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Porgy & Bess Revisited

Nicolas Dautricourt (violin), Pascal Schumacher (vibraphone), Knut Erik Sundquist (double bass)

Porgy & Bess Revisited

Awards:

Gershwin’s opera is not so much as Revisited as reimagined and refracted on this rather weird and wonderful sequence of improvisations and composed responses to some of its best-known themes,...

Porgy & Bess Revisited

Nicolas Dautricourt (violin), Pascal Schumacher (vibraphone), Knut Erik Sundquist (double bass)

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44.1 kHz, 16 bit, FLAC/ALAC/WAV

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This release includes a digital booklet

Stream now lossless, 44.1 kHz, 16 bit

Awards:

Gershwin’s opera is not so much as Revisited as reimagined and refracted on this rather weird and wonderful sequence of improvisations and composed responses to some of its best-known themes,...

About

A trio of musical adventurers and the timeless hits of George Gershwin combine to create Porgy and Bess Revisited, a rich mix of free improvisation, melodic fantasy and formal composition. This alluring album, set for release on Orchid Classics, captures the playfulness and passion, the coruscating wit and haunting sadness of Gershwins American folk opera, as Porgy and Bess was billed for its first outing on Broadway in 1935-36. Porgy and Bess Revisited unites three contrasting artistic personalities, the debonair double-bassist Knut Erik Sundquist, the phlegmatic vibraphone virtuoso and composer Pascal Schumacher and the flamboyant violinist Nicolas Dautricourt. Like Gershwin, they vault the boundary walls of convention to produce music suffused with the rhythms and life of jazz, the elegance of classical form, the irresistibility of popular song and the pathos of folk art.

Contents and tracklist

Awards and reviews

  • Presto Editor's Choice
    November 2019

November 2019

Gershwin’s opera is not so much as Revisited as reimagined and refracted on this rather weird and wonderful sequence of improvisations and composed responses to some of its best-known themes, ranging from a relatively straightforward take on It ain’t necessarily so to wilder flights of fancy inspired by 'Summertime' and 'Bess you is my woman now'.
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