording: 08/14/2010 
Venue:  Konzertsaal, Musikhochschule Würzburg 
Length: 11 Minutes 5 Secs. 
6. Anamorphosis 2 (-Polymorphia), for ensemble in various spatial constellations (Version A) by Michael Quell
Conductor:  Alistair Zaluda
Orchestra/Ensemble:  Ensemble Aventure (Germany)
Period: Contemporary 
Written: 2002-2003 
Venue:  Elisabeth Schneider Stiftung Freiburg 
Length: 12 Minutes 28 Secs. 

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