Thursday, January 28, 2016

Colin Stetson Announces New Album SORROW, Shares Trailer

Colin Stetson Announces New Album SORROW, Shares Trailer

Photo by Brantley Gutierrez

Last year, Colin Stetson released Never Were the Way She Was, a collaborative album with Arcade Fire violinist Sarah Neufeld. Now, he's announced SORROW, his first solo record since New History Warfare Vol. 3: To See More Light. The album, which features Neufeld, Liturgy's Greg Fox, and others, is a reimagining of Gorecki's Third Symphony. Read Stetson's statement about the release below, and scroll down to see the album art, a trailer, and an excerpt of the record.

We all have those moments when we experience a piece of music that transforms us, and this was one of those moments for me.  Over the years, I went on to listen to this record countless times, always determined to absorb every instance of it, to know it throughout and fully.  And this dedication to a thorough knowledge of the piece eventually gave way to a need to perform it. 

 The concept was simple, and true to the original score.  I haven’t changed existing notation, but rather have worked with altering instrumentation, utilizing a group consisting heavily of woodwinds, synthesizers, and electric guitars, as well as retaining an element of the orchestral in a string section of violins and cellos, which features prominent and decorated Canadian musicians Sarah Neufeld (Arcade Fire, Bell Orchestre) and Rebecca Foon (Saltland, Esmerine).  

My approach was “additive”, in that I imagined certain sounds or parts, though not present in the original, were (to me) extensions of the emotional core of the piece.  For example, the instrumentation is rounded out by the most extreme of those sonic/timbral/musical additions, the drum set.  Performed inimitably here by NYC drummer/percussionist, Greg Fox (Liturgy, Guardian Alien, Z’s).  My background and education in classical concert music is here, as well as a focus on group improvisation.  The arrangement draws heavily from the world of black metal, early electronic music, and from my own body of solo saxophone music.  

The result is an intact rendition of Henryk Górecki’s 3rd Symphony, though one which has been filtered through the lens of my particular musical aesthetic and experience.



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