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Columbia Records Celebrates 125 Years Of Great American Music With 360 Sound: The Columbia Records Story

Columbia Records 360 Sound

“360 Sound: The Columbia Records Story” Celebrates 125 Years of Great Music. (PRNewsFoto/Columbia Records)

Written by Pulitzer Prize-and GRAMMY-nominated author and historian Sean Wilentz, 360 Sound illustrates sweeping cultural and business changes in music over more than a century

Special deluxe version includes book by celebrated journalist Dave Marsh highlighting his selection of the 263 most important songs in Columbia’s history along with a drive including all tracks

ISBN: 978-1-4521-0736-3

NEW YORK, July 30, 2012 /PRNewswire/ — Columbia Records will celebrate its 125th anniversary with the release of a book titled 360 Sound: The Columbia Records Story on the great American record label and its role in initiating recorded music, cultivating great artists, and igniting cultural change. Written by Pulitzer Prize-and GRAMMY nominated author and historian Sean Wilentz, the book provides a journey through Columbia Records’ storied past and its contributions to entertainment from the invention of commercial recording through the present day.

360 Sound: The Columbia Records Story, published by Chronicle Books, will be released on October 30 th. It begins in the late 1880′s, when Columbia, under the leadership of Edward Easton, seized upon the phonographic inventions of Thomas Edison and others to offer the public the first commercial musical recordings. The book goes on the explore the rich stories of how Columbia’s artists and producers have redefined American music and performance over the past 125 years, at once reflecting and shaping changes in the wider culture.

Simultaneously, Columbia Records will release a deluxe package, which will include, in addition to a hard cover copy of the Wilentz book, a separate book, written by Dave Marsh, entitled 360 Sound: The Columbia Records Story: Legends and Legacy. Marsh has culled from Columbia’s vaults a collection of 263 songs and tracks of the greatest historical, as well as musical, significance, and his book offers his thoughts on each selection. The package also includes a beautifully crafted drive with all 263 recordings.

360 Sound: The Columbia Records Story will also be available as an e-book through multiple platforms.

Bob Dylan (In 1966)

Bob Dylan (in 1966) featured in new book “360 Sound: The Columbia Records Story” by Sean Wilentz, celebrating 125 years of music. (photo: Jerry Schatzberg). (PRNewsFoto/Columbia Records)

Columbia’s list of major performers, past and present, is unsurpassed and includes much of the most important, and beloved music in all genres, including pop, rock, country, show tunes, classical, jazz, R&B, hip-hop, and blues. Artists recorded by Columbia and its subsidiaries have included Barbra Streisand, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Miles Davis, Leonard Bernstein, Johnny Cash, Beyonce, Adele, Billy Joel, Al Jolson, Frank Sinatra, Duke Ellington, Robert Johnson, Bing Crosby, Count Basie, Billie Holiday, Tony Bennett, Simon and Garfunkel, Leonard Cohen, Neil Diamond, Aerosmith, Elvis Costello, Willie Nelson, Yo-Yo Ma, LL Cool J, James Taylor, Philip Glass, Mariah Carey, Lauryn Hill, Dixie Chicks, John Mayer, Jack White, and more.

360 Sound includes 300 rare and intimate photographs from the Columbia archives and sidebar discussions of crucial developments and performers written by eminent music historians Dave Marsh and Colin Escott. The book offers a virtual history of the music industry from its infancy, tracing Columbia’s pivotal technological as well as business innovations, not least its invention of the LP. It also reflects on the connection between Columbia’s artists and music and sweeping cultural and political changes, from the emergence of mass commercial culture to the rise of the civil rights movement and beyond.

The release of 360 Sound: The Columbia Records Story will be celebrated with a launch event in New York on Oct. 30 th. Additionally there will be a retrospective exhibit at the GRAMMY Museum in Los Angeles. An event is set for November 7 th at the Museum on opening day.

360 Sound author Sean Wilentz is one of the nation’s most prominent historians. His books and commentary on music, politics, and the arts have received numerous awards, including a Pulitzer Prize nomination, and his writing on music has been nominated for a Grammy Award. He is currently the George Henry Davis 1886 Professor of American History at Princeton University.

Dave Marsh has written more than 20 books on rock and popular music. He has written extensively for publications including Rolling Stone and Playboy. Since 2004, he has hosted a two hour weekly show on XM/Sirius Radio.

SOURCE Columbia Records

This company’s web site http://www.columbiarecords.com/




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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by tbirdsradio - July 30, 2012 at 1:37 pm

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Legendary Harpist, Ann Hobson Pilot, Transitions Into Successful Solo Career

NEW YORK, July 24, 2012 /PRNewswire/ – Former Boston Symphony Orchestra (BSO) principal harpist, Ann Hobson Pilot, who many — including James Levine, Yo-Yo Ma, Sir Simon Rattle and Seiji Ozawa — consider the most accomplished of her time, has made the rare move into a successful solo career.

After 40 years with the BSO, Ann retired to seek new opportunities to play recitals and perform with orchestras throughout the world. She parlayed momentum as a soloist opening the BSO and Carnegie Hall seasons premiering John Williams’ concerto, “On Willows and Birches,” written especially for her into a partnership with Spring LLC — a NYC-based commercial management company.

The goal of the collaboration was to inject the sales and marketing sophistication of the corporate world into the staid traditions of classical artist representation. The result was a unique approach to career development uncommon among classical musicians.

“Ann is an extraordinary musician and person,” said Spring managing director, Michael Aiken. “Although we weren’t involved with classical music, after considering her accomplishments and openness to new ideas, we couldn’t pass up the opportunity to work with such a legend.”

The first step was to reintroduce Ann as a soloist to leading orchestras and concert associations. Focusing less on her artistic talents, which were already well documented, they chose to highlight her ability to spur box-office results — especially for a harpist. “We knew all about Ann’s significant artistic reputation with the BSO, and we were pleased to have her as a soloist this season,” said Brian Ritter, executive director of the Albany Symphony (NY). “She astounded our audience with the John Williams Concerto. The performance exceeded our expectations and was our earliest sell-out concert of the year.”

Another step was to build her profile with wider audiences through viewings of A Harpist’s Legacy, Ann Hobson Pilot and the Sound of Change, a documentary about her career, struggles and triumphs as the first African-American principal player with a major orchestra. This led Tampa’s WEDU to spearhead syndication to almost 100 other PBS stations.

In 2012, Ann continues to explore her limits as an artist and harp ambassador. She recently partnered with the Associacio Xavier Montsalvatge to celebrate the 100th anniversary of his birth and as one of the most significant Spanish composers of the 20th Century.

“I really enjoyed Montsalvatge’s Concerto Capriccio for harp and orchestra,” said Pilot. “The more I learned about him, the more I became interested in playing it for new audiences and fostering a greater understanding of his contributions to contemporary classical music in Spain and beyond.”

Concludes Ann, “I really enjoyed my time with the BSO, but this is a whole different type of fun. The best part is that I’m free to explore anything and everything.”

For more information about Ms. Pilot, please visit http://www.annhobsonpilot.com.





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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by tbirdsradio - July 24, 2012 at 2:02 pm

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Yo-Yo Ma, Stuart Duncan, Edgar Meyer and Chris Thile Transcend Musical Boundaries and Create Organized Chaos in a Beautiful “Goat Rodeo”

The Goat Rodeo Sessions Available October 24, 2011 on Sony Masterworks

Also Features Guest Vocalist Aoife O’Donovan

NEW YORK, Oct. 20, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — Thanks to a fortuitous “goat rodeo,” Sony Masterworks is releasing The Goat Rodeo Sessions , a landmark album project by four of the great instrumentalists in music today, on Monday, October 24, 2011.  The album uniquely showcases cellist Yo-Yo Ma, bassist Edgar Meyer, mandolinist Chris Thile and fiddler Stuart Duncan. While each musician is a renowned superstar in his own music sphere, they have come together now as a unified ensemble on a most remarkable and organic cross-genre project stemming from their friendship, and the title concept. The album also includes two vocal tracks featuring Thile and guest artist Aoife O’Donovan, the lead vocalist and writer for progressive bluegrass group Crooked Still.

A goat rodeo, according to Urban Dictionary, “is about the most polite term used by aviation people (and others in higher risk situations) to describe a scenario that requires about 100 things to go right at once if you intend to walk away from it.” Meyer first heard it used by his longtime music copyist in reference, he recalls, to “a very chaotic situation where a lot of agendas are kind of confused, and it’s hard to tell up from down.”

Relating it to The Goat Rodeo Sessions participants, all four lead extremely demanding if not chaotic lives in terms of scheduling, at least, making their meeting here, while much desired, still a near goat-rodeo miracle. But “goat rodeo” proved a perfect catch-all, too, in describing the otherwise hard-to-define nature of the quartet’s music.

While everyone personalized their own definition of “goat rodeo” Yo-Yo Ma sums it up: “In the end, what we’re trying to do is simply make music that transcends whatever roots or categories or backgrounds that it starts from–that just exists as something that we’re trying to express, through our community of values, as a moment in time creating very special music.”

“The song arrangements are goat rodeos,” says Thile, the young lion of the bluegrass mandolin, whose playing has fueled the progressive acoustic trio Nickel Creek and his current group Punch Brothers, and who collaborated with his multi-music genre hero Meyer on the 2008 album Edgar Meyer And Chris Thile. Adds Meyer, “We get a lot of pleasure in arrangements that have just enough twists and turns that you really can’t let your guard down, like each little thing has to go right: If I trip on one thing, that’s going to throw Chris, and then that’s going to throw Yo-Yo, and then Stuart’s going to have to make up a whole new part, because he’s not going to know where we are from what just happened!”  Ma adds, “The mix of four people together could really be dicey. But you’re building trust in a fabulous way through actually having lots of fun, and also supporting each other. To me, that’s the goat rodeo.”

The end result is music that is indefinable, exciting and eclectic.

The first single “Attaboy” is a great example of the group’s dexterity memorably likened by Duncan to “a snowstorm of information” in its Irish medley of early jig music and reels in increasingly complicated dynamic changes and time signatures. On the slower side, the beautiful ballad “Helping Hand,” features Duncan on mandolin and Thile on guitar; for his part, Meyer gets to show off his piano prowess on “Franz And The Eagle.”

In addition to playing multiple instruments, Thile also sings on Goat Rodeo’s two vocal songs, “No One But You” and “Here And Heaven.” He is joined on both by Aoife O’Donovan (Crooked Still), who wrote “Lay My Burden Down” on Alison Krauss & Union Station’s acclaimed Paper Airplane.  Aoife O’Donovan (her first name is pronounced ee-fa) co-wrote “Here And Heaven” with Meyer, Thile and Duncan; the song is further marked by breathtaking instrumental flexibility in Duncan’s switch from fretless banjo to fiddle, Thile’s trade-off from gamba (a Renaissance stringed instrument) to mandolin and Meyer’s exchange of gamba for bass.

The Goat Rodeo Sessions was achieved via a remarkable series of magical recording sessions where the distinguished soloists somehow came together in forming a very real band.

The four virtuosos actually sat together in a circle, facing each other in order to play with and off each other. No one was isolated in a separate recording booth or room, and there was no overdubbing, just precision playing by all and at all times.

But each player brought his own unique approach to the sessions. The classically-trained Ma, who doesn’t improvise, played as if he did, while Duncan, who co-wrote the music with Meyer and Thile, worked off his own hand-notated notebook paper. Meyer likewise read from his own handwritten score, moving seamlessly from the structured page to improvisation as he moved the sheets around with his foot. Improvisational genius Thile, however, needed no musical text, but played perfectly from memory.

The Goat Rodeo Sessions came about through friendship.  Ma and Meyer have been great friends and great collaborators for a number of years, as have Meyer and Thile, Thile and Duncan, and Thile, Duncan and Meyer.  A number of years ago, Meyer suggested that Ma work with Thile, and the three of them collaborated on tracks for Ma’s Songs of Joy & Peace.  Following a long day of recording, they went out for sushi and talked about how much they wanted to work together again.  A few years later Meyer and Thile wrote to say they’d found the perfect musician to complete their quartet - Stuart Duncan.  Thus the goat rodeo was born.

“Edgar made a good point that the four of us are here because each of us enjoys hearing the other three do what they do best,” Thile says, “and these are the people that we want to hear! And the music was composed with that in mind – maintaining what’s special about the individual voices and trying to find something new as a group, within that context.”

The finished Goat Rodeo Sessions is something so musically new that the title works perfectly on one more significant level.

“We want the freedom to not have the music immediately defined by a couple of words,” explains Meyer. “But at its root, Yo-Yo’s going for the same thing that Stuart’s going for, that Chris is going for–which is to completely internalize the music, and to play it without any kind of exterior references or even knowing what it is we’re going for, but with an easy agreement among the four of us in knowing when we get there.”

Concludes Thile: “The Goat Rodeo Sessions just sort of sums it up.”

Sony Masterworks USA comprises the Masterworks Broadway, Masterworks, Masterworks Jazz, RCA Red Seal and Sony Classical imprints. For email updates and information please visitwww.SonyMasterworks.com.

SOURCE SONY MASTERWORKS

Web Site: http://www.SonyMasterworks.com

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by tbirdsradio - October 20, 2011 at 7:40 am

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Yo-Yo Ma, Stuart Duncan, Edgar Meyer and Chris Thile Transcend Musical Boundaries and Create Organized Chaos in a Beautiful “Goat Rodeo”

The Goat Rodeo Sessions Available October 25, 2011 on Sony Masterworks

Also Features Guest Vocalist Aoife O’Donovan

NEW YORK, Sept. 13, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — Thanks to a fortuitous “goat rodeo,” SONY MASTERWORKS is releasing The Goat Rodeo Sessions , a landmark album project by four of the great instrumentalists in music today, on Tuesday, October 25, 2011.  The album uniquely showcases cellist Yo-Yo Ma, bassist Edgar Meyer, mandolinist Chris Thile and fiddler Stuart Duncan. While each musician is a renowned superstar in his own music sphere, they have come together now as a unified ensemble on a most remarkable and organic cross-genre project stemming from their friendship, and the title concept. The album also includes two vocal tracks featuring Thile and guest artist Aoife O’Donovan, the lead vocalist and writer for progressive bluegrass group Crooked Still.

A goat rodeo, according to Urban Dictionary, “is about the most polite term used by aviation people (and others in higher risk situations) to describe a scenario that requires about 100 things to go right at once if you intend to walk away from it.” Meyer first heard it used by his longtime music copyist in reference, he recalls, to “a very chaotic situation where a lot of agendas are kind of confused, and it’s hard to tell up from down.”

Relating it to The Goat Rodeo Sessions participants, all four lead extremely demanding if not chaotic lives in terms of scheduling, at least, making their meeting here, while much desired, still a near goat-rodeo miracle. But “goat rodeo” proved a perfect catch-all, too, in describing the otherwise hard-to-define nature of the quartet’s music.

While everyone personalized their own definition of “goat rodeo” Yo-Yo Ma sums it up: “In the end, what we’re trying to do is simply make music that transcends whatever roots or categories or backgrounds that it starts from–that just exists as something that we’re trying to express, through our community of values, as a moment in time creating very special music.”

“The song arrangements are goat rodeos,” says Thile, the young lion of the bluegrass mandolin, whose playing has fueled the progressive acoustic trio Nickel Creek and his current group Punch Brothers, and who collaborated with his multi-music genre hero Meyer on the 2008 album Edgar Meyer And Chris Thile. Adds Meyer, “We get a lot of pleasure in arrangements that have just enough twists and turns that you really can’t let your guard down, like each little thing has to go right: If I trip on one thing, that’s going to throw Chris, and then that’s going to throw Yo-Yo, and then Stuart’s going to have to make up a whole new part, because he’s not going to know where we are from what just happened!”  Ma adds, “The mix of four people together could really be dicey. But you’re building trust in a fabulous way through actually having lots of fun, and also supporting each other. To me, that’s the goat rodeo.”

The end result is music that is indefinable, exciting and eclectic.

The first single “Atta Boy” is a great example of the group’s dexterity memorably likened by Duncan to “a snowstorm of information” in its Irish medley of early jig music and reels in increasingly complicated dynamic changes and time signatures. On the slower side, the beautiful ballad “Helping Hand,” features Duncan on mandolin and Thile on guitar; for his part, Meyer gets to show off his piano prowess on “Franz And The Eagle.”

In addition to playing multiple instruments, Thile also sings on Goat Rodeo’s two vocal songs, “No One But You” and “Here And Heaven.” He is joined on both by Aoife O’Donovan (Crooked Still), who wrote “Lay My Burden Down” on Alison Krauss & Union Station’s acclaimed Paper Airplane.  Aoife O’Donovan (her first name is pronounced ee-fa) co-wrote “Here And Heaven” with Meyer, Thile and Duncan; the song is further marked by breathtaking instrumental flexibility in Duncan’s switch from fretless banjo to fiddle, Thile’s trade-off from gamba (a Renaissance stringed instrument) to mandolin and Meyer’s exchange of gamba for bass.

The Goat Rodeo Sessions was achieved via a remarkable series of magical recording sessions where the distinguished soloists somehow came together in forming a very real band.

The four virtuosos actually sat together in a circle, facing each other in order to play with and off each other. No one was isolated in a separate recording booth or room, and there was no overdubbing, just precision playing by all and at all times.

But each player brought his own unique approach to the sessions. The classically-trained Ma, who doesn’t improvise, played as if he did, while Duncan, who co-wrote the music with Meyer and Thile, worked off his own hand-notated notebook paper. Meyer likewise read from his own handwritten score, moving seamlessly from the structured page to improvisation as he moved the sheets around with his foot. Improvisational genius Thile, however, needed no musical text, but played perfectly from memory.

The Goat Rodeo Sessions came about through friendship.  Ma and Meyer have been great friends and great collaborators for a number of years, as have Meyer and Thile, Thile and Duncan, and Thile, Duncan and Meyer.  A number of years ago, Meyer suggested that Ma work with Thile, and the three of them collaborated on tracks for Ma’s Songs of Joy & Peace.  Following a long day of recording, they went out for sushi and talked about how much they wanted to work together again.  A few years later Meyer and Thile wrote to say they’d found the perfect musician to complete their quartet – Stuart Duncan.  Thus the goat rodeo was born.

“Edgar made a good point that the four of us are here because each of us enjoys hearing the other three do what they do best,” Thile says, “and these are the people that we want to hear! And the music was composed with that in mind – maintaining what’s special about the individual voices and trying to find something new as a group, within that context.”

The finished Goat Rodeo Sessions is something so musically new that the title works perfectly on one more significant level.

“We want the freedom to not have the music immediately defined by a couple of words,” explains Meyer. “But at its root, Yo-Yo’s going for the same thing that Stuart’s going for, that Chris is going for–which is to completely internalize the music, and to play it without any kind of exterior references or even knowing what it is we’re going for, but with an easy agreement among the four of us in knowing when we get there.”

Concludes Thile: “The Goat Rodeo Sessions just sort of sums it up.”

Sony Masterworks USA comprises the Masterworks Broadway, Masterworks, Masterworks Jazz, RCA Red Seal and Sony Classical imprints. For email updates and information please visit www.SonyMasterworks.com.

SOURCE Sony Masterworks

Web Site: http://www.sonymasterworks.com

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by tbirdsradio - September 13, 2011 at 5:54 pm

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