Akropolis
Reed Quintet
Ghost Light

Released April 9 2021
On New Focus Recordings

New works by Stacy Garrop, Michael Gilbertson, Niloufar Nourbakhsh, Theo Chandler, and Jeff Scott with the poetry of Marsha Music.

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For Your Consideration, 64th GRAMMY Award Nominations

NARAS friends, we're excited to share with you Ghost Light is on the Grammy’s FYC first round ballot in these three categories:

1) Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance

2) Best Contemporary Classical Composition
Jeff Scott: Homage to Paradise Valley

3) Best Engineered Album, Classical
Dave Schall

Record Label / Catalogue Number: New Focus Recordings fcr292
Many thanks for listening, and for your consideration.

 

Ghost Light News!

Akropolis is officially the first reed quintet to grace the Billboard Charts with Ghost Light coming in at #14 on the Traditional Classical Albums chart the week of May 15, 2021.

Ghost Light Press & Reviews

"faultless detail and refreshing artistry...Ghost Light will leave you transfixed long after the final note"
~ I CARE IF YOU LISTEN

"audibly driven by real excitement and a sense of adventure. There's nothing tentative in their approach, and that extends to their programming of multifariously challenging and imaginative new works." ~ The WIRE, U.K.

“Here is range, here is agility and grace” ~ The Whole Note

“The ensemble has taken the chamber music world by storm. Ghost Light does not dissapoint. The performance standards of Akropolis are award winning for a reason.”
~ Fanfare Magazine

“The esteemed players balance powerful, adventurous and haunting moments that cultivate chamber sounds like few others would dare to attempt.” ~ Take Effect

“exploring everything from the Egyptian Book of the Dead to racial violence in their native Detroit. The sheer sound of this group is instantly captivating...a sublime smoothness of tone and texture."
~ AnEarful

Listen to Ghost Light on Bandcamp

Album Teaser Videos

About Ghost Light

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Over the past two years we’ve premiered a series of works dealing with life, death, and rebirth. With Ghost Light, we wanted to shine a light on ghosts around us, and help you embrace the beautiful cycle of life and death while recalling important moments and practices from our history. For us, some of that history was right beneath us, like the razing of several Black neighborhoods in Detroit in the 1900s. Other sounds composed for us describe deadly lakes of fire, heavenly fields of reeds, and the near-death adrenaline of facing a firing squad. Through these masterful works by composers of various backgrounds and experiences, we hope you are transformed into a ghostly and intoxicating world of dark and light, death and life — rebirth. Ghost Light is supported by the Alice M. Ditson Fund of Columbia University.

Akropolis Reed Quintet

Tim Gocklin (oboe), Kari Landry (clarinet), Matt Landry (saxophone), Andrew Koeppe (bass clarinet), Ryan Reynolds (bassoon)

Celebrating their 13th year making music with a “collective voice driven by real excitement and a sense of adventure” (The Wire), Akropolis has “taken the chamber music world by storm” (Fanfare). As the first reed quintet to grace the Billboard Charts(May 2021), the untamed band of 5 reed players and entrepreneurs are united by a shared passion: to make music that sparks joy and wonder.

Winner of 7 national chamber music prizes including the 2014 Fischoff Gold Medal, Akropolis delivers 120 concerts and educational events each year and has premiered over 130 works. They are the first ensemble of their kind to grace the stage on noteworthy series like Oneppo (Yale University), Chamber Music San Antonio, Phillips Collection (Washington, D.C.), Summerwinds Münster (Germany), Flagler Museum (Palm Beach), and many more.

Their 22-23 season will include premieres of the music of Augusta Read Thomas and Omar Thomas; imaginative renditions of music by Ravel, Bernstein, Rameau, Shostakovich, and Gershwin; and touring their 4th album, Ghost Light, lauded for its “range, agility, and grace” (The Whole Note). Read More +

Marsha Music

Marsha Music, daughter of a pre-Motown record producer, grew up in Highland Park and lives in the Palmer Park district of Detroit. She is a self-described Detroitist and writes about the city’s music, its past, present and future. She is a former activist/labor leader and a noted speaker. She has contributed to significant Detroit narratives, including “Untold Tales, Unsung Heroes: An Oral History of Detroit’s African American Community,” as well as documentaries on HBO, PBS, and The History Channel. Ms. Music has read her poetry with the DSO; written and performed new poetry with the Detroit Opera Theater as part of their 2020 Drive-Thru opera, Twilight: Gods. She recently published her first book, “The Detroitist.”

About the Pieces

Rites for the Afterlife by Stacy Garrop

As the average lifespan of an Egyptian hovered around 30 years, living past the death of one’s physical body was a legitimate concern. Egyptians believed that upon death, their soul would undertake a harrowing journey through the Netherworld. Rites for the Afterlife follows the path of the soul to the afterlife.

In movement 1, the soul leaves the body and begins the journey, protected by spells and incantations written on the tomb’s walls. In movement 2, the soul is now on a funerary barque, being towed through the Netherworld and encountering demons, serpents, crocodiles, lakes of fire, and other terrors. In movement 3, the soul stands before forty-two divine judges in the "Hall of Judgement" and gives a negative confession connected to each judge, (e.g. “I did not rob,” etc.). Then the soul’s heart is weighed on a scale against a feather from Maat, the goddess of truth. If balanced, the soul moves on. The "Field of Reeds" (movement 4) is a perfect mirror image of the soul’s life in Egypt. The soul reunites with deceased family members, makes sacrifices to the Egyptian gods and goddesses, harvests crops from plentiful fields of wheat under a brilliant blue sky, and lives forever next to the abundant and nourishing waters of the Nile. Rites for the Afterlife was commissioned by the Barlow Endowment on behalf of the Akropolis Reed Quintet, Calefax Reed Quintet, and the Brigham Young University Reed Quintet (2018).

Kinds of Light by Michael Gilbertson

Kinds of Light takes each reed quintet instrument as a color or pigment. When combined in various combinations, textures, and layers, they come together to illustrate kinds of light. Unlike other works on the album, much of Kinds of Light is homophonic, moving these colors at the same time and in the same rhythm.

Otherwise, clear layers are present and serve as foils, such as the melody of the saxophone, oboe, and bassoon in “Ultraviolet” against the clarinet and bass clarinet engine. “Twilight” is completely homophonic, with no rhythm variance between instruments, but rich in harmonic development and detail which is therefore more apparent and appreciable. Kinds of Light was commissioned by Akropolis and the I-Park Foundation (2018).

Firing Squad by Niloufar Nourbakhsh

“Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendia was to remember that distant afternoon his father took him to discover ice.” —Gabriel Garcia Márquez, One Hundred Years of Solitude

The compelling opening of Márquez’s masterpiece constructs an intense moment of reflection by digging into a childhood memory. Firing Squad is structurally inspired by this sentence. The piece explores an instance of confronting death, then expands into all possible feelings and memories one might go through before saying farewell to life. Nourbakhsh utilizes a recording of Akropolis for Akropolis to play along with, adjusted for effect, to act as a mirror of Akropolis’ live, acoustic sounds. Firing Squad was commissioned by Akropolis and the I-Park Foundation (2018).

Seed to Snag by Theo Chandler

The three movements of Seed to Snag describe periods between the beginning and end of the lifecycle of organic matter, that is between the seed and the snag. Chandler looks to the Baroque era for his structure, the 1st movement imitating the slow appearance of limbs and other plant parts using the musical style of a Baroque prelude, with a heavily-ornamented, slow-moving harmony. The 2nd movement is a virtuosic bassoon solo recalling a Baroque aria with harpsichord accompaniment with the other instruments in the quintet resonating from the bassoon's pitches. The 3rd movement focuses on consistent pulse and imitation as the seeds spin and spread from the tree in rapid succession, closing with material that ignites a new beginning of the cycle. Seed to Snag was commissioned by Akropolis and the I-Park Foundation (2018).

Homage to Paradise Valley by Jeff Scott

The historical content of these notes by the composer is provided courtesy of the Detroit Historical Society (detroithistorical.org) where one can find a wealth of information on Paradise Valley and Black Bottom. Poetry by Marsha Music—a lifelong resident of Detroit whose father, Joe Von Battle, was a record producer for Aretha Franklin and owned Joe’s Records, central to the Black Bottom community—was commissioned by Akropolis in 2020 to create poetry to accompany Jeff’s music.

Black Bottom was a predominantly Black neighborhood in Detroit, Michigan. In the early 20th century, African-American residents became concentrated here during the first wave of the Great Migration to northern industrial cities. Informal segregation operated in the city kept them in this area of older, less expensive housing. Black Bottom/Paradise Valley became known for its African-American residents' significant contributions to American music, including Blues, Big Band, and Jazz, from the 1930s to 1950s. Black Bottom was eventually razed and redeveloped for various urban renewal projects, driving the residents out. By the 1960s the neighborhood ceased to exist.

Hastings Street ran north-south through Black Bottom and had been a center of Eastern European Jewish settlement before World War I, but by the 1950s, migration transformed the strip into one of Detroit's major African-American communities of black-owned businesses, social institutions, and nightclubs.

From the Bantu language of Swahili, "Roho, Pumzika kwa Amani" (Spirits, Rest Peacefully) is a lullaby, my humble offering to the many souls who came before me and persevered through the middle passage, decades of slavery, disenfranchising laws, and inequality. I am who I am because of those who stood before me. May their spirits rest peacefully.

Orchestra Hall closed in 1939, but reopened in 1941 as the Paradise Theater. For 10 years it would then offer the best of African-American musicians from around the country. "Paradise Theater Jump" is dedicated to the famed theater and harkens to the up-tempo style of "jump blues," usually played by small groups and featuring saxophone or brass instruments. Homage to Paradise Valley was commissioned by Akropolis and Chamber Music America, made possible by the Chamber Music America Classical Commissioning Program, with generous funding provided by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation (2019).

About the Composers

Stacy Garrop
on Monday, September 24, 2018.

Stacy Garrop

Stacy Garrop’s music is centered on dramatic and lyrical storytelling, and she shares these stories by taking audiences on sonic journeys. Garrop is a full-time freelance composer. She has received numerous awards including an Arts and Letters Award in Music from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Fromm Music Foundation Grant, Barlow Prize, and three Barlow Endowment commissions. Notable commissions include The Battle for the Ballot for the Cabrillo Festival Orchestra, Goddess Triptych for the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, Glorious Mahalia for the Kronos Quartet, Give Me Hunger for Chanticleer, The Transformation of Jane Doe for Chicago Opera Theater, and My Dearest Ruth for voice and piano with text by the husband of the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

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Michael Gilbertson

The works of Michael Gilbertson have been described as “elegant” and “particularly beautiful” by the New York Times, “vivid, tightly woven” and “delectably subtle” by the Baltimore Sun, “genuinely moving” by the Washington Post, and “a compelling fusion of new and ancient” by the Philadelphia Inquirer. Gilbertson is the BMI Composer in Residence with the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra and is a professor at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. He was a finalist for the 2018 Pulitzer Prize in Music for his Quartet. His works have been programmed by the Minnesota Orchestra, Pittsburgh Symphony, Washington National Opera, Albany Symphony, and San Francisco Chamber Orchestra, among many others.

Niloufar

Niloufar Nourbakhsh

Described as “stark” by WNPR, and “darkly lyrical” by the New York Times, winner of the 2nd Hildegard competition, and recipient of the 2019 Female Discovery Grant from Opera America, Iranian composer Niloufar Nourbakhsh’s music has been commissioned and performed by the Nashville Symphony Orchestra, Library of Congress, National Sawdust Ensemble, International Contemporary Ensemble, Women Composers Festival of Hartford, PUBLIQuartet, Forward Music Project, and many more, performed at numerous festivals and venues including Carnegie Hall and The Kennedy Center. A founding member and co-director of Iranian Female Composers Association, Nilou is a strong advocate of music education.

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Theo Chandler

Theo Chandler is the recipient of the Copland House Residency Award, SCI/ASCAP Graduate Commission, American Prize for Vocal Chamber Music, Lili Boulanger Memorial Fund Award, Charles Ives Scholarship from the Academy of Arts and Letters, and the Graduate Music Award from the Presser Foundation. He has received commissions from the New York Youth Symphony First Music Program, Tanglewood Music Center, Fischer Duo, Utah Arts Festival, and others. He has been a fellow at the Britten-Pears Young Artist Programme, Mizzou International Composers Festival, Tanglewood Music Center, Copland House Cultivate, and Aspen Music Festival. Previous residencies include Composer in Residence for Les Délices, Composer in Residence for the Maryland Wind Festival, Fellow for Musiqua, and more.

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Jeff Scott

A native of Queens, NY, Jeff Scott started the French horn at age 14, receiving an anonymous gift scholarship to go to the Brooklyn College Preparatory Division. An even greater gift came from his first teacher, Carolyn Clark, who taught the young Mr. Scott for free during his high school years, giving him the opportunity to study music when resources were not available. Associate Professor of Horn at the Oberlin Conservatory, Mr. Scott's performance credits are many and varied, including The Lion King orchestra (on Broadway, New York) 1997-2005. He has been a member of the Alvin Ailey and Dance Theater of Harlem orchestras since 1995 and has performed under the direction of Wynton Marsalis with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra. Mr. Scott is also the French hornist in the internationally acclaimed wind quintet “Imani Winds.”

Ghost Light Artwork by Ashton Springer

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Ashton Springer is an Artist and Illustrator born and Artistically Educated in the UK. He studied and obtained his Bachelor of arts degree in Graphic Design & Illustration in the autumn of 2012. From then on, he embarked on a journey to curate and fine tune his artistic voice and continues to push the boundaries of his craft till this very day.

His style has a dark but playful childlike feel to it. Which allows it to appeal to both adults and children alike. It can be adapted to different sectors within the world of commercial illustration.

From as young as six years old Ashton has been image making and he still creates art with the same enthusiasm and boundless energy as he did many moons ago. The only difference now, it is on an international platform.

See more of this work at https://www.ashtonspringer.com/.

Additional Credits and Thanks

Producers: Courtney Snyder Ng, Elliott Tackitt, Akropolis
Production Assistants: Thomas Morris
Recorded at First Presbyterian Church in Ypsilanti, MI & Tempermill Studios
Recorded, Edited, Mixed, & Mastered by Dave Schall Acoustic
Album Artwork by Ashton Springer
Publicist: Unfinished Side

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