Vienna Art Orchestra - Plays for Jean Cocteau (1995)
BAND/ARTIST: Vienna Art Orchestra
- Title: Plays for Jean Cocteau
- Year Of Release: 1995
- Label: Amadeo
- Genre: Jazz, Progressive Big Band, Avant-Garde
- Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log)
- Total Time: 01:02:24
- Total Size: 363 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Prologue - written by Jean Cocteau (01:50)
2. Say Good Evening To Everyone (03:57)
3. Interlude (je n'aurai pas peur) - written by Jean Cocteau (01:06)
4. I Burn The Silence (03:57)
5. Interlude (toujours la même) - written by Jean Cocteau (01:46)
6. The Sky Is A Hedge In May (04:38)
7. The Rose Knows No Age (04:58)
8. Interlude (je n'ai plus faim) - written by Jean Cocteau (01:26)
9. Enough, Statue! (05:05)
10. The Secret Of Blue Is Well-guarded (05:24)
11. Interlude (calmez-vous, la bête) - written by Jean Cocteau (01:30)
12. Backwards, Silence Goes Faster (05:33)
13. Interlude (quand vous êtes en retard) - written by Jean Cocteau (02:02)
14. A Single Glass Of Water Lights The World (04:06)
15. Misfortune Has Glove Size Seven (03:08)
16. The Landscape Changes Three Times (02:54)
17. Interlude (la bête, la bête, pardon) - written by Jean Cocteau (00:56)
18. If You Break Statues, You Risk Becoming One Yourself (08:08)
1. Prologue - written by Jean Cocteau (01:50)
2. Say Good Evening To Everyone (03:57)
3. Interlude (je n'aurai pas peur) - written by Jean Cocteau (01:06)
4. I Burn The Silence (03:57)
5. Interlude (toujours la même) - written by Jean Cocteau (01:46)
6. The Sky Is A Hedge In May (04:38)
7. The Rose Knows No Age (04:58)
8. Interlude (je n'ai plus faim) - written by Jean Cocteau (01:26)
9. Enough, Statue! (05:05)
10. The Secret Of Blue Is Well-guarded (05:24)
11. Interlude (calmez-vous, la bête) - written by Jean Cocteau (01:30)
12. Backwards, Silence Goes Faster (05:33)
13. Interlude (quand vous êtes en retard) - written by Jean Cocteau (02:02)
14. A Single Glass Of Water Lights The World (04:06)
15. Misfortune Has Glove Size Seven (03:08)
16. The Landscape Changes Three Times (02:54)
17. Interlude (la bête, la bête, pardon) - written by Jean Cocteau (00:56)
18. If You Break Statues, You Risk Becoming One Yourself (08:08)
Founded in 1977 by director and composer Mathias Rüegg, the band started out by performing Rüegg's distinctive postmodern compositions on stages throughout Europe. Among the founding musicians were saxophonists Wolfgang Puschnig and Harry Sokal, singer Lauren Newton, and tuba player Jon Sass. In 1980 the ensemble signed a recording contract with the Swiss hatART label, and in 1984 it toured the United States for the first time.
The group essentially disbanded for a brief period at the end of the 1980s. In 1992 the VAO opened a new phase with a smaller complement of musicians. The band played fewer of Rüegg's compositions and concentrated on arrangements of works by Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus, and other noted American jazz composers, as well as music inspired by the classical music of Verdi, Wagner, Schubert, and Erik Satie.
In 1997 the ensemble's personnel changed once again, increasing in size and adding younger musicians. New compositions by Rüegg became a regular feature of VAO concerts, which often included visual and dramatic elements.
The Vienna Art Orchestra has performed more than 800 concerts and released more than 35 recordings. The film An Echo from Europe: Vienna Art Orchestra on Tour by Othmar Schmiderer was released in 1998.
The ensemble was nominated for an Amadeus Austrian Music Award in 2001 for the album All That Strauss, and again in 2003 for Art and Fun.
On July 10, 2010, Mathias Rüegg announced that the Vienna Art Orchestra had been disbanded for financial reasons.
The program "Vienna Art Orchestra plays for Jean Cocteau" was co-produced under the original title "La belle et la bete" in 1992 by the Banlieues Bleues Festival Paris, by the Donaufestival St. Polten, and by Jazz a Trento. It was also performed in Vienna, Salzburg, Klagenfurt, at the Israel Festival in Jerusalem (1993), in Zurich, Bordeaux and at the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival (1994).
The group essentially disbanded for a brief period at the end of the 1980s. In 1992 the VAO opened a new phase with a smaller complement of musicians. The band played fewer of Rüegg's compositions and concentrated on arrangements of works by Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus, and other noted American jazz composers, as well as music inspired by the classical music of Verdi, Wagner, Schubert, and Erik Satie.
In 1997 the ensemble's personnel changed once again, increasing in size and adding younger musicians. New compositions by Rüegg became a regular feature of VAO concerts, which often included visual and dramatic elements.
The Vienna Art Orchestra has performed more than 800 concerts and released more than 35 recordings. The film An Echo from Europe: Vienna Art Orchestra on Tour by Othmar Schmiderer was released in 1998.
The ensemble was nominated for an Amadeus Austrian Music Award in 2001 for the album All That Strauss, and again in 2003 for Art and Fun.
On July 10, 2010, Mathias Rüegg announced that the Vienna Art Orchestra had been disbanded for financial reasons.
The program "Vienna Art Orchestra plays for Jean Cocteau" was co-produced under the original title "La belle et la bete" in 1992 by the Banlieues Bleues Festival Paris, by the Donaufestival St. Polten, and by Jazz a Trento. It was also performed in Vienna, Salzburg, Klagenfurt, at the Israel Festival in Jerusalem (1993), in Zurich, Bordeaux and at the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival (1994).
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