Guy Klucevsek
Citrus, My Love
Generously imbued with
melodic charm and grace
—The Wire
Strikingly beautiful
—AllMusic Review
Uplifting, positive music [that] still sounds fresh and lively
—Vital Weekly

Starkland’s re-issue of Guy Klucevsek’s “Citrus, My Love” album, out of print for over 25 years, replaces a gaping hole in this master accordionist’s discography. The release offers two substantial works composed for dance, Citrus, My Love (1990) and Passage North (1990), separated by another piece Patience and Thyme (1991). Listening today, Klucevsek finds the music is “solemn, introspective, and incredibly personal.”

“It broke my heart when the ‘Citrus, My Love’ recording went out of print” Klucevsek wistfully recalls. Originally released in 1993, the CD was abandoned just two years later when the RecRec Swiss label disappeared. Starkland’s re-issue presents all of the original notes, along with new, updated materials.

The album contains some of my most personal, deeply felt, emotional music, which is why I'm incredibly excited and delighted Starkland is re-releasing it.
—Guy Klucevsek

In addition to a standard digital album (the music and a thorough 10-page booklet), there is a special Bonus package consisting of the standard album and exclusive access to 13 new videos, during which Klucevsek discusses each track, the release as a whole, his compositional techniques, and influences ranging from choreographers he’s worked with to various composers, including Morton Feldman, Steve Reich, and Philip Glass.

In Mark Dery’s original Introduction, he comments that the title piece “evinces a rare gift for harmonizing sumptuous textures and unvarnished simplicity.” Regarding both Citrus, My Love and Passage North, Dery writes they “conjure the austere beauty of Shaker furniture; the artless honesty of William Billings’s fuguing tunes; the bear-hug lustiness of Walt Whitman’s verse. They are sturdy works with iron in their bones, no less handsome for their lack of adornment, no less profound for their plainspoken manner.”

Klucevsek’s Patience and Thyme “is a love note to my wife, Jan.” He composed the work while in residence at the Yellow Springs Institute in Pennsylvania, which coincided with his 22nd wedding anniversary.

Klucevsek’s hand-picked Bantam Orchestra adds three distinguished string players to his accordion: Mary Rowell (violin/viola); Erik Friedlander (cello); and Jonathan Storck (double bass). In addition to a standard digital album (the music and a thorough 10-page booklet), Starkland also offers a special Bonus package consisting of the standard album and private access to 13 new videos, in which Klucevsek discusses each track, the release as a whole, compositional techniques, and influences ranging from choreographers he’s worked with to various composers, such as Morton Feldman, Steve Reich, and Philip Glass.

I’m especially proud of the 13 new videos” Starkland’s Tom Steenland states. “I wanted to give meaningful insights into each track, as well as the album as a whole, and to collectively provide a mini-documentary explaining how Guy embeds complexity into his seemingly simple music.

Other Klucevsek releases on Starkland include:

  • Transylvanian Softwear” with works by William Duckworth, Fred Frith, Klucevsek, and John Zorn. Awarded a “Recording of Special Merit” by Stereo Review.
  • Free Range Accordion” with works by Burt Bacharach, Lars Hollmer, Aaron Jay Kernis, Jerome Kitzke, Klucevsek, Stephen Montague, Somei Satoh, and Lois V Vierk. “A rebel with an accordion … Klucevsek combines poker-faced wit and imagination with command of his instrument, forcing you to re-think the accordion’s limitations” (Downbeat).
  • Polka From The Fringe” A double-CD re-release presenting the most comprehensive edition of this major project conceived and shepherded by Klucevsek. Works by Mary Ellen Childs, Anthony Coleman, Dick Connette, William Duckworth, Carl Finch (of Brave Combo), Fred Frith, David Garland, Peter Garland, Phillip Johnston, Aaron Jay Kernis, John King, Mary Jane Leach, Bobby Previte, Elliott Sharp, Carl Stone, Lois V Vierk, William Obrecht, more. “A long-overdue reissue.” (John Schaefer, WNYC New Sounds). “A two-CD collection of new polkas he got from a wide range of classical new music, jazz and indie pop composers. It’s a riot, and an addictive one at that” (Los Angeles Times).
  • Teetering on the Verge of Normalcy” with works exclusively by Klucevsek. With violinist Todd Reynolds, soprano Kamala Sankaram, and pianist Alan Bern. “This heartfelt album has an especially elegiac quality” (Sarah Cahill).

Guy Klucevsek

“Klucevsek is an American treasure.”
RootsWorld

Guy Klucevsek is one of the world’s most versatile and highly respected accordionists. A composer as well as an accordion virtuoso, he has performed and/or recorded with the American Composers Orchestra, Laurie Anderson, Alan Bern, Brave Combo, the Boston Pops Orchestra, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, Dave Douglas, Bill Frisell, the Kronos Quartet, Natalie Merchant, A.R. Rahman, Tom Waits, and John Zorn. Klucevsek also performed on the John Williams film scores for Spielberg’s The Terminal, Munich, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, and The Adventures of Tintin; as a guest on Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood; and with soprano Renée Fleming at the memorial service for Senator John McCain. His group Accordion Tribe – a quintet of international composers/accordionists with Bratko Bibic (Slovenia), Lars Hollmer (Sweden), Maria Kalaniemi (Finland), and Otto Lechner (Austria) – released three albums and is the subject of Stefan Schwietert’s documentary film Accordion Tribe: Music Travels. Klucevsek is the recipient of a 2010 United States Artists Collins Fellowship, “recognizing the most compelling artists working and living in the United States.” He has written over 100 pieces for accordion for the ballroom, the beer garden, the concert hall, and for collaborations with choreographers, theatre artists, and filmmakers. His discography includes 23 recordings as soloist, leader and co-leader on Starkland, Tzadik, Winter & Winter, Innova, Review, Intuition, CRI, and XI.