Itinéraire Quatuor Voce

Cover Itinéraire

Album info

Album-Release:
2018

HRA-Release:
28.09.2018

Label: Alpha

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Chamber Music

Artist: Quatuor Voce

Composer: Vincent Segal (1967), Kinan Azmeh (1976), Kevin Seddiki (1981), Gabriel Sivak (1979), Vincent Peirani (1980), Hamza El Din (1929-2006)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Vincent Segal (b.1967):
  • 1 BethKlang : I. Guaganco 04:47
  • 2 BethKlang: II. Dub 03:50
  • 3 BethKlang: III. Beth Klang 07:55
  • Kinan Azmeh (b.1976):
  • 4 Grounded 06:44
  • Kevin Seddiki (b.1981):
  • 5 Méditation 03:05
  • 6 Danse 08:44
  • Gabriel Sivak (b.1979):
  • 7 Suite Capoeira: I. Nanà 03:46
  • 8 Suite Capoeira: II. Candomblé 03:05
  • 9 Suite Capoeira: III. Baden 02:56
  • 10 Suite Capoeira: IV. Cuiqueros 04:21
  • Vincent Peirani ((b.1980):
  • 11 Sawah Padi / Putri Cening Ayu 14:00
  • Hamza El Din (1929 - 2006):
  • 12 Escalay (Water Wheel) 11:48
  • Total Runtime 01:15:01

Info for Itinéraire

"Playing the demanding and constantly shifting string quartet repertory is enough to fill up four lives... Buoyed up by this heritage, we wanted to explore less well-known territories. In the early years of the twentieth century, Bartók and Kodály roamed the villages of Hungary and Romania, collecting, transcribing and recording hundreds of folk tunes and songs. Building on a number of encounters with leading figures of jazz and world music, we asked five instrumentalist-composers to write us pieces inspired by musical worlds to which they feel close. In addition to these new compositions, we wanted to record Escalay by the Egyptian oud player Hamza el Din who died in 2006, a nod to the Kronos Quartet whose approach is an inspiration to us." (Voce Quartet: Sarah Dayan and Cécile Roubin (violins), Guillaume Becker (viola), Lydia Shelley (cello)). A recording made under the artistic direction of Vincent Segal.

Quatuor Voce




Quatuor Voce
“One of the best French quartets I have heard for some years (...). The Quatuor Voce has every quality that goes to make a good quartet: refinement, beautiful tone, excellent ensemble, precise chording, fine rhythm and loads of character.” Tully Potter, The Strad

In only a few years the Quatuor Voce has received numerous prizes in international competitions, most notably Geneva, Cremona, Vienna, Bordeaux, Graz, London and Reggio Emilia. Giving concerts worldwide, the quartet also works regularly with many outstanding artists such as Yuri Bashmet, Gary Hoffman, Nobuko Imai, Bertrand Chamayou, David Kadouch, Juliane Banse...

Following a nomination from the Cité de la Musique in Paris, the European Chamber Hall Organisation (ECHO) has named the quartet as Rising Stars for the 2013-2014 season.

Since its debut in 2004, the Quatuor Voce has been committed to championing the great repertoire for string quartet, seeking guidance from some of its leading exponents (the Ysaÿe Quartet, Günter Pichler, Eberhard Feltz).

Dedicating its first CD release to the music of Schubert, the recording was the critic’s choice in The Strad and was given 'ffff' in Télérama.

Open to the diverse influences of the world which surrounds them, the Voce regularly work closely on new commissions from modern day composers - Bacri, Cresta, Finzi, Markéas, Mantovani, Moultaka, Looten... Their curiosity has lead them to experiment with different forms of concert performance : they give their voice to silent movies from W. F. Murnau to B. Keaton, and share their universe with such diverse personalities as the musicologist Bernard Fournier, the singer and guitarist -M-, the Canadian singer Kyrie Kristmanson, and choreographer Thomas Lebrun.

At the heart of the quartet is a strong desire to transfer their experience, be it teaching younger quartets or encouraging amateur players on music courses.

Since its creation the Quatuor Voce has benefited from the support of numerous organisations, most notably ProQuartet CEMC, the Théâtre de la Cité Internationale, the Fondation Banque Populaire, the Académie Musicale de Villecroze, the Instituto Albéniz in Madrid, and the Fondation Charles Oulmont.

Sarah Dayan plays on a violin by Stefano Scarampella (1888), Cécile Roubin a violin by Francis Kuttner (2010), Guillaume Becker a viola by Aymeric Guillard (2005) and Lydia Shelley a cello by Bernard Simon Fendt (1830).



Booklet for Itinéraire

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