Sat May 19, 2007
NEW PROGRAM: HEAL THE WOUNDS OF WAR

HEAL THE WOUNDS OF WAR
A program of compelling musical works conceived as a homage to victims of war on a global level.
Award-winning e-cellist, Jeffrey Krieger
The performance begins with Threnody, a song of mourning for victims of war by composer, Tom Flaherty, followed by Landmine, a text/sound work by Anna Rubin, which explores the landmine crisis especially as it has effected Cambodia. Interviews with experts in the field are heard interwoven with sampled sounds triggered by the performer as well as e-cello sound. Next, Jonathan Berger’s riveting work, The Lead Plates of the ROM Press, depicts the Nazi occupation members of the Resistance attempts to melt down the plates of great literary works and religious tracts in order to produce ammunition. Finally, the title work, Heal the Wounds of War for e-cello and video by composer, Ken Steen and media artist, Lyn Harper is composed of "found images" from broadcast TV programming on Veterans' Day, 1987 accompanied by haunting ethereal e-cello and electronic sound.
Images and a short video of a performance of Heal the Wounds of War can be found at http://www.xenarts.com/music/krieger/krieger_media.php
This program is eligible for a Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism Arts Presentation Grant.
For additional information please contact Jeffrey Krieger at vcvolt@yahoo.com or (860)291-9437
Sat Mar 24, 2007
CONCERT PHOTOS: Jaipur, India 3/20/07

International School of Informatics & Management
Jaipur, India
Tuesday, February 20 2007 11 am
PROGRAM
On Connecticut Naturalism by Michael Gatonska
Shadows & Light by Ken Steen
Landmine by Anna Rubin
Tue Mar 20, 2007
Suddenly It's Evening for solo e-cello by Donald Erb available on iTunes
Suddenly It's Evening by Donald Erb for solo e-cello is now available for download on iTunes. Here is what the composer, who turns 80 this year, writes about the music.
Suddenly It’s Evening (1997) was a commission from the Fromm Foundation and was composed for Jeffrey Krieger and his electronic cello. The title is taken from a poem by Salvatore Quasimodo and is only three lines in length. The English translation is:
Each of us is alone on the heart of the earth
pierced by a ray of sun:
and suddenly it’s evening.
The titles of the four movements are meant to give the audience some insight into the character of each movement. The first movement Xanax in Xanadu is introspective, rather sad, with a chilly end to it. Interlude, the second movement which separates two slow movements, is fiery, virtuosic and designed to show the cellist off as a dazzling good one. Winter in My Heart is sad music, written perhaps about the concerns of an old person; and Eyes of Flame which follow is fierce and fast and is, again, meant to be a showcase for the cellist.
A review in the Cleveland Plain Dealer by Music Critic, Donald Rosenberg said about a performance in 2001 at the Cleveland Museum of Art the following. "It is a beautiful creation concerned with musical communication rather than mere equipment."
More...
Mon Mar 19, 2007
REVIEW: New Delhi, American Center Auditorium 2/25/07
Cello Takes a Bow
The e-version of the instrument played new sounds, thanks to an eager musician and a software
Pallavi Jassi
New Delhi, February 25: The Beatles may have pioneered the use of the cello in popular music by adding its delicate strains to the songs Eleanor and Strawberry fields but the instrument sings an entirely different tune in the hands of American musician Jeffrey Krieger. It is an e-world out there as he plays a uniquely shaped electric cello, plugged to a laptop, and reads the score on the monitor.
While the violin is admitted even to the hallowed hall of conservative Carnatic music, its cousin cello is a strange presence on the Indian stage. E-cello is even stranger. “An electric cello is like an electric guitar. However, in the case of the e-cello, it needs an amplifier. Otherwise you cannot hear a sound,” says Krieger after his performance at the American Center.
Fri Mar 09, 2007
REVIEW: Kala Academy, Goa, India 3/1/07
PANJIM: Renowned chamber musician Jeffrey Krieger gave an admirable and rare performance at the KA Black Box, in collaboration with The American Centre, Kala Academi, and the Guitar Guild-Goa. The solo electronic cello performance regaled the music lovers as Krieger used a sophisticated technique with a wide variety of sounds which the toy-like cello produced with a computer as interface.
American Center, New Delhi, India Photo
University of Hartford Unotes India Tour
http://www.hartford.edu/daily/news.asp?id=2605
Wed Jan 24, 2007
INDIA TOUR 2007 CONCERT - HARTFORD, CT
Jeffrey Krieger, e-cello
India Tour 2007 Concert
Centinel Hill Hall - 11th floor
Capitol Community College
950 Main Street, Hartford CT
Thursday, February 8, 2007
12:00 p.m
Works by Michael Gatonska, Anna Rubin and Donald Erb
ADMISSION FREE!!!
Sun Oct 22, 2006
Reliquary of Labor Podcast 47
Mon Oct 02, 2006
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