Ben Johnston: String Quartets Nos. 2, 3, 4, & 9 cover

Ben Johnston: String Quartets Nos. 2, 3, 4, & 9

Composer
Released

While a professor at the University of Illinois in the 1960s, the composer Ben Johnston devised a system of musical notation that expanded the typical twelve-note subdivision of the octave — for centuries, the underpinning of Western harmony — to include hundreds of potential notes. Comprehending Johnston’s schema and producing these “microtones” demands an unusual set of skills: a Good Will Hunting-esque ability to instantaneously compute highly complex ratios, the hair’s breadth finesse and fearlessness of a free soloing rock climber, and an elementary school orchestra teacher’s tolerance for outrageous dissonance.

The Milwaukee-based Kepler Quartet was formed in 2002 with the express purpose of recording Johnston’s ten string quartets and, with the composer’s assistance, completed their three-volume survey in 2016. That they were even able to perform these works is a tremendous feat in and of itself; that they managed to find the heart, humor, humility, and humanity within them suggests their namesake’s once-in-a-generation genius.

Zev Kane

Suggestions
Contemporary Voices cover

Contemporary Voices

Otis Murphy, Pacifica Quartet
Julia Wolfe: Fire in My Mouth cover

Julia Wolfe: Fire in My Mouth

Jaap van Zweden, New York Philharmonic
Salsa Baroque cover

Salsa Baroque

Ensemble Caprice, Matthias Maute
Paddle To The Sea cover

Paddle To The Sea

Third Coast Percussion
Bach Bartók cover

Bach Bartók

Julien Libeer
Mass for the Endangered cover

Mass for the Endangered

Gallicantus, Gabriel Crouch
The Alehouse Sessions cover

The Alehouse Sessions

Bjarte Eike, Barokksolistene
The Suspended Harp of Babel cover

The Suspended Harp of Babel

Vox Clamantis, Cyrillus Kreek, Jaan-Eik Tulve
Gossec: Symphonies, Op. 4 Nos. 1-6 cover

Gossec: Symphonies, Op. 4 Nos. 1-6

Deutsche Kammerakademie Neuss, Simon Gaudenz, German Chamber Academy Neuss
Libertà! Mozart & the Opera cover

Libertà! Mozart & the Opera

Pygmalion, Raphaël Pichon, Sabine Devieilhe