Mark Abel. 4.4.2 Mark Abel

Cover Mark Abel. 4.4.2

Album info

Album-Release:
2026

HRA-Release:
13.02.2026

Label: Delos

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Chamber Music

Artist: Mark Abel

Composer: Mark Abel (1948)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Mark Abel (b. 1948): As the World Turns:
  • 1 Abel: As the World Turns: No. 1, Rising High 05:36
  • 2 Abel: As the World Turns: No. 2, Might Makes Right 05:03
  • 3 Abel: As the World Turns: No. 3, Oh, What a Glorious Thing 05:49
  • 4 Abel: As the World Turns: No. 4, Counting the Years 03:50
  • Samantha Sketches:
  • 5 Abel: Samantha Sketches: I. Best of Intentions 07:31
  • 6 Abel: Samantha Sketches: II. Skyward 04:52
  • 7 Abel: Samantha Sketches: III. An Urgent Matter 05:05
  • Symbiotica:
  • 8 Abel: Symbiotica: I. — 07:03
  • 9 Abel: Symbiotica: II. — 11:50
  • A Door Opens:
  • 10 Abel: A Door Opens: I. — 05:49
  • 11 Abel: A Door Opens: II. — 09:22
  • Total Runtime 01:11:50

Info for Mark Abel. 4.4.2



Composer Mark Abel, a long-standing partner of Delos, is releasing his seventh album on the label. It bears the matter-of-fact title "4.4.2" and contains the world premiere of four works for two musicians. The album is a combination of vocal and chamber music and offers a tantalizing glimpse into Abel's diverse sound world. It showcases one of America's most original composers alongside an impressive roster of international artists. The five-piece lineup includes rising mezzo-soprano Simone McIntosh, flutist Alice K. Dade, violinist Jennifer Choi, cellist Jonah Kim and pianists Michael McMahon, Ieva Jokubaviciute and Keisuke Nakagoshi, as well as the composer himself on organ. 4.4.2 will certainly further establish Mark Abel as a "master of composing fascinating contemporary music".

Simone McIntosh, mezzo-soprano
Michael McMahon, piano
Alice K. Dade, flute & piccolo
Leva Jokubaviciute, piano
Jennifer Choi, violin
Jonah Kim, cello
Keisuke Nakagoshi, piano
Mark Abel, organ



Mark Abel
is an American composer born in 1948 and based in Northern California. He is known for his distinctive vocal and chamber works and his multiple collaborations with Grammy-winning soprano Hila Plitmann. A rock musician as a young man, Abel began developing his signature style during a 20+-year career as a newspaper editor in San Francisco. His music began to circulate after he became affiliated in 2012 with the Delos label, which has issued seven Abel albums. The newest is 4.4.2 – a broad survey of his palette of expression to be released on February 13, 2026.

Abel’s idiom eludes easy pigeon-holing. Possessing a strong gift for melody, he first made his mark with vocal music, its contours extending from art song to larger forms involving the orchestra to a 103-minute opera. An expansion into chamber music beginning in 2018 has led to recorded performances by revered figures such as David Shifrin, Fred Sherry, Carol Rosenberger and Isabel Bayrakdarian, and impressive talents including cellist Jonah Kim, mezzos Kindra Scharich and Simone McIntosh, violinists Jennifer Choi and Sabrina-Vivian Höpcker, flutist Alice K. Dade, and pianists Dominic Cheli, Ieva Jokubaviciute, Robert Koenig, Sean Kennard and Jeffrey LaDeur. Abel’s seamless incorporation of rock and jazz elements into classical structures has been praised as one of the very few successful experiments along those lines.

Abel has set poetry by Rainer Maria Rilke, Marina Tsvetaeva, Pablo Neruda and California poets Kate Gale and Joanne Regenhardt. He has also increasingly been recognized as a lyricist of considerable emotional depth in his own right, praised for shining a light on timeless and contemporary issues.

Abel's releases on Delos in 2022 and 2020, Spectrum and The Cave of Wondrous Voice, introduced his first chamber works as well as several major vocal pieces. Time and Distance (2018) features Hila Plitmann and mezzo Janelle DeStefano. Home Is a Harbor (2016) includes Abel’s first opera (a look at modern America through the lens of twentysomething twin sisters) and the Gale-derived, Los Angeles-centric cycle “The Palm Trees Are Restless,” brilliantly sung by Plitmann. His first two Delos albums are the art song showcase Terrain of the Heart (2014) and the large-scale orchestral song cycle The Dream Gallery (2012).

Abel’s creative life suggests a tapestry woven with two primary and powerful strands: Music and journalism. Son of the distinguished reporter and author Elie Abel, Mark grew up in America, Europe and Asia, receiving as a child crucial exposure to the fast-moving global political and cultural events of the 1950s and 1960s. This immersion included an introduction to classical music, which was his consuming artistic interest until his early teens. It was then supplanted for some time by modern jazz and later by rock, the medium through which he first developed his talents as a writer of vocal music. Mark briefly attended Stanford University in the turbulent late '60s but decided to strike out on his own at the age of 20.

As a guitarist, bassist, songwriter and record producer in New York in the 1970s and into the '80s, Abel led his own groups and also collaborated with seminal rock figures such as Tom Verlaine (Television), the Feelies, Michael Brown (the Left Banke), Danny Kalb (the Blues Project) and Harold Kelling, founder of the legendary Atlanta fusion group the Hampton Grease Band. In 1971 Mark participated as a choral singer in the recording of jazz composer Carla Bley's groundbreaking masterpiece Escalator Over the Hill.

Abel relocated to California in 1983 and made a vocational shift into journalism, eventually becoming the foreign editor of the San Francisco Chronicle (the second largest newspaper on the West Coast), a post he held until 2004. During those years, much changed in his musical world as he began working out more complex compositional ideas, an evolving process that led him back to classical music.

Abel’s principal heroes include composers such as Ives, Szymanowski, Brahms, Duparc, Strauss, Debussy, Berg, Janacek, Lutoslawski, Takemitsu and Dutilleux. He also cites enduring inspiration from jazz figures from his early years, among them: John Coltrane, Thelonious Monk, Eric Dolphy, Paul Bley and Denny Zeitlin. Mark views his mission going forward as refining and expanding his signature synthesis of musical building blocks.

Abel's music has been given at venues including SongFest in Los Angeles, Chamber Music Northwest in Portland, OR., the Broad Stage in Santa Monica, Festival Mozaic in San Luis Obispo, the Irvine Barclay Theater, Boston Court in Pasadena, the unSUNg series in Glendale, the Olmos Ensemble series in San Antonio, TX., and the San Francisco Music Festival. He currently resides in Sonoma, CA.

Booklet for Mark Abel. 4.4.2

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