LAURIE ANDERSON HOMELAND

 

EXPANSIVE NEW WORK EXPLORES POLITICS AND AMERICAN CULTURE

INTERNATIONAL TOUR PRECEDES 2009 NONESUCH RECORDS ALBUM RELEASE

“Laurie Anderson is a singer-songwriter of crushing poignancy—a minimalist painter of melancholy moods who addresses universal themes in the vernacular of the commonplace.”—Rolling Stone

Laurie Anderson’s new work Homeland presents the vast landscape that is contemporary American culture through the lens of one of the world’s foremost and critically acclaimed artists. The piece, part political dialogue, part poetry song cycle, combines words, electronics and live music. Anderson will perform Homeland at concert halls and theatres across the globe, beginning March 26 at Carnegie Hall’s Zankel Hall in New York City. The tour includes performances at London’s Barbican Theatre and Spoleto Festival and will be followed by the release of Homeland on Nonesuch Records in early 2009.

The foundations of Homeland were created on the road through a series of performances and improvisations at venues ranging from small clubs to an ancient theatre on the Acropolis in Athens. The piece draws on an array of influences collected along the way—Tuvan throat singers, jazz improvisers and New York experimental artists contribute voices to what has become one of Anderson’s most political works to date. Her recent sonic experiments with the violin, along with groove-oriented electronics and traditional instruments such as the Chinese erhu, shape the piece as well. Homeland is as much a process as it is a statement, as each version is unique.

The themes Anderson explores with Homeland cover a breadth of contemporary issues, from the war and the media to America’s growing surveillance culture and the environment. In 2004, while making a film commissioned for the World Expo in Japan, Anderson began to contemplate the meaning of place via the short stories she was using in the work. One of the stories touched on losing things, or the feelingof losing things. “‘I knew I had lost something but I just couldn’t put my finger on it,’ was one of the lines in the story,” Anderson explains. “Like when you feel bereft and you don’t know whether it’s because you lost your keys or your job or because your grandfather just died,” she continues. “But I started to think about when I wrote that story and I remembered that it was when we began the invasion of Iraq. And what I’d lost was my country.” Anderson applies that notion to Homeland’s thematic threads.

For U.S. performances of Homeland, Anderson is joined by Okkyung Lee (cello), Peter Scherer (keyboard) and Skuli Sverrisson (bass). In Europe her group features Eyvind Kang (viola), Peter Scherer (keyboard) and Skuli Sverrisson (bass).

Laurie Anderson is one of America’s most renowned—and daring—creative pioneers. Her work, which encompasses music, visual art, poetry, film and photography, has challenged and delighted audiences around the world for more than 30 years. Anderson is best known for her multimedia presentations and musical recordings. Anderson’s first album, O Superman, launched her recording career in 1980, rising tonumber two on the British pop charts and subsequently appearing on her landmark release Big Science. She went on to record six more albums with Warner Brothers. In 2001, Anderson recorded her first album with Nonesuch Records, the critically lauded Life on a String. Anderson’s tours have taken her around the world, where she has presented her work in small arts spaces and grand concert halls—and everywhere in between. She has numerous major works to her credit, along with countless collaborations with an array of artists, from Jonathan Demme and Brian Eno to Bill T. Jones and Peter Gabriel. Anderson is recognized worldwide as a groundbreaking leader in the use of technology in the arts: she was appointed the first artist-in-residence of NASA in 2002. Anderson was also part of the team that created the opening ceremony for the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. More recently, she received the prestigious Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize for her outstanding contribution to the arts.


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For more information, please contact
Carla Sacks or Brian Shimkovitz at Sacks & Co., 212.741.1000.


photo credit Jonas Karlsson

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March 26 New York, NY Zankel Hall at Carnegie Hall
March 29 Boston, MA Opera House
April 4 Akron, OH EJ Thomas Hall at Univ. of Akron
April 6 Scottsdale, AZ Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts
April 9 Santa Barbara, CA Campbell Hall
April 10 Los Angeles, CA Royce Hall at UCLA
April 12 Boulder, CO Boulder Theater
April 14 Madison, WI Overture Hall
April 16 Chicago, IL Harris Theatre for Music & Dance
April 24 Riga, Latvia Arena Riga
April 26 Moscow, Russia Moscow Central Russian Army Theatre
April 30-May 3 London, UK Barbican Theatre
May 5 Norfolk, UK Theatre Royal
May 7 Vicenza, Italy Max Live
May 9 Luzern, Switzerland KKL
May 11 Modena, Italy Teatro Communale
May 13 Granada, Spain Teatro Alhambra
May 14 Sevilla, Spain Teatro Central
May 16 Santiago, Spain Auditorio de Garcia
May 18 Murcia, Spain Auditorio de Murcia
June 4-6 Charleston, SC Spoleto Festival
June 13-14 Toronto, Ontario Luminato Festival
July 22-26 New York, NY Rose Theater at Lincoln Center
September 12 Lawrence, KA Lied Center of Kansas
September 14 Atlanta, GA Ferst Center for the Arts
September 16 Gainesville, FL Phillips Center
September 18 Durham, NC Duke University
September 20 Princeton, NJ McCarter Theatre
October 10 Houston, TX Cullen Theater
October 12 Dallas, TX McFarlin Auditorium
October 16 Seattle, WA The Moore Theater
October 18 Vancouver, BC Centre for the Performing Arts
October 20 La Jolla, CA Mandeville Auditorium
October 22 Davis, CA Mondavi Center for the Art
October 24-25 Berkeley, CA Zellerbach Hall