“…zest, imagination and brilliant technique…”
~ The San Francisco Examiner
Its
name derived from creation mythology found in Native American Folklore,
the Turtle Island String Quartet, since its inception in 1985, has
been a singular force in the creation of bold, new trends in chamber
music for strings. Cellist nonpareil Yo-Yo Ma has proclaimed TISQ
to be “a unified voice that truly breaks new ground –
authentic and passionate – a reflection of some of the most
creative music-making today.” Turtle Island fuses the classical
quartet esthetic with contemporary American musical styles, and
by devising a performance practice that honors both, the state of
the art has inevitably been redefined.
The Quartet’s birth was the result of violinist David Balakrishnan’s
brainstorming explorations and compositional vision while writing
his master’s thesis at Antioch University West. The journey
has taken Turtle Island through forays into folk, bluegrass, swing,
be-bop, funk, R&B, rock, hip-hop, as well as music of Latin
America and India …a repertoire consisting of hundreds of
ingenious arrangements and originals. It has included over a dozen
recordings on labels such as Windham Hill, Chandos, Koch and Telarc,
soundtracks for major motion pictures, TV and radio credits such
as the Today Show, All Things Considered, and Prairie Home Companion,
feature articles in People and Newsweek magazines, and collaborations
with famed artists such as clarinetist Paquito D’Rivera, The
Manhattan Transfer, pianists Billy Taylor and Kenny Barron, the
Ying Quartet and the Parsons Dance Company.
Another unique element of TISQ is their revival of venerable improvisational
and compositional chamber traditions that have not been explored
by string players for nearly 200 years. At the time of Haydn’s
apocryphal creation of the string quartet form, musicians were more
akin to today’s saxophonists and keyboard masters of the jazz
and pop world, i.e., improvisers, composers, and arrangers. Each
Turtle Island member is accomplished in these areas of expertise
as well as having extensive conservatory training as instrumentalists.
One
result of this dedication can be seen in Turtle Island’s phenomenal
international appeal, particularly in Europe where chamber music
remains a vital facet of life. What was once termed ‘alternative’
chamber music now firmly inhabits the mainstream. TISQ members refine
their skills through unusual and endemic ‘re-compositions’
of works by the old masters, through the development of repertory
by some of today’s cutting edge composers, through performances
and recordings with major symphonic ensembles, and through a determined
educational commitment. Turtle Island String Quartet promises to
be a string quartet for the 21st century.
Download
TISQ Media Kit (112 k .pdf)
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