Artist: National Symphony Orchestra, Kennedy Center, Gianandrea Noseda
Title: Carlos Simon: Four Symphonic Works
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: National Symphony Orchestra
Genre: Classical
Quality: 24bit-96kHz FLAC (tracks + booklet)
Total Time: 66:48
Total Size: 1.22 GB
Tracklist:
1. Simon: The Block (6:37)
2. Simon: Tales – A Folklore Symphony: I. Motherboxx Connection (4:49)
3. Simon: Tales – A Folklore Symphony: II. Flying Africans (4:46)
4. Simon: Tales – A Folklore Symphony: III. Go Down Moses (Let My People Go) (8:17)
5. Simon: Tales – A Folklore Symphony: IV. John Henry (4:43)
6. Simon: Songs of Separation: I. The Garden (4:40)
7. Simon: Songs of Separation: II. Burning Hell (4:19)
8. Simon: Songs of Separation: III. Dance (3:17)
9. Simon: Songs of Separation: IV. We Are All the Same (5:24)
10. Simon: Wake Up! Concerto for Orchestra (20:02)
Four Symphonic Works features a collection by John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts’ Composer-in-Residence, Carlos Simon. Each piece was recorded live in concert and initially released digitally, one at a time, throughout the season. The final release, a collection of all four works, will be available on CD and via streaming and download services on August 23. Four Symphonic Works will be released on the National Symphony Orchestra label and distributed by LSO Live (NSO0018).
The recording features Simon’s short orchestral study, The Block, which takes inspiration from the visual art of the late Romare Bearden, an artist whose work reflected African American life in urban cities as well as the rural American south.
Tales—A Folklore Symphony delves into African American culture and folklore. The work is an exploration of African American folklore and Afrofuturist stories.
Songs of Separation for mezzo-soprano and orchestra was commissioned by the National Symphony Orchestra in connection with Simon’s appointment as Composer-in-Residence. The work takes its inspiration from a set of four poems by the 13th-century Persian poet and Sufi mystic Jalāl al-Dīn Muhammad Rūmī and features mezzo-soprano J’Nai Bridges.
Completing the album is the composer’s Wake Up! Concerto for Orchestra, inspired by the poem Awake, Asleep, written by the Nepali poet Rajendra Bhandari. The poet, “warns of the danger of being obliviously asleep in a social world, but yet how collective wakefulness provides ‘a bountiful harvest of thoughts,’” said Simon in his liner notes.