


Voices 2: CD
Voices 2, the second part of Max Richterās VOICES on CD, including a 12 page booklet of photos and credits.
Described by Richter as āa place to thinkā, VOICES was a response to our tempestuous political climate and the enduring need for compassion. VOICES 2 develops this principle, continuing and intensifying the āplace to thinkā concept. While the first part of the project focuses on the text of The Universal Declaration Of Human Rights and its uplifting vision ā opening with the 1949 recording of Eleanor Roosevelt reading the Declaration, and including excerpts read by a global community of 70 voices ā VOICES 2 opens up a meditative musical space to consider those ideas raised by the first record.
āOne of the things that was really striking, when we premiered the music, was that even though everyone knows of the Declaration, not many people have actually read it or spent time with it,ā says Richter. āThe overwhelming comment we had from the audience was āitās amazing to hear that textā. If people can have time to experience that text, and then in the second part of the record really spend time thinking about it, that for me is a perfect outcome.ā
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Description
Voices 2, the second part of Max Richterās VOICES on CD, including a 12 page booklet of photos and credits.
Described by Richter as āa place to thinkā, VOICES was a response to our tempestuous political climate and the enduring need for compassion. VOICES 2 develops this principle, continuing and intensifying the āplace to thinkā concept. While the first part of the project focuses on the text of The Universal Declaration Of Human Rights and its uplifting vision ā opening with the 1949 recording of Eleanor Roosevelt reading the Declaration, and including excerpts read by a global community of 70 voices ā VOICES 2 opens up a meditative musical space to consider those ideas raised by the first record.
āOne of the things that was really striking, when we premiered the music, was that even though everyone knows of the Declaration, not many people have actually read it or spent time with it,ā says Richter. āThe overwhelming comment we had from the audience was āitās amazing to hear that textā. If people can have time to experience that text, and then in the second part of the record really spend time thinking about it, that for me is a perfect outcome.ā












