American Anthem: The Music of Samuel Barber & Howard HansonAudio with SACDLabel: Naxos Music UKDescription: EDITORIAL REVIEWS Sono Luminus has come together again with the amazing talent of the Ying Quartet and is excited to release American Anthem: The Music of Samuel Barber & Howard Hanson. Bringing together musical selections that are truly expressive of the American spirit this album also includes a selection from American composer Randall Thompson and features pianist Adam Neiman and baritone Randall Scarlata. REVIEW On their new disc the Ying Quartet presents the major string quartet works of two important figures in American music of the first half of the 20th century: Samuel Barber and Howard Hanson. Bringing together music that is truly expressive of the American spirit this album also includes an arrangement of Randall Thompson's Alleluia and features pianist Adam Neiman and baritone Randall Scarlata. --WFMT Lisa Flynn April 2013The Ying Quartet a US group in residence at the Eastman School of Music in New York state has a reputation for fresh programming in the often moribund string quartet field and this release is no exception. It contains possibly the most familiar of all American quartets albeit one usually played by an orchestra and shorn of its surrounding movements: the Molto adagio movement of the String Quartet Op 11 of Samuel Barber better known as the Adagio for strings. The Ying Quartet is not the only group to play the original version but it is the only one to also include Barber's original finale to the piece which he later rejected and replaced with the current finale a small bit of music closely related to the opening movement. The effect of that is to elevate the Adagio to full prominence but quite a few quartets in the work's early years played the first version and it's an exuberant finish that casts a new hue onto the Adagio. Both versions are included here so anyone with programming capability can compare the two; the Ying's reading of the Adagio itself seems affected by the presence of the new finale; it's an unusually tense un-transcendent version. Elsewhere there's the thoroughly neo-classic rarely heard and entirely delightful Serenade for string quartet Op. 1 of Barber as well as his familiar setting of Dover Beach a quartet and piano quintet by Howard Hanson that give unusual taste of his Romantic but rigorous manner and most unusually of all a transcription of Randall Thompson's Alleluia a choral piece known by heart to anyone of a certain age who has sung in an American high school choir. Much of this music is unknown and the inclusion of voice and piano along the way is difficult to pull off without seeming random but this collection of American 20th-century Romanticism hangs together beautifully and lives up to its title. A superior release of American chamber music. --AllMusic.com James Manheim April 2013The Ying Quartet is simply marvelous in this recording providing a real richness and depth of tone. The performances are wonderfully shaped and there is a sense that these musicians really love this music deeply and are committed to its effects on the audience. Carefully thought out tempos and a great overall balance within the quartet create some amazing results all wonderfully captured by the Sono Luminus engineers. This is a must have for American music fans hands down. --Cinemusical MaestroSteve April 2013The Ying Quartet a US group in residence at the Eastman School of Music in New York state has a reputation for fresh programming in the often moribund string quartet field and this release is no exception. It contains possibly the most familiar of all American quartets albeit one usually played by an orchestra and shorn of its surrounding movements: the Molto adagio movement of the String Quartet Op 11 of Samuel Barber better known as the Adagio for strings. The Ying Quartet is not the only group to play the original version but it is the only one to also include Barber's original finale to the piece which he later rejected and replaced with the current finale a small bit of music closely related to the opening movement. The effect of that is to elevate the Adagio to full prominence but quite a few quartets in the work's early years played the first version and it's an exuberant finish that casts a new hue onto the Adagio. Both versions are included here so anyone with programming capability can compare the two; the Ying's reading of the Adagio itself seems affected by the presence of the new finale; it's an unusually tense un-transcendent version. Elsewhere there's the thoroughly neo-classic rarely heard and entirely delightful Serenade for string quartet Op. 1 of Barber as well as his familiar setting of Dover Beach a quartet and piano quintet by Howard Hanson that give unusual taste of his Romantic but rigoro
"American Anthem: The Music of Samuel Barber & Howard Hanson" is an ideal product for music lovers and composers who enjoy exploring the works of Barber and Hanson."