Iannis Xenakis

May 4, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Composer Iannis Xenakis

Composer Iannis Xenakis

Iannis Xenakis is one of the leaders of modernism in music, a hugely influential composer, particularly in the later 1950s and 1960s, when he was experimenting with compositional techniques that soon entered the basic vocabulary of the twentieth-century avant garde.

Xenakis was born, not in Greece, but in Braïla, Romania, of Greek parents, on 29 May 1922. His initial training, in Athens, was as a civil engineer. In 1947, after three years spent fighting in the Greek resistance against the Nazi occupation, during which time he was very badly injured (losing the sight of an eye), he escaped a death sentence and fled to France, where he settled and subsequently became an important element of cultural life.

Xenakis was first active as an architect, collaborating with Le Corbusier on a number of projects, not least the Philips Pavilion, designed by Xenakis, at the 1958 Brussels World Fair. It was in the 1950s, too, that Xenakis’ compositions began to be published. In 1952 he attended composition classes with Olivier Messaien, who suggested that Xenakis apply his scientific training to music.

The resulting style, based on procedures derived from mathematics, architectural principles and game theory, catapulted Xenakis to the front ranks of the avant garde – although there was never any suggestion that he was a member of a clique or group: he was always his own man. He never, for example, embraced total serialism, and he also avoided more traditional devices of harmony and counterpoint; instead, he developed other ways of organising the dense masses of sound that are characteristic of his first compositions. These stochastic, or random, procedures were based on mathematical principles and were later entrusted to computers for their realisation.

But for all the formal control in their composition, Xenakis’ scores retain an elemental energy, a life-force that gives the music an impact of visceral effectiveness: works like Bohor for electronics (1962), Eonta for piano and brass quintet (1963-64), Persephassa for six percussionists, placed around the audience (1969), and the ballet Kraanerg, for 23 instrumentalists and tape (1969) all exhibit a primitive power that belies the complexity of their origins. The Sydney Morning Herald said of Kraanerg, for example, that it “remains staggeringly powerful and clamorous, an essay in constantly renewed energy that shows not the least sign of faltering”. Married with this primordial power is the composer’s fascination with ritualism, most often that of ancient Greece, finding fullest theatrical form in his setting of the Oresteia (1966).

Iannis Xenakis is published by Boosey & Hawkes.
Reprinted by kind permission of Boosey & Hawkes

Charles Wuorinen

May 4, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Composer Charles Wuorinen

Composer Charles Wuorinen

Charles Wuorinen (b. 1938, New York) is one of the world’s leading composers.  His many honors include a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship and the Pulitzer Prize (the youngest composer to receive the award).  His compositions encompass every form and medium, including works for orchestra, chamber ensemble, soloists, ballet, and stage.  Wuorinen has written more than 250 compositions to date.  His newest works include Time Regained, a fantasy for piano and orchestra for Peter Serkin, James Levine and the MET Opera Orchestra, Second Piano Quintet for Peter Serkin and the Brentano Quartet, Eighth Symphony for the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Fourth Piano Sonata for Anne- Marie McDermott and Synaxis for four soloists, strings and timpani. Upcoming projects include an opera on Annie Proulx’s Brokeback Mountain. (Wuorinen’s Haroun and the Sea of Stories based on the novel of Salman Rushdie was premiered by the New York City Opera in Fall 2004.)

Wuorinen has been described as a “maximalist,” writing music luxuriant with events, lyrical and expressive, strikingly dramatic.  His works are characterized by powerful harmonies and elegant craftsmanship, offering at once a link to the music of the past and a vision of a rich musical future.

Both as composer and performer (conductor and pianist) Wuorinen has worked with some of the finest performers of the current time and his works reflect the great virtuosity of his collaborators.

His works have been recorded on nearly a dozen labels including several releases on Naxos, Albany Records (Charles Wuorinen Series), John Zorn’s Tzadik label, and a CD of piano works performed by Alan Feinberg on the German label Col Legno.

Wuorinen is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

For further information please contact:

Howard Stokar Management
870 West End Avenue
New York, New York, 10025-4948
(212) 866-5798 [telephone]
(212) 662-0804 [fax]
hstokar@stokar.com
www.stokar.com

Tamar Diesendruck

May 4, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Composer Tamar Diesendruck

Composer Tamar Diesendruck

Tamar Diesendruck’s favored compositional medium is virtuosic chamber music, although she has also composed solo, orchestral and vocal works. Her music is often characterized as having a very wide range of expression. Works include experimental pieces like “8 —> ∞” for eight cellos (eight tends toward infinity), and unusually slow, stark music like “the grief that does not speak”. Prof. Diesendruck’s work has been performed throughout the U.S., and in Europe, by an array of excellent performers including the Pro Arte Quartet, Boston Modern Orchestra Project, Lions Gate Trio, Speculum Musicae, New Millenium Ensemble, Dinosaur Annex, Phantom Arts Ensemble, San Francisco Contemporary Music Players, New Century Players, League of Composers-ISCM, Earplay, Musica D’Oggi, Composers, Inc., Parnassus, Washington Square Contemporary Music, Prism Players, Music on the Edge, San Francisco Chamber Singers, Pittsburgh Youth Symphony Orchestra, Cabrini Quartet, pipa virtuoso Wu Man, avant garde violinist Carla Kihlstedt, pianist Donald Berman, and numerous other groups and soloists.

Prof. Diesendruck earned an M.A. and Ph.D. in Composition from the University of California, Berkeley and a B.A. from Brandeis University. Her work has been supported with a series of grants, fellowships, commissions and residencies, most notably a Guggenheim Fellowship, Bunting Fellowship awarded by the Radcliffe Institute, Rome Prize awarded by the American Academy in Rome, Koussevitzky Foundation Commissions, Fromm Foundation Commission, Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellowship, the Academy Award, Goddard Lieberson Fellowship, and Ives Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Copland Fund Recording Grants, several grants from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, and numerous residencies at The MacDowell Colony, Bellagio (Rockefeller Foundation), Yaddo, and the Djerassi Foundation. Currently she is on the Composition faculty at the University of Southern California Thornton School of Music in Los Angeles, having previously taught at the New England Conservatory, Berklee College of Music, and University of Pittsburgh.

Conlon Nancarrow

May 4, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Composer Conlon Nancarrow

Composer Conlon Nancarrow

Conlon Nancarrow (born October 27, 1912August 10, 1997) was a U.S.-born composer who lived and worked in Mexico for most of his life. He became a Mexican citizen in 1955.

Nancarrow was born in Texarkana, Arkansas. He played trumpet in a jazz band in his youth, before studying music first in Cincinnati, Ohio and later in Boston, Massachusetts with Roger Sessions, Walter Piston and Nicolas Slonimsky. He met Arnold Schoenberg during that composer’s brief stay in Boston in 1933.

In Boston, Nancarrow joined the Communist Party. When the Spanish Civil War broke out, he traveled to Spain to join the Abraham Lincoln Brigade in fighting against Francisco Franco. Upon his return to the United States in 1939, he learned that his Brigade colleagues were having trouble getting their U.S. passports renewed because of their Communist Party membership. After spending time in New York City in 1940, Nancarrow moved to Mexico to escape the harassment visited upon former Communist Party members.

Upon his first subsequent return to the U.S., in 1981 (for the New Music America festival in San Francisco), he consulted a lawyer about the possibility of returning to his native country, since the pollution in Mexico City was worsening his emphysema. He was told that he would have to sign a statement swearing that he had been “young and foolish” when he embraced communism, which he refused to do. Consequently, he continued living in Las Águilas, Mexico City, until his death at age 84. Though he had a few friends among Mexican composers, he was largely ignored by the Mexican musical establishment during most of his lifetime.

Nevertheless, it was in Mexico that Nancarrow did the work he is best known for today. He had already written some music in the United States, but the extreme technical demands they made on players meant that satisfactory performances were very rare. That situation did not improve in Mexico’s musical environment, also with few musicians available who could perform his works, so the need to find an alternative way of having his pieces performed became even more pressing. Taking a suggestion from Henry Cowell’s book New Musical Resources, which he bought in New York in 1939, Nancarrow found the answer in the player piano, with its ability to produce extremely complex rhythmic patterns at a speed far beyond the abilities of humans.

Cowell had suggested that just as there is a scale of pitch frequencies, there might also be a scale of tempi. Nancarrow undertook to create music which would superimpose tempi in cogent pieces, and by his twenty-first composition for player piano, had begun “sliding” (increasing and decreasing) tempi within strata. (see: William Duckworth, Talking Music.) Nancarrow later said that if electronic resources had been available to him at this time, he would have probably written music for them, but they were not.

Temporarily buoyed by an inheritance, Nancarrow traveled to New York City in 1947, bought a custom built, manual punching-machine to enable him to punch the piano rolls. The machine was an adaptation of one used in the commercial production of rolls, and using it was very hard work, and very slow. He also adapted the player pianos, increasing their dynamic range by tinkering with their mechanism, and covering the hammers with leather (in one player piano) and metal (in the other) so as to produce a more percussive sound. On this trip to New York he also met Cowell, and heard a performance of John Cage’s Sonatas and Interludes for prepared piano (also a result of Cowell’s esthetics), which would later lead to Nancarrow modestly experimenting with prepared piano in his Study #30.

Nancarrow’s first pieces combined the harmonic language and melodic motifs of early jazz pianists like Art Tatum with extraordinarily complicated metrical schemes. The first five rolls he made are called the Boogie-Woogie Suite (later assigned the name Study No. 3 a-e) and are probably the most jazzy of all his works. Later works tend to be more abstract, with no obvious references to any music apart from Nancarrow’s.

Many of these later pieces (which he generally called studies) are canons in augmentation or diminution or prolation canons. While most canons using this device, such as those by Johann Sebastian Bach, have the tempos of the various parts in quite simple ratios, like 2:1, Nancarrow’s canons are in far more complicated ratios. The Study No. 40, for example, has its parts in the ratio e:pi, while the Study No. 37 has twelve individual melodic lines, each one moving at a different tempo.

His music has a mathematical beauty and elegance that happily coexists with musical expressiveness and a puckish sense of humor. Nancarrow did not see a clear delineation between the two approaches and he never worried about it. This natural, organic “double-esthetic” is one of his most relevant contributions to 20th century music. Another important contribution relates to a kind of “semiological extrapolation“. On the one hand, his music can be heard as “symbols”, with their often-recognized analogical correspondences (”Blues”, “Jazz”, “Flamenco”, etc). There is, also, an “abstract, decodified profile” (the complex poly-temporal structures, for instance) which may be present in the same piece. This fact does break the statement “something is more different when its similarity decreases” generally used in semiology…

Having spent many years in obscurity, Nancarrow benefitted from the 1969 release of an entire album of his work by Columbia Records as part of a brief flirtation of the label’s classical division with modern avant garde music.

In 1982 he received a MacArthur Award which paid him $300,000 over 5 years. This increased interest in his work prompted him to write for conventional instruments, and he composed several works for small ensembles.

Still more recently, Nancarrow’s entire output for player piano has been recorded and released on the German Wergo label. Some of his Studies for Player Piano have also been arranged for musicians to play. In 1995, composer and critic Kyle Gann published a full-length study of Nancarrow’s output, The Music of Conlon Nancarrow (Cambridge University Press, 1995, 303 pp.). Jürgen Hocker, another Nancarrow specialist, published Begegnungen mit Nancarrow (neue Zeitschrift für Musik, Schott Musik International, Mainz 2002, 284 pp.)

The complete contents of Nancarrow’s studio, including the player piano rolls, the instruments, the libraries, and other documents and objects, are now in the Paul Sacher Foundation in Basel. The Germans Jurgen Hocker and Wolfgang Heisig are the current live-performers of Nancarrow’s rolls using similar acoustical instruments. Other performers of his works (often in arrangement for live musicians) include Thomas Ades, Alarm Will Sound and ensemble Calefax from the Netherlands who also recorded the Studies for player piano, already called ‘Best CD of 2009′ by Dutch newspaper Het Parool, only to be beaten by a eventual recording of the mysterious Judas-Passion by Johann Sebastian Bach, which nobody new existed.’

Jonathan Russell

March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Composer/clarinetist Jon Russell with Jeff Anderle in Squonk Duo

Composer/clarinetist Jon Russell with Jeff Anderle in Sqwonk

ADORNO is excited to premiere a new work by composer/clarinetist Jonathan Russell. Jon also performs regularly with ADORNO’s clarinetist Jeff Anderle in their bass clarinet duo, Sqwonk. An active artist in the San Francisco Bay Area, he also cofounded the Switchboard Music Festival, presenting “an eclectic, genre-crossing/-breaking/-bastardizing group of experimentalists, innovators, and musical omnivores.”

A uniquely creative and versatile musician, composer and clarinetist Jonathan Russell is active in a wide variety of music, from classical to experimental to klezmer to church music, and has composed for ensembles ranging from orchestra to bass clarinet quartet to rock band. His work stretches the boundaries of contemporary classical music, opening it up to the sounds and attitudes of the other musical traditions that surround it. His music, while deeply connected to the best of the classical tradition, is passionately concerned with the sounds and ideas of today’s world. He has received commissions from ensembles such as the San Francisco Symphony, Empyrean Ensemble, Woodstock Chamber Orchestra, and Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra, and performances from numerous other ensembles and performers, including the Berkeley Symphony, San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra, the BluePrint Project, the new music bands FIREWORKS, Capital M, and Oogog, and pianists Sarah Cahill, Lisa Moore, and Lara Downes. In the 2007 New Ariel Competition, Russell’s piano piece Metamorphosis #1 was chosen to be professionally recorded for release on the Capstone record label by acclaimed pianist Jeffrey Jacob. His orchestral composition Essay was the winner of the 2002 Lee Highsmith Orchestral Composition Competition, and received Honorable Mention in the 2003 Minnesota Orchestra Reading Competition. Upcoming projects include commissions from the Paul Dresher Ensemble, the Adorno Ensemble, Classical Revolution, and pianist Matthew McCright.
Also active as a performer on clarinet and bass clarinet, Jonathan is a member of the heavy metal inspired Edmund Welles bass clarinet quartet and the Balkan/klezmer/experimental band Zoyres. He also plays in, composes for, and is a founding member of the Sqwonk bass clarinet duo, and freelances in the Bay Area as a classical, contemporary, and klezmer clarinetist.
Jonathan teaches composition at San Francisco Conservatory’s Adult Extension and Preparatory divisions, serves as Music Director at First Congregational Church, San Francisco, writes for the online San Francisco Classical Voice, and has served on the Music Theory faculty at San Francisco Conservatory’s collegiate division. He has a B.A. in Music from Harvard University and an M.M. in Music Composition from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. His composition teachers have included Dan Becker, Elinor Armer, Eric Sawyer, John Stewart, and Eric Ewazen.

Links:

Jonathan Russell

Sqwonk

Dan Becker

March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

danbecker

Composer Dan Becker

ADORNO will perform Dan Becker’s Keeping Time, a work commissioned by Other Minds Festival in 2008, and premiered by the group. Dan received his D.M.A., M.M.A., and M.M. in Composition from Yale University, and his B.M. from the Conservatory. His teachers include Jacob Druckman, Elinor Armer, Martin Bresnick, Louis Andriessen and Terry Riley. Awards and grants include those from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Meet the Composer, the Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust, the Aaron Copland Fund for Music, ASCAP, the Jerome Foundation and the San Francisco Arts Commission. He is the founder and Artistic Director of the Common Sense Composers’ Collective, an eight-member SF/NYC-based composers’ group that has collaborated with such ensembles as the Meridian Arts Ensemble, the New Millennium Ensemble, Twisted Tutu, the Dogs of Desire Ensemble, Essential Music and the American Baroque period instrument ensemble. CDs of works by the collective can be found on the CRI and Santa Fe New Music labels. He currently serves on the board of directors of the American Music Center.

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Dan Becker

Ryan Brown

March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

ryanbrown

Composer Ryan Brown

Composer RYAN BROWN draws heavily on his omnivorous musical tastes while maintaining a unique sound all his own. His works are often noted for their energy and off-kilter, foot-tapping rhythms and have been called “modern composed music at its best: nimble, expressive, ear-turning, and strange in an accessible way, highly virtuosic but never pretentious.” (Washington City Paper)

Ryan’s music has been performed by many notable groups, performers, and presenters, including pianist Lisa Moore, guitarist Mark Stewart, the Robin Cox Ensemble, the BluePrint Project, the Great Noise Ensemble, and the MATA Festival. Ryan has received an Emerging Composer Award from the Gerbode and Hewlett Foundations, and a Morton Gould Young Composer Award from ASCAP. He is currently a fellow in the Brooklyn Philharmonic’s Composer Mentoring Program. Upcoming premieres and commissions include music for the Left Coast Ensemble, the Paul Dresher Ensemble, and the Brooklyn Philharmonic.

Ryan is a graduate of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and California State University, Long Beach, and is currently a graduate fellow at Princeton University. He has studied with Dan Becker, Martin Herman, Steve Mackey, and Bruce Miller. Visit his website at www.ryanbrownmusic.com.

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Ryan Brown

Evan Ziporyn

March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

evan_ziporyn

Composer Evan Ziporyn

Clarinetist Jeff Anderle will perform Evan Ziporyn’s virtuosic Tsmindao Ghmerto for solo clarinet. Ziporyn has toured the globe with the All-stars since 1992. He is also founder and Artistic Director of Gamelan Galak Tika, a Boston-based Balinese music and dance troupe devoted to new works by American and Balinese composers. With Galak Tika, he has presented his groundbreaking Balinese/western fusion works in venues as diverse as New York’s Zankel Hall and and the Balinese International Arts Festival. He is the recipient of the 2007 USA Artists Walker Fellowship and the 2004 American Academy of Arts and Letters Goddard Lieberson Award. His music has been commissioned and performed by Yo-yo Ma’s Silk Road Project, the Kronos Quartet, Wu Man, the American Composers Orchestra, the American Repertory Theater (their acclaimed 2004’s “Oedipus Rex”), Maya Beiser, and the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, with whom he recorded his 2006 orchestral CD, “Frog’s Eye.”

His works have been released on Cantaloupe, Sony Classical, New Albion, New World, Koch, Innova, and CRI; his 2001 solo clarinet CD, “This Is Not A Clarinet”, made numerous Top Ten lists and was featured on All Things Considered and PRI’s The World. He has also recorded for Nonesuch (including Steve Reich’s New York Counterpoint and the Grammy Award winning Music for 18 Musicians), Thirsty Ear, and Point; his music provided the soundtrack for the PBS film “Tail-enders”, and his playing was featured in Tan Dun’s soundtrack for the film “Fallen.” With the All-stars, a partial list of collaborators includes Brian Eno, Ornette Coleman, Thurston Moore, Meredith Monk, Iva Bittova, Philip Glass, Terry Riley, Don Byron, Louis Andriessen, Cecil Taylor, Henry Threadgill, Wayan Wija, Kyaw Kyaw Naing, and Pamela Z. He has also recorded with Paul Simon, Matthew Shipp, So Percussion, and Ethel. He is Kenan Sahin Distinguished Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and has two children, Leo (14) and Ava (7). He is currently working on a opera based on the life of Colin McPhee, to be premiered in Bali with the All-stars in June 2009.

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Evan Ziporyn

David Lang

March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Composer David Lang

Composer David Lang

ADORNO will perform David Lang’s “Cheating, Lying, Stealing”. “There is no name yet for this kind of music,” writes Los Angeles Times music critic Mark Swed, but audiences around the globe are hearing more and more of David Lang’s work: in performances by such organizations as the Next Wave Festival at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Santa Fe Opera, the New York Philharmonic, the San Francisco Symphony, The Cleveland Orchestra, and the Kronos Quartet; at Tanglewood, the BBC Proms, The Munich Biennale, the Settembre Musica Festival, the Sidney 2000 Olympic Arts Festival and the Almeida, Holland, Berlin and Strasbourg Festivals; and in the choreography of Edouard Lock and La La La Human Steps, Twyla Tharp, the Paris Opera Ballet, The Nederlands Dans Theater and the Royal Ballet.

Recent projects include monumental musical environments like the dark and meditative amplified orchestra piece The Passing Measures; Writing on Water for the London Sinfonietta, with visuals by English filmmaker Peter Greenaway; Shelter for trio medaeival and musikFabrik, with co-composers Michael Gordon and Julia Wolfe; The Difficulty of Crossing a Field - an opera for the Kronos Quartet; Grind to a Halt for the San Francisco Symphony; World to Come, a commission for cellist Maya Beiser from Carnegie Hall, and loud love songs, a concerto for the percussionist Evelyn Glennie and orchestra. Upcoming works include a collaboration with visual artist Mark Dion and Ridge Theater Company on an opera, entitled Anatomy Theater, and an opera with Paul Hiller and Theater of Voices that will premiere in Carnegie Hall in the fall of 2007.

His most recent CD is ELEVATED (Cantaloupe) - it comes with a DVD of Lang’s collaborations with visual artists William Wegman, Bill Morrison and Matt Mullican. The CD recording of THE PASSING MEASURES (Cantaloupe) was named one of the best CD’s of 2001 by The New Yorker magazine. Other CDs include the introspective chamber work CHILD (Cantaloupe) and other works on Sony Classical, BMG, Point, Chandos, Argo/Decca, Caprice, CRI and Cantaloupe labels.

Links:

David Lang and Bang on a Can

Julia Wolfe

March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

julia_wolfe

Composer Julia Wolfe

ADORNO volinist Graeme Jennings and pianist Eva Maria Zimmerman will perform Julia Wolfe’s “Mink Stole” for violin and piano. Wolfe’s music is muscular and kinetic and experienced through the body. She creates journeys like unfolding dramatic landscapes, a music meant to be entered into by the listener. Wolfe’s work is distinguished by this intense focus on sound, the power of sound, the ways in which sound is related to memory and experience, the possibilities for new harmonies between familiar chords and micro tonal tunings or sounds found in nature and the urban world. With a care and attention to detail that is both masterful and highly respectful, Wolfe’s music celebrates the extraordinary qualities contained within something as specific as a gesture or an inflection.

Julia Wolfe’s music is heard around the world in performances at the Next Wave Festival at BAM, the Sydney Olympic Arts Festival, Settembre Musica (Italy), the Holland Festival, Theatre de la Ville (Paris), the San Francisco Symphony, The Brooklyn Philharmonic, and more. Upcoming works include a new work FUEL for Ensemble Resonanz with a film by Bill Morrison, and an evening length work with film for the Bang on a Can All-Stars. Recent works include My Beautiful Scream for Kronos and Orchestra, Cruel Sister for string orchestra, Impatience for the Asko Ensemble to the film of the same name by early Belgian experimentalist Charles Dekeukeleire, and an accordian concerto commissioned by the Miller Theater and written for Guy Klucevsek.

Recent collaborations with composers Michael Gordon and David Lang with writer Deborah Artman include Shelter written for musikFabrik and trio mediaeval with staging by the Ridge Theater Company; Lost Objects, an oratorio with Concerto Koln directed by Francois Girard; with Gordon and Lang The Carbon Copy Building with comic book artist Ben Katchor and the Ridge Theater. For The Carbon Copy Building, she received the 2000 Village Voice OBIE Award for Best New American Work. Wolfe received a 2001 OBIE for the music to Jennie Ritchie, a collaboration with playwright Mac Wellman and Ridge Theater.

Her recording “Julia Wolfe - The String Quartets” was released on the Cantaloupe label. Wolfe’s music has also been recorded on Teldec, Universal, Sony Classical, and Argo/Decca.

(excerpt from a bio by Deborah Artman)

Links

Julia Wolfe and Bang on a Can

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