Béla Fleck is often considered the world’s premier banjo
player. The 15-time Grammy winner has
earned awards in Jazz, World Music, Classical, Folk, Bluegrass, Pop
Instrumental, Gospel and more, and has been nominated in more categories than
any instrumentalist in Grammy history.
On March 3, 2017, Fleck will release Juno Concerto (Rounder
Records), a concerto for banjo and orchestra, recorded in March, 2016 with the
Colorado Symphony, conducted by Jose Luiz Gomez. The album also features two pieces for banjo
and string quartet, performed with Brooklyn Rider.
Named for his son Juno, “every note of the concerto is
colored by the experience of being a new father, and how that has changed what
is important to me as a person, as well as what I wish to express through
music,” says Fleck, who became a father for the first time at 55, with his
wife, musician Abigail Washburn.
Co-commissioned by the Canton, Colorado, South Carolina, and Louisville
Symphony Orchestras, Juno Concerto was composed in 2015.
Companion pieces to the Juno Concerto include “Griff” (G
riff), featuring Béla with the Brooklyn Rider string quartet, and the second
movement of 1984’s “Quintet for Banjo and Strings.” Recorded here for the first time in 2016, the
piece was co-written with friend and mentor, Edgar Meyer and was Béla’s first
foray into classical music.
“For Juno Concerto, I wanted to take what I had learned from
writing and performing my first concerto and apply it here. The Impostor was
written in 2011 and now that I’ve had the chance to play it over 50 times, I’ve
had the chance to observe what I like and what I think could be different,”
says Béla. “This time I wanted to improve my writing for the orchestra, to
create more and better slow music, and for the solo parts to focus on flow and
things that come naturally to the banjo, rather than attempting to do the
nearly impossible, constantly.”
Béla made the classical connection in 2001 with Perpetual
Motion, his critically acclaimed, two-time Grammy winning recording with John
Williams, Joshua Bell, Evelyn Glennie, Chris Thile, Edgar Meyer and
others. In 2003, Fleck and Meyer
debuted a double concerto for the Nashville Symphony which featured banjo and
bass, which they co-wrote. The dynamic pair collaborated again with the
Nashville Symphony in 2006 on The Melody of Rhythm, a triple concerto for
banjo, bass, and tabla, this time with Indian consummate tabla virtuoso, Zakir
Hussain. All of this built up to Béla’s
first stand-alone banjo concerto, The Impostor, a commission by the National
Symphony which premiered in 2011, followed by the companion documentary, How to
Write a Banjo Concerto.