:Ajna: presents The Art of Funerary Violin LP + Rose Criox LP

Started by bitewerksMTB, July 31, 2012, 08:22:56 PM

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bitewerksMTB

www.theajnaoffensive.com

THE ART OF FUNERARY VIOLIN : Recordings from the Funerary Violin cannon. Performed by The Guild of Funerary Violinists. Led by Rohan Kriwaczek. Bass drums by Tobias James. Over 40 minutes of music.The track listing is as follows: 1- from Funerarius for Micheal Wise Esquire - Orlando Addleston (1681) 2- The Sombre Coquetry of Death – Hieronymous Gratchenfleiss (1810?) 3- The Dizzy Flight of Death - Hieronymous Gratchenfleiss (1810?) 4- from Pompes Funèbres no. 2 – Pompe II - Michel Meunier (1693) 5- from Funerary Suite no.4 – Flight - Charles Sudbury (1832) 6- The Noble March of Death - Hieronymous Gratchenfleiss (1810?) 7- from Funerary Suite no.4 – Eulogy - Charles Sudbury (1832) 8- from The Sultry Dance of Death - Hieronymous Gratchenfleiss (1810?) 9- from Sept Regards sur l'Esprit de la Mort - Marche Funèbre - Pierre Dubuisson (1826) 10-11- Introduction to the Angels - The Purging of Mortal Sin - Stanley Eaton (1912) The band leader, Rohan Kriwaczek, is also an author. The following bit of text dates back to 2006 and comes from the NPR website: "A forthcoming book traces the lost history of a musical genre too good to be true: funerary violin. If you believe Rohan Kriwaczek, author of An Incomplete History of the Art of the Funerary Violin, funerary violin is a previously unknown musical genre that was virtually extinguished by the mid-19th century in the Great Funerary Purges, said to be ordered by the Vatican. But as first reported in The New York Times, violin dealers, string-instrument publications and other experts say there is no evidence of the funerary violin genre, forgotten or otherwise. Despite the questions of authenticity, the book's U.S. publisher, Overlook Press, still plans to release the book, which includes pictures of legendary funerary violin composers like Hieronymous Gratchenfleiss, musical scores and information on the Guild of Funerary Violinists. Peter Mayer, the publisher of Overlook Press, bought the manuscript. Even though he had doubts about the authenticity of the material, he was hooked. "I decided it didn't really matter to me how much of this was actually accurate. It was a life's work. [Kriwacezk] was dedicated to this guild not being forgotten, dedicated to the music. I decided this is just an amazing piece of work, and I wanted to publish it," Mayer says. In his book, Kriwaczek writes about "funerary duels" in France in the 1810s: Two violinists improvised on a fragment of melody, attempting to draw more tragedy from it than his opponent; the winner was the artist who drew the most tears from the assembled crowd. "Who knows if it's true, but it's unbelievable reading," Mayer says. Author Kriwaczek issued a statement Thursday, in which he writes that to call his work a hoax is to misunderstand his intentions. He says he wanted to "expand the notion of musical composition to encompass the creation of an entire artistic genre, with its necessary accompanying history, mythology, philosophy, social function, etc." And he notes that as a funerary violinist himself, he has performed at more than 50 funerals throughout southeast England."

kettu

I got a bunch of funereal fiddle in my collection. really enjoyable tunes.

bitewerksMTB

I'd never heard of it before until Ajna mentioned it. Looking forward to hearing the LP (plus the 3 train records he's sending down).

RG

I noticed that Funerary Violin record on Ajna a while back then just saw this post here. How is it Keith?

bitewerksMTB

It's violin music (a few pieces also have drums). Some of it sounds like it could easily be used for movies, other pieces sound like they'd go good at a funeral.