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Kronos Quartet + Mary Kouyoumdjian, Witness

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Topic: Kronos Quartet + Mary Kouyoumdjian, Witness
Posted By: snobb
Subject: Kronos Quartet + Mary Kouyoumdjian, Witness
Date Posted: 17 Mar 2025 at 11:03am

Recorded in remembrance of the victims of the Armenian genocide, Witness and its pensive, unsteadying sentiment sees the quartet working with documentarian-composer and Pulitzer finalist Mary Kouyoumdjian, an artist whose music swells with the emotion of having an unsettled family in the Lebanese Civil War (all streaming proceeds from Witness are directed to support the Armenian and Lebanese communities). Together, they utilize the voices of those who lived through that horrific period, as well as aged folk song and field recordings. To that, Kouyoumdjian and her often minor chord–driven melodies and harmonies seem unafraid to use anything to get her pained point across to the listener.

At turns gorgeous, brutal, and awe-stricken, the achingly slow repetition that guides moments such as “Silent Cranes I: slave to your voice” and the calm call of its vocalist Armenak Shah Muradian turn on a dime to something inflamed and tentatively violent by mid-song. The pacing “Groung [Crane]” could itself be a child’s lullaby if not for the mournful manner in which Harrington’s violin hangs in mid-air like a deflating parade balloon. The unhurried brightness of the intro to “Bombs of Beirut II: The War” is made chillier and chillier by its clipped Greek chorus of witnesses reliving their horrors. As the 13-minute track moves forward, so, too, does its tempo, growing jagged, barbed, and dissonant until the literal explosions of its halfway point.

Much of Witness does this—rises to fall, to drift, to linger, to crush; its rhythms not so much an audible punctuation but an inference, a mood married to the foot-feel of its march, a mannered but not polite creep to some unknowing battleground. Despite how often its voices and Kronos’ strings pierce loudly through the icy smoke of Kouyoumdjian’s compositions, so much of the record is revealed in what isn’t there, the surprise spaces that fall silent after its orchestration rises and stings. I won’t pretend to know what the pains and pangs of battle are, or what continual torturous atrocities do to people. I will, though, hazard a guess that Kronos Quartet and Mary Kouyoumdjian’s elegant compositions for Witness are worthy, undulating documentation to whatever war may be.

from https://floodmagazine.com




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