Kronos Festival @ SFJAZZ

One Ronnie's Awesome List family will WIN 4 tickets to see Kronos Quartet perform a family concert entitled "Around the World with Kronos" on April 28th, 11am at SFJAZZ Center, as part of their Kronos Festival 2018. It is an hour-long program featuring a mix of eclectic and energetic music from across the globe. Great for ages 3 and up. 

For nearly 45 years, the Kronos Quartet has performed thousands of concerts worldwide, commissioned more than 900 works, collaborated with many of the world's most accomplished composers and performers. They’ve released over 60 recordings and film soundtracks as well as mentoring young artists and more. I caught up with David Harrington, artistic director, founder and violinist of the San Francisco based Grammy winning string quartet the Kronos Quartet to find out more about the upcoming family concert at SFJAZZ.

Can you tell me more about Kronos Festival 2018's family concert Kronos Festival 2018's family concert "AROUND THE WORLD WITH KRONOS" this April 28 at the SFJAZZ Center in San Francisco?  

DH: Our family concerts are one of my favorite concerts that we play. A lot of times on tour we notice when we are doing sound check that parents will bring their kids and sometimes we play in schools. We began to notice we don’t do that as much at home. So the last few years we’ve been doing family concerts as part of our annual hometown festival and I love it when parents bring their kids so we can talk to them during the concert and after the concert. What we try to do is make a concert, about an hour long, it moves by quickly. There’s generally music from most of the continents and many different cultures. It’s great when concerts bring families together and that’s what this is all about.  

How are you hoping will this resonate with families?  

DH: The music is fun, it’s varied, there’s all kinds of music and sounds that can be made on instruments. And I think celebrating work that is handmade, that’s what we’re doing. And we’re trying to give our audiences what it’s like to be in Kronos. So, each of us will have a solo, probably there will be fast music, slow music, sad music, happy music. All kinds of things like that.  

Can you tell me more about your background in music leading up to when The Kronos Quartet was formed in 1973?

DH: I started playing in quartets when I was 12 AND contemporary music when I was 15. I was very lucky because there was AN EXCELLENT music PROGRAM in the public school that I went to. The Seattle Youth Symphony was ALSO a wonderful resource. THERE, I got to know all kinds of musicians. When I first heard string quartet music at age 12 all I had to do is call up three members of the Seattle Youth Symphony and check out some music out of the public library. We were able just following what we heard on the record. Ever since then, I felt that I wanted to try to make that kind of experience available for others. If our concerts can encourage young players and composers, that’s exactly what we’re hoping for.  

How were your parents and school supportive towards your musical education?  

Photo By Jay Blakesberg

DH: I didn’t come from a family of musicians but my parents were very supportive. My parents rented me an instrument, I had private lessons shortly after that and just tried to get as many musical experiences as I possibly could. As a teenager, the thing I loved to do the most was go to concerts and play string quartet music. I'd always get there before everybody else and I’d sit in the front row. I WANTED to be where the action was. Being curious about the world of music is something that I always felt. I realized how big the world of music truly is and how varied and how unbelievably rich and inviting. I felt the desire to connect the string quartet as an art form with as many of the most amazing traditions of music from around the world. That’s something we spend a lot of our energy and time trying to accomplish in Kronos.  

As a parent to a budding musician, I want to keep encouraging her passion in music. Do you have any encouraging words or advice and perhaps to parents like myself to keep encouraging her along this path?  

DH: Blanket advice is not something I feel comfortable about giving, but I think one thing to be sure of is that there be available as many different kinds of music and art. Not only just music but paintings and sculptures and dance and fabrics. Things that people make and the result of our imaginations is an opportunity to experience those sorts of celebrations of creativity. I think that's a very good thing for all of us and especially for the youngest members of our society.  

How did you come up with the name Kronos (Quartet)?  

DH: In October of 1973, we had our first concert in November and we didn’t have a name. So what we did is we got out our Greek and Roman Mythological Dictionary and a bottle of wine and a great big piece of paper and started writing down our favorite gods and goddess names and found C-h-r-o-n-o-s. I like the idea of time and timeliness but I felt it should start with a “K”. Only years later I found out that was a different god but anyway, that’s how we came up with the name.  

Now that you look back at your amazing career in music, what would you say is the crown jewel of your professional career?  

DH: Kronos has been really fortunate. There’s been a lot of jewels in whatever crown we are wearing and there’s lots of shining lights coming from whatever crown we might be apart of. It would be real hard to focus in on one experience. To have some of the composers that we’ve worked with and have them join us in rehearsals, and to be learning from some of the most creative people in our world, that has always been very important to me. I think music is continually a learning experience and nobody can say that they’re the best at anything. There’s always somebody that can do something better. That person might be very young or very old. You can learn new things all the time. And I guess, now that I think about it, the crown jewel in our career is the fact that in a couple of minutes I’m going to go to a rehearsal and the intensity of desire to make Kronos more vital, more in tune, and more together is as strong today as it was in 1973. So to me that’s the crown jewel.

Now that Kronos Quartet has been around for over 40 years, what do you think your most important contribution to music?  

DH: We’ve tried to ensure that our art form, the string quartet, two violins, a viola and a cello, can travel comfortably around the world of music. I mean, virtually anything you can thing of that is fun and exciting and expressive and wonderful, that’s the kind of work I want Kronos to be apart of. We’ve been working on that every day for all these years and in the process I believe we’ve tried to take the preciousness out of what a string quartet concert might be. We’ve tried to bring elements that we find important to consider into our concerts. I feel that every concert we’ve ever played, every experience we’ve ever made, is an anti-war, anti-violence experience. I think people of every culture, that I’m aware of, celebrate life through music. To me, it is important that our concerts reflect that as much as possible.  

I’m very proud of the fact that at this point there are as many women composers writing for Kronos as men composers. I’m very proud of the fact that our “Pieces of Africa” album was the first album of African string quartet music. I’m very proud of the performance that we’re able to do of “Black Angels” by George Crumb. So, we try to make concerts really as vital and exciting as we possibly can and bring in all kinds of elements of lighting and sonic reinforcements and all sorts of variety. Those are the things we have accomplished so far. 

You said in an interview, "I think everything is personal. Everything is also political, in that every decision you make expresses something of how you want the world to be." In today's current political climate, how is the Kronos Quartet interpreting this.  

DH: Well, if anything I’ve tripled, quadrupled, quintupled my search for the most incredible music we can find. I think the focus on work that cuts through all sorts of distraction is incredibly important and I think that by bringing voices of wisdom into our concerts, I’m hoping there will be a ripple effect. And that’s what I’m looking for. And you can find musical wisdom in a lot of places. It’s not just dead white guys from Europe in the 18-19 century. And so I think that search is something that’s even more important right now. More than ever.  

Finally, I like to end with what are you working on now?

We’re putting everything together for our festival that is happening in two weeks. And I neglected to mention that we have this program called 50 for the Future. 50 for the Future is, We’re right in the middle of it now, in fact in the fourth year of it. We’re attempting to create a body of contemporary string quartet work that will be available for free, online to players all over the world. So you can download any of these pieces, anytime of the day or night and you can learn to play them in your quartet whereever you are in the world. You can look at them now. They’re on our website, you can see and listen to interviews with each of the composers. We're trying to make a body of work learning repertoire that will allow other musicians into the kind of work that Kronos does.  

You can meet David and the Kronos Quartet at the Kronos Festival 2018 on April 26th-28th at the SFJAZZ Center in San Francisco. For more information visit sfjazz.org or kronosquartet.org/kronos-festival-2018.  


KRONOS FESTIVAL 2018

SFJAZZ Center (201 Franklin Street, San Francisco, California)
Click the concert titles below to learn more and view full programs

THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2018

Opening Night
7:30 PM | Robert N. Miner Auditorium
Kronos Quartet with David Coulter and guests Mahsa Vahdat, CocoRosie and Zakir Hussain
SOLD OUT! Thank you

FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 2018

Day 2
7:30 PM | Robert N. Miner Auditorium
Kronos Quartet with David Coulter and guests Trio Da Kali and Jolie Holland, plus a special appearance by Ruth Asawa San Francisco School of the Arts’ Dragon String Quartet
Tickets: $20-$65 / Reserved seating // Buy tickets >

SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 2018

Family Concert / “Around the World with Kronos”
11:00 AM | Robert N. Miner Auditorium
Tickets: $10 youth (16 and under), $15 adults / General Admission // Buy tickets >

Amaranth Quartet Plays Kronos’ Fifty for the Future
2:00 PM | Joe Henderson Lab
Tickets: $20 / General Admission // Buy tickets >

David Coulter & Friends
5:00 PM | Joe Henderson Lab
David Coulter with guests Sahba Aminikia, The Living Earth Show and bran(…)pos
Tickets: $25 / General Admission // Buy tickets >

Day 3
7:30 PM | Robert N. Miner Auditorium
Kronos Quartet with David Coulter and guests San Francisco Girls Chorus and Vân-Ánh Võ
Tickets: $20-$65 / Reserved seating // Buy tickets >

ABOUT THE FESTIVAL

The San Francisco–based, Grammy-winning Kronos Quartet and its nonprofit Kronos Performing Arts Association presents their fourth annual hometown music festival Kronos Festival 2018 this April at SFJAZZ Center. With six concerts over three days, Kronos Festival 2018 illustrates one of the group’s central artistic tenets: collaboration.

Together for the first time since the release of their critically acclaimed joint album Ladilikan last fall, Kronos and the Malian griot ensemble Trio Da Kali perform music from the LP that topped several year-end best-of lists, including SonglinesfRoots and the Transglobal World Music Chart. Returning from previous festivals are Zakir Hussain, Mahsa Vahdat, Vân-Ánh Võ and the San Francisco Girls Chorus, conducted by Valérie Sainte-Agathe. Kronos also unveils exciting new projects with the wildly performative experimental duo CocoRosie and genre-bending singer-songwriter Jolie Holland. Additional guests to be announced.

This year’s festival highlights the expansive sonic worlds of David Coulter, who serves as the festival’s artist-in-residence. The British-born, Bay Area–based multidisciplinary artist, musician, composer, director and educator has worked with Kronos since the 1990s. Known for his work with The Pogues, Tom Waits, Robert Wilson, Laurie Anderson, Yoko Ono, Beck and Gorillaz, as well as his theatrical scores, including A.C.T.‘s recent production of A Thousand Splendid Suns, Coulter will be featured throughout the festival.

“It is both thrilling and a great honor to have been invited by Kronos Quartet to be artist-in-residence for this festival,” says Coulter. “Each time I have collaborated with them it has been an exhilarating voyage into the unknown. We share a sense of adventure and are not afraid of taking risks. As a musician, I am an improviser with a very strong sense of ritual. I look at my work as sonic meditation, a musical exploration of resonance, playing with time, a creation of space, an exploration of emotions to create vivid images. To be given the opportunity to spend several days sharing a stage with some of the most magical performers I know is a fabulous gift.”

“Kronos Festival 2018 is a giant leap for our work,” says David Harrington, Kronos’ artistic director, founder and violinist. “We are building on previous Kronos Festivals, deepening relationships, alerting our audience to some ideas from diverse corners of the world of music, celebrating possibilities recently revealed to us. I hope our audiences will be emboldened, energized and thrilled by the amazing range of work that is currently possible.”

A thread woven throughout the festival is Kronos’ Fifty for the Future open access education initiative, which is commissioning—and distributing for free—a learning library of contemporary repertoire. Eleven of these 50 commissions will be performed by Kronos and, fittingly, by the Ruth Asawa San Francisco School of the Arts’ Dragon String Quartet and the Bay Area–based ensemble Amaranth Quartet.