In-School Performances

TURTLE ISLAND QUARTET

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“A STERLING EXAMPLE OF FIRST-RATE JAZZ MUSIC-MAKING”
Los Angeles Times
“EXCELLENT PRECISION AND MUSICALITY”
Excellent precision and musicality
“THE STRINGS SING, NOT LIKE ANGELS, BUT LIKE THEY'VE BEEN AROUND. THE IMPROVISATIONS HANG TOUGH, SOLIDLY BUILT AND TAKE NO BACK TALK FROM ANYBODY.”
The Seattle Post-Intelligence
News and Events

03.03.10
Turtle Island Quartet Celebrates Coltrane, Hendrix in Denver
Turtle Island Quartet wowed the audience with "A Love Supreme: The Music of John Coltrane."

02.23.10
A Convincing Portrayal of Ibsen's Vision
Aquila's Enemy of the People maintained a clean and contemporary edge which highlighted brilliantly the play's perpetual relevance.

Performance Highlights

03.11.10
Aquila Theatre
Overture Center, Madison, WI

03.12.10
[Flamenco Vivo]/Carlota Santana
Gallo Center for the Arts
Modesto, CA

03.12.10
Danu
Wilson Center for the Arts - Brookfield, WI

Listen

from the album- A Love Supreme: The Legacy of John Coltrane
La Danse du Bonheur (McLaughlin/Shankar)
Countdown (Coltrane)
So What (Davis)
excerpts from A Solstice Celebration
Jot Se Jot Jagake Chalo (Pyarela)
Winter in Cairo (Vivaldi)
Beautiful Savior (Trad.)
Christmas Day I'Da Mornin'/Apples in Winter (Trad.)
excerpts from Turtle Island Quartet with Cyrus Chestnut
Milestones (Davis)
Swing Low, Sweet Chariot (Willis)

Tours & Projects

Turtle Island/Ying Quartet - 09-10-11

The Turtle Island Quartet and Ying Quartet* collaboration features two dynamic string ensembles from opposite ends of the musical spectrum exploring the inner core and outer edges of their art form. This collaboration won a 2006 GRAMMY® Award.

The project was inspired by idle conversation between Phillip Ying and David Balakrishnan while they both were attending a Chamber Music America board meeting. The two groups had the opportunity to pursue the myriad possibilities in person during a subsequent Turtle Island engagement at Eastman School of Music, where the Yings are in residence. As the musicians threw ideas back and forth, such as what role improvisation and groove play in a classical string quartet and how vibrato is used in creating a sonorous blend when playing jazz, a preliminary concept for a central theme soon emerged: “Tradition versus Innovation.”

During the first half of the program each quartet performs separately, demonstrating their individual styles of presentation and interpretation. The quartets unite in the second half to perform a new transcription of Darius Milhaud’s “La Création Du Monde,” the first significant attempt to use jazz in a concert work (1923). “Julie-O,” a virtuosic tour de force for cello duo by Mark Summer, follows. The centerpiece of the program is David Balakrishnan’s, “Mara’s Garden Of False Delights,”* a three-movement work imbued with the composer’s trademark stylistic integration of jazz, American vernacular, western classical and East Indian musical genres. The program ends with both groups squaring off in a classic ‘battle of the bands’ configuration to perform Evan Price’s masterful “Variations on an Unoriginal Theme,” which takes the audience on a tour through a brief history of chamber music, beginning with a bit of simulated Haydn and ending with the sounds of James Brown. Telarc released the collaboration nationally in 2005.

Commissioned  by the Lied Center at the University of Kansas, Porter Center at Brevard College & Minnesota State University/Moorhead.

*The Ying Quartet appears by special arrangement with Melvin Kaplan, Inc.