Yo-yo ma - appalachian journey
Mark O'Connor (b. August 5, , Seattle, Washington)
"One of the most spectacular journeys in recent American music." - The New York Times
"One of the most talented and imaginative artists working in music -- any music -- today." - The Los Angeles Times
"Brilliantly original." - The Seattle Times
"The audience was on its feet .
. . They were moved by Mr. O'Connor's journey without maps, cheering for the only musician today who can reach so deeply first into the refined, then the vernacular, giving his listeners a complex, sophisticated piece of earlyst-century classical music and then knocking them dead with the brown-dirt whine of a Texas fiddle." - The New York Times
Mark O'Connor began his creative journey at the feet of American fiddling legend Benny Thomasson, and the iconic French jazz violinist Stéphane Grappelli.
Now, at age 55, he has melded these influences into a new American classical music, and is perpetuating his vision of an American School of String Playing.
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Mr. O’Connor has won three Grammys, seven CMA awards as well as several national fiddle, guitar and mandolin champion titles. His distinguished career includes representing the United States Information Agency in cultural diplomacy to six continents and performing in front of several U.S. presidents including being invited to the White House by President Ronald Reagan to perform as a teen.
After recording a series of albums for Rounder and Warner Bros including his multiple Grammy-winning New Nashville Cats, his recordings for Sony Classical with Yo-Yo Ma, Appalachia Waltz and Appalachian Journey sold a million CDs and gained O'Connor worldwide recognition as a leading proponent of a new American musical idiom.
Mr. O’Connor’s Fiddle Concerto released on Warner Bros. has become the most-performed violin concerto composed in the last 50 years. On his own OMAC Records label, the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra recorded his sweeping Americana Symphony while his groundbreaking 9th concerto, The Improvised Violin Concerto was recorded in Boston Symphony Hall.
His new touring group, the Mark O’Connor Band consisting of family members (wife, son and daughter-in-law) debuted at #1 on Billboard Magazine’s bluegrass album chart and their first album Coming Home won a Grammy in and followed it up with a live band album A Musical Legacy.
Mr. O’Connor’s most recent album is a solo guitar release called Markology II, a year sequel to his first guitar album and one that is considered a landmark album to all guitar flatpickers – he recorded the first Markology LP when he was Bela Fleck writes the album notes for the new CD.
He says:
“…a bit stunned at the shear technical bravado his guitar playing is capable of (including that bit of jealousy that I’ve always had at how well this guy’s hands work!). Great tone he pulls from his guitars…puts us mortal musicians into a state of awe.”
Mr. O’Connor has authored a series of educational books called the O’Connor Method and is now the fastest growing violin method in the country and tens of thousands can credit the O’Connor books for learning how to play stringed instruments.
The O’Connor Method features American music styles, creativity, cultural diversity and western classical technical training. Mr. O’Connor tours nationally as the Mark O’Connor Duo with his wife Maggie, with his perennial An Appalachian Christmas and performs his original concertos with symphony orchestras. He resides in North Carolina with his wife, and duo partner Maggie O’Connor.
Mr.
O’Connor is currently hosting online streaming shows with his wife called "Mondays with Mark and Maggie O'Connor" and broadcasting from their home in Charlotte. They plan on resuming their national concert dates as the "Mark O'Connor Duo" again once the pandemic is over.
For more information, please see and
RECORDINGS (over two-million CDs sold as a solo recording artist, and 45 feature albums released in 45 years)
Some of the highlight recordings:
O'Connor released six albums as a teenager for Rounder Records, one of them ‘Markology’ is a solo guitar that was considered a landmark recording for acoustic bluegrass guitar.
He was accompanied by Tony Rice, David Grisman and Sam Bush.
O’Connor release a succession of albums in his twenties for the Warner Bros. label. Two standouts are his biggest sellers, ‘New Nashville Cats’ that won two Grammys and helped launch his solo career, and ‘Heroes’ that featured 14 of his violin-playing heroes including Jean-Luc Ponty, L.
Shankar, Johnny Gimble, Vassar Clements, Benny Thomasson, Pinchas Zukerman and others.
O'Connor's first recording for the Sony Classical record label, 'Appalachia Waltz', was a collaboration with Yo-Yo Ma and Edgar Meyer. The works Mr. O'Connor composed for the disc, including its title track, gained him worldwide recognition as a leading proponent of a new American musical idiom.
The tremendously successful follow-up release, 'Appalachian Journey', received a Grammy Award in February
With more than performances, his first full length orchestral score "Fiddle Concerto" has become the most-performed modern violin concerto composed in the last 50 years. It was recorded for the Warner Bros label in
Mr.
O'Connor's 2nd concerto "Fanfare for the Volunteer" was recorded with the London Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Steven Mercurio, released by Sony Classical in October The Newark Star Ledger notes: "As a composer, he understands the power of a thematic transfiguration and development throughout a minute work."
In April , Mr.
O'Connor premiered his fourth violin concerto, "The American Seasons: Seasons of an American Life," at Troy Music Hall in Troy, N.Y. According to the New York Times, " if Dvorak had spent his American leisure time in Nashville instead of Spillville, Iowa, 'New World Symphony' would have sounded like this." The American Seasons was recorded with the Metamorphosen Chamber Orchestra and released in Richard Dyer of the Boston Globe called the work "concise, lyrical and irresistibly rhythmic." Wayne Gay of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram said, "The American Seasons is destined to rank among the greatest masterpieces of American musicthe first musical masterpiece of the 21st century."
In August , Mr.
O'Connor's third concerto, "Double Violin Concerto," received its premiere along with Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg as soloist and the Chicago Symphony, Christoph Eschenbach conducting. In November , Mr. O'Connor and Ms. Salerno-Sonnenberg recorded the work with Marin Alsop conducting the Colorado Orchestra. Fanfare enthusiastically writes: "All aficionados of the violin and all listeners in general will pass up this recording at their peril.
The very highest commendation."
In , Mr. O'Connor released Hot Swing!, a tribute to his great friend and mentor, the legendary French jazz master, Stephane Grappelli.
Appalachia waltz by yo-yo ma biography wikipedia It was inspired by the thousands of students O'Connor has taught at his string camps and at universities and conservatories across the country, and by his belief that the modern classical violin student who develops a working knowledge of folk fiddling, jazz music and world music styles can enjoy a lifetime of music-making, and be more successful in the new music environment. Shostakovich: Symphony No. Obrigado Brazil Live in Concert Authority control databases MusicBrainz release group.Released on his own OMAC label, the CD was recorded live with Frank Vignola on guitar and Jon Burr on bass. The Chicago Tribune called it "one of the finest discs of his career and one of the greatest jazz violin albums ever."
O’Connor’s “Jam Session” (4/13/10, OMAC), offers “dazzling” (Wall Street Journal) live acoustic recordings that combine bluegrass and gypsy jazz.
Shore Fire Media describes it as being "comparable in its rhythmic intoxication and stratospheric solos with Charlie Parker/Dizzy Gillespie/Bud Powell/ Charles Mingus/ Max Roach 'Jazz at Massey Hall.' Perhaps no better jam recordings have been captured on acoustic string instruments in recent memory." “Jam Session” features, in turn, Chris Thile (mandolin), Frank Vignola (guitar), Bryan Sutton (guitar), Jon Burr (bass) and Byron House (bass).
The "Americana Symphony: Variations on Appalachia Waltz" was recorded by Marin Alsop and the Baltimore Symphony in David McGee of and Rolling Stone says "Americana Symphony" may well be regarded one day as one of this country's great gifts to the classical music canon, as well as being a pivotal moment in the rise of the new American classical music." The Associated Press reviewed Mr.
O'Connor's Symphony as "a monumental workinevitably will be compared to Copland."
“The Improvised Violin Concerto” premiered in at Boston Symphony Hall and released the following year both on CD and DVD for OMAC Records is the first of its kind in violin history. Conductor of New York’s Sympho says, “It's utterly groundbreaking…a concerto like this is totally unplayable by the vast majority of conservatory grads.” Larry Livingston, Chair of Conducting at USC says, “he may have permanently changed the landscape for his magical instrument.”
Mr.
O'Connor released his String Quartet No. 2 "Bluegrass" and String Quartet No. 3 "Old-Time" in The quartets represent some of his most intricate compositions and were recorded with chamber music greats Ida Kavafian, Paul Neubauer, and Matt Haimovitz and released in May,
“An Appalachian Christmas” by Mr. O’Connor was released in to both critical and commercial success.
The project has enjoyed ten nation-wide tours. "All Christmas music should be played so elegantly on violin" - Boston Globe; "Elegant " - New York Times; "Heavenly" - Associated Press.
In collaboration with his wife, violinist Maggie O’Connor, Mr. O’Connor has recently produced a CD of violin duets entitled ‘Duo’ that he has arranged from American classics featured in the advanced books of the O’Connor Method Book series.
Bartók-Pásztory Award-winning violinist and professor Péter Kováts writes; “[O’Connor’s] unique and excellent settings will serve the same goal that Bartók’s Duos serve.”
With his family members, O’Connor released ‘Coming Home’ in and ‘A Musical Legacy’ in , winning a Grammy for best Bluegrass recording. PopsMatters says it “is truly a family affair and a triumphant return to Mark O’Connor’s bluegrass roots.” No Depression writes that the “O’Conor Band hands us a stunning debut.”
Mr.
Jill hornor Yo-Yo broke a string. Solo What I do now is I actually play Open in new tab Music ultimately is one of the great ways that we humans have for coding internal life.O’Connor’s new recording ‘Markology II’ is a return to the guitar after a year lay off. The release date will be set for Spring,
PERFORMANCES AND RECORDINGS OF O'CONNOR PIECES BY OTHER ARTISTS
As word of his considerable compositional talents has spread, Mark O'Connor's musical works have been embraced by a variety of performers.
Yo-Yo Ma has recorded the solo cello adaptation of "Appalachia Waltz" and Renee Fleming has performed and recorded vocal arrangements of O'Connor's music, and a new Christmas song to come out on an upcoming Holiday release by Mr. O'Connor. "Strings and Threads Suite" a duet that Mr. O'Connor composed for violin and guitar for guitarist Sharon Isbin recording, won a Grammy Award for Best Classical Instrumental Performance.
Mr. O'Connor performs with piano trio his "Poets and Prophets" composition, inspired by the music of Johnny Cash, often in a collaborative concert with Rosanne Cash, daughter of the legendary singer. The Eroica Trio commissioned the "Poets and Prophets" piano trio and in released it on the EMI Record label. Dance troupes, including Twyla Tharp Dance Co., the New York City Ballet, Alvin Ailey and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, are staging and choreographing Mr.
O'Connor's lyrical American music, and O'Connor frequently collaborates with director Ken Burns for the sound tracks of his documentary films.
EARLY YEARS
At age 13, he was the youngest person ever to win the Grand Master Fiddler Championships competing against all ages, amateur and professional.
Forty years later, his record still stands. Mr. O’Connor is still the only person to ever win national titles (open to all ages) on fiddle, bluegrass guitar and mandolin (Weiser, ID; Winfield, Kansas; Kerrville, TX). Mr. O’Connor won a record breaking six Country Music Association Musician Of The Year Awards in a row in Nashville, TN.
At age 17 Mr. O'Connor played guitar as a member of one of the greatest acoustic string bands of the s, the David Grisman Quintet. At age 19 he played violin and guitar alongside Steve Morse as a member of one of the greatest rock-fusion instrumental bands of the s, The Dregs. In his twenties he was a member of one of the greatest acoustic bands of all time with four of the greatest players on their respective instruments, Strength in Numbers (with Bela Fleck, Sam Bush, Jerry Douglas and Edgar Meyer).
He also assembled two of the greatest Country bands of all time in and - The American Music Shop house band and New Nashville Cats. During his twenties, Mr. O'Connor became the most in demand session musician of any instrument and in any genre for a 3-year period, appearing on more top ten hits in the country, recording over albums, and recording with everyone - Dolly Parton, James Taylor, Paul Simon, Randy Travis, The Judds, the list is too long to print.
EDUCATIONAL WORK
Mr.
O'Connor regularly conducts three-day residencies, giving lectures, demonstrations, and workshops at a variety of music programs around the country. Some of his recent hosts include The Juilliard School, Harvard University, Berklee College of Music, Cleveland Institute of Music, Rice University, University of Maryland, University Of Texas, Curtis Institute, Eastman School of Music, Tanglewood, and Aspen Summer Festival.
Appalachia waltz by yo-yo ma biography for kids MusicBrainz release group. Brahms: Cello Sonatas He's not -- There's no wall. I discovered this.Mr. O'Connor was Artist-in-Residence at UCLA from and at University of Miami from Mr. O'Connor was the founder and president of the internationally recognized Mark O'Connor String Camp, and now is directing the O’Connor Method Camp New York City.
O'CONNOR METHOD (Website)
The O'Connor Method for violin and strings has been widely praised since its debut in fall as "an American grown rival to the Suzuki method" (The New Yorker).
It takes an American Classical approach to modern violin playing, offering a technical foundation using songs from the diverse range of traditional American string playing. The groundbreaking method is the first violin method to feature all American music and has been hailed by teachers from across the country as filling a significant gap in classical music education.
It was inspired by the thousands of students O'Connor has taught at his string camps and at universities and conservatories across the country, and by his belief that the modern classical violin student who develops a working knowledge of folk fiddling, jazz music and world music styles can enjoy a lifetime of music-making, and be more successful in the new music environment.
Three professional CDs have been released featuring music from the books, “American Classics,” “America on Strings,” and “MOC4.” The O’Connor Method and its companion orchestra book series is now being taught to tens of thousands of students around the country and parts of the world.
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