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Matt Haimovitz - Primavera II: The Rabbits makes Violinist.com's 'For the Record' weekly roundup

On February 4, 2022, multi-Grammy nominated cellist Matt Haimovitz’s released his latest recording, PRIMAVERA II the rabbits via the PENTATONE Oxingale Series. The new digital album features the next 13 of 81 new pieces written for Haimovitz, commissioned by THE PRIMAVERA PROJECT, also featuring Haimovitz’s new arrangement of Josquin de Prez’s Kyrie (from Missa Hercules Dux Ferrariae). The project asks composers to respond to Sandro Botticelli’s enigmatic painting, Primavera, and the prophetic large-scale triptych, Primavera 2020, by contemporary artist Charline von Heyl. Haimovitz recorded the album in May 2021 at von Heyl’s artist studio near downtown Marfa, Texas. More information about the project, composers, and pieces is available at THE PRIMAVERA PROJECT’s online hub, www.theprimaveraproject.com.
ABOUT THE ALBUM:

PRIMAVERA II the rabbits is the second of six albums in a momentous series encompassing 81 world premieres for solo cello. This digital album presents 13 new commissions by THE PRIMAVERA PROJECT for groundbreaking, multi-GRAMMY nominated cellist Matt Haimovitz. Each composer responds to Sandro Botticelli’s enigmatic painting, Primavera, and the prophetic large-scale triptych, Primavera 2020, by world-renowned contemporary artist Charline von Heyl. The album also features Haimovitz's new arrangement of Josquin de Prez’s Kyrie (from Missa Hercules Dux Ferrariae).

PRIMAVERA II the rabbits begins where PRIMAVERA I the wind left off, referencing the time of Botticelli. Haimovitz plays all four parts of his arrangement of Josquin des Prez’s Kyrie from Missa Hercules Dux Ferrariae, bridging to Missy Mazzoli’s deconstruction of Josquin in her haunting Beyond the Order of Things (After Josquin). Haimovitz also overlays the four cellos of Texu Kim’s Beseeching, entwining Native-American rain dance drumming and old Korean melodies in voices of desperation and hope.

The album takes its name from the rabbit trilogy motif in Charline von Heyl’s work. In Primavera 2020, the rabbits join the dancing graces, referencing centuries of symbolism: eternity, rebirth, fertility, and vitality. Niloufar Nourbakhsh depicts this communal ecstasy in her Cyclical Rabbits, incorporating Persian modes and oud-like strumming.

As with the first album, PRIMAVERA II the rabbits celebrates the extraordinary diversity of the American contemporary landscape. From Nico Muhly’s Spring Figures which leads our mind’s eye through the upward, rhythmic trajectory of the paintings to the soaring Volplaning by Tomeka Reid; from the pathos of Gordon Getty’s Spring Song to the abstraction of Nina Shekhar’s A negative space, an exploration of timbre and overtones. The contrapuntal serialism of Juri Seo’s Two Rhapsodies of Spring – the first violent in its ushering of Spring, the second a gentle Sarabande – is juxtaposed with David Balkrishnan’s channeling of Jimi Hendrix in his Theme and Variants. Sky Macklay’s 1 3 2 3 is a journey through the groupings of figures in the Primavera paintings; Nia Franklin’s Afro-dite focuses on the goddess Venus and women’s complex roles in our shared humanity. Alex Weston’s Sandro/Charline: Both embraces Bach-like strains in a rondo form, and Texas-based composer Jennifer Jolly re-imagines Vivaldi, Mendelssohn, and Stravinsky in a raucous, unrelenting Compulsive Bloom.

For the Record, Violinist.com's laurie Niles writes…..Welcome to "For the Record," Violinist.com's weekly roundup of new releases of recordings by violinists, violists, cellists and other classical musicians. We hope it helps you keep track of your favorite artists, as well as find some new ones to add to your listening!

This album, which follows Primavera I: The Wind, features the next 13 of 81 new pieces written for cellist Matt Haimovitz, commissioned by The Primavera Project. The project asks composers to respond to Sandro Botticelli’s enigmatic painting, Primavera, and the prophetic large-scale triptych, Primavera 2020, by contemporary artist Charline von Heyl. Haimovitz recorded the album in May 2021 at von Heyl’s artist studio near downtown Marfa, Texas. Composers include David Balakrishnan, Nia Imani Franklin, Gordon Getty, Jennifer Jolley, Texu Kim, Sky Macklay, Missy Mazzoli, Nico Muhly, Niloufar Nourbakhsh, Tomeka Reid, Juri Seo, Nina Shekhar, and Alex Weston. BELOW: Haimovitz’s new arrangement of Josquin de Prez’s Kyrie, for cello quartet:

Photo by Stephanie Mackinnon.

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