New & Notable Classical Albums

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  • edited July 2016
    Newish, (april 2015), released on Ars Harmonica:

    - "This radio work (radio poem) celebrates the 100th birthday of the cuban poet Nicolas Guillen (1902-1989) and uses his marvelous, powerful, strong and musical voice, coming from old LP recordings, introducing, for certain texts, the voice of my colleague at the Pompeu Fabra University, the cuban Ruben Hinojosa. The piece is divided in three parts and uses a vocal processor developed by the Music Technology Group of the Pompeu Fabra University of Barcelona, a processor that allows to program in real time 4 voices independently, and each voice may be manipulated separately in real time. The present composition is a selection of recordings mixed according to studio work. Caminando means walking, we all walk in life, we never cease to walk until the very end, all changes and keeps changing. Guillén uses a mervelous afro-cuban-spanish language full of rhythm and expression in his poetry."
    More Tracks:
    Ludus Basiliensis
    Microtonalidades
    Ludus Allavarium
    Viso di Primavera
    - Radioartnet - Bandcamp

    Andrés Lewin-Richter Ossiander (born 1937) is a Spanish composer of electronic music.

    - "Born in Miranda de EbroSpain, he began his studies in engineering at Polytechnic University of Catalonia in 1955. Seven years later, he received a Fulbright Fellowship to continue his studies at Columbia University in New York to study with Vladimir UssachevskyMario Davidovsky and Edgard Varèse. While there, he worked as a teaching assistant in the Columbia Princeton Electronic Music Center and composed music for the film “The Gondola Eye” by Ian Hugo and as a sound engineer at the Alwin Nikolais Dance Company.

    In 1966 Lewin-Richter founded the Estudio de Música Electrónica del Conservatorio de Música in Mexico City.

    In 1968, he returned to Spain and established the Barcelona Electronic Music Studio. He then widened his scope by becoming a founding member -together with Josep Mestres Quadreny and Lluís Callejo i Creus- and vice-president of the Phonos Electronic Music Studio in 1973. He has served as artistic and executive director for the music ensemble Conjunt Català de Música Contemporània (1968-1973).

    Always centering on electronic methods, his work has used tape, other instruments combined with tape, and instrumental collage techniques. Many of his pieces also use voice in a prominent role and have been used for dance, theater and cinema. Two of his most influential recordings are Musica Electroacustica and Secuencia III Para Anna, both issued on the Hemisferio label. Rich notes, His skillful use of gradual phase lag has led to some of his major achievements, bringing great beauty and expressiveness to his music. He has toured the world performing, lecturing, teaching and beginning electronic music studios. Since 2003, Lewin-Richter has been a professor of electronic music history at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra and the Escola Superior de Música de Catalunya de Barcelona."

  • edited July 2016
     
    - "The first part of the "Vantdraught" series was called "Vantdraught 10 · Vol. 1" and featured ten classical instruments - 4 violins, 2 violas, cello, vibraphone, marimba and piano. The now appearing second part is "Vantdraught 4", a quartet album written for violin, clarinet/bass clarinet, trombone and piano. The minimalistic style of Vantdraught 10 is preserved although the music is less repetitive and much more intimate. Instinct and intuition is the main force behind the writing process, usually avoiding typical chord progressions and the classical cadential technique. In contrast to "Vantdraught 10 · Vol. 1", the rhythm domain is also less important, thus allowing the melody and harmony to come to the fore. The pieces of "Vantdraught 4" are mainly tonal music but Kapsa also makes use of atonal and polytonal harmonies which requires the listener to put more effort into listening to these parts. The unusual set of instruments is what makes this quartet album unique and fresh sounding. "Vantdraught 4" is certainly linked to classical and minimal music in general but one can find other influences such as jazz and "new music".

    Much like its predecessor, "Vantdraught 4" features an astonishing artwork based on "The Reluctant Conscript" by the seminal artist duo Kahn & Selesnick."

    Kuba Kapsa is a Polish pianist and composer being the leader of the avant-jazz combo Contemporary Noise Sextet (2006-2014). Beyond that he is a renowned composer for film and theater plays. His latest venture is the first of a sophisticated series of projects of modern classical music bearing the common title "Vantdraught".

    - Denovali Records




  • Here's a little taster from an album to be released 27 October 2016:




  • edited September 2016
    The second release from The Industry Records (Cristopher Cerrone's Invisible Cities was the first)
    Wholeheartedly recommended to Emusers such as @Nereffid , @RonanM and @vivaldi55


    The Industry Records is an independent label creating high-quality recordings of The Industry’s productions and diverse projects that share the spirit of our organization. We strive to be an artist-friendly label: all artists and creators involved in the recording receive royalties from the first album sale. The Industry Records is an extension of our artistic mission to find new pathways to support, document and disseminate contemporary operatic works.


    THE EDGE OF FOREVER


    Music by Lewis Pesacov
    Libretto by Elizabeth Cline
    wild Up ensemble, Christopher Rountree conducting.

    - "The Edge of Forever is a chamber opera in five scenes inspired by the ending of the Mayan Long Count Calendar. It is a time-responsive opera, written for one moment in time and performed once on December 21, 2012, the final day of the Mayan Calendar.

    The Edge of Forever explores the nature of consciousness and its relationship to time through a prophecy of divine love. It is the story of an ancient astronomer and a distant beloved, a cosmic union that will begin a new, undocumented era of time. Pesacov's score manifests his journey from dark emotional states of yearning to the warm glow of infinite love. The sound world balances imaginary ancient and future musics, from conch shell to electronic oscillations: Deep earth sounds ripple, murmur and surge into shimmering ritualistic music.

    To remain true to the concept and experience of the work, this recording is the only documentation of the production. It is comprised of both live and post-performance studio recordings, produced by the composer with the utmost sensitivity to creating the best possible representation of the live experience.

    The Edge of Forever was site specific to the historic Philosophical Research Society, a Mayan Revival architecture style building in Los Angeles. The audience entered the opera in Act III, at that present moment in time on December 21, 2012 at 8pm—an event that has been recorded in stone since the 9th century by the Mayans as the end of their calendar. The opera was staged as an immersive experience that begins with a procession of chorus members leading the audience into the theater with their voices. Once inside, the audience was immediately transported to the cenote where the action is already taking place."

    - "Lewis Pesacov is a musician, producer and composer based in Los Angeles, California. LA Weekly writes "Lewis Pesacov is living the dream. Not only has he learned to make a career out of being a musician, but he's learned to separate his personal projects from his work, and therefore never lose his passion."

    As co-founder of Afro-pop group, Fool’s Gold, Pesacov has co-written, performed and produced the group's three studio albums. Fool's Gold has toured extensively throughout the US, UK and Europe in a wide range of settings, including appearances at the Austin City Limits, Glastonbury, Reading, and Leeds Festivals; at the historic Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles with legendary desert rockers Tinariwen. In 2012, Fool's Gold supported the Red Hot Chili Peppers in arenas across the UK, as well as in Tel Aviv at one of the largest concerts in Israel's history.

    An accomplished songwriter and guitar player, Pesacov has been featured in American Songwriter, Guitar Player, LA Times Magazine, The Village Voice and LA Weekly. As a guitar player, he has immersed himself in diverse guitar styles ranging from Mande and Tuareg desert blues of Mali to the Soukous fingerstyle from the Congo. Currently Pesacov is studying North Indian Hindustani classical music and the Hansa Veena Indian slide guitar.

    As a producer, Pesacov has made numerous albums, including Best Coast’s 2010 Billboard-charting debut Crazy for You, as well as a variety singles/EPs for influential independent artists including FIDLAR, Oberhofer, Superhumanoids, and Guards to name but a few. He was co-founder of the influential Echo Park-based indie label, White Iris Records, which released over thirty 7" singles, EPs and full-length albums over the course of it's four years.

    As a composer, Pesacov is inspired by the transcendent potential in sounds, heard. His works have been featured in festivals, museums and galleries including The Walker Art Center (Minneapolis), the 2013 Biennial of the Americas (Denver) performed by the Colorado Symphony Orchestra and at Machine Project (Los Angeles) performed by the Calder Quartet. His work has also been performed internationally at the Darmstadt Ferienkursen and the Conservatory of Music Trossingen (Germany), the Dissonanz Festival (Switzerland) and by the Orchestre de Sceince-Poiltiques Paris (France). In 2013, Pesacov's chamber opera The Edge of Forever, inspired by the ending of the Mayan long count calendar, was performed by LA-based chamber music ensemble wild Up, conducted by Christopher Rountree, at The Philosophical Research Society (Los Angeles)."

    - "wild Up is an experimental classical ensemble. A flexible band of Los Angeles musicians committed to creating visceral, thought-provoking happenings. The group, led by artistic director and conductor Christopher Rountree, unites around the belief that no music is off limits, and that a concert space should be as moving as the music heard in it: small, powerful and unlike anything else. Our projects are meant to bring people together, defy convention and address the need for heart-wrenching, mind-bending experiences."
  • edited August 2016

     

    Hand Eye, the newest project from multiple Grammy award-winning “super musicians” (Los Angeles Times) Eighth Blackbird, features a musical dream team of performers and composers in an album of great beauty, energy, and immediacy. Eighth Blackbird won Grammy awards for all three of its Cedille recordings released between 2007 and 2013. Its next Cedille album, FILAMENT, was released in September 2015 and won the 2016 GRAMMY for Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance.

    The new-music sextet joins forces with Sleeping Giant, six young American composers “rapidly gaining notice for their daring innovations, stylistic range and acute attention to instrumental nuance” (WQXR Radio). The result is an album of world-premiere recordings of works written for eighth blackbird and inspired by stunning pieces of contemporary artIn Timo Andres’ Checkered Shade, the aural perspective zooms out as musical fragments coalesce into an expressive chorale. Andrew Norman’s Mine, Mime, Meme places the cellist in a sonic space where the other instrumentalists mimic his playing. Robert Honstein’s three-movement Conduit takes its cue from an interactive digital sculpture pulsing with colors and the world of touch-screen electronic devices. Christopher Cerrone’s South Catalina reflects both an audio-responsive interactive light sculpture and the composer’s discomfort with Southern California’s perpetual sunshine. Ted Hearn’s By-By Huey is a soul-infused jam session. Jacob Cooper’s Cast assembles an array of distinctive musical gestures around a vibraphone line.The sextet features flutist Tim Munro, clarinetist Michael J. Maccaferri, violinist Yvonne Lam, cellist Nicholas Photinos, percussionist MatthewDuvall, and pianist Lisa Kaplan. 

    Hand Eye producer Elaine Martone and engineer Michael Bishop are multiple Grammy winners. Martone was awarded Producer of the Year, Classical in 2006. Audio editor is Cedille’s own Grammy-nominated engineer Bill Maylone.

    - Cedille


    Nathalie Joachim, flutes • Michael J. Maccaferri, clarinets • Yvonne Lam, violin & viola •Nicholas Photinos, cello • Matthew Duvall, percussion • Lisa Kaplan, piano

    Eighth Blackbird’s “super-musicians” (Los Angeles Times) combine the finesse of a string quartet, the energy of a rock band, and the audacity of a storefront theater company. The Chicago-based, four-time GRAMMY Award-winning sextet celebrates its 20th anniversary in 2016: two decades of performing for audiences across the country and around the world with impeccable precision and a signature style.

    A winner of the 2016 MacArthur Award for Effective and Creative Institutions, Eighth Blackbird has been described as “one of the smartest, most dynamic contemporary classical ensembles on the planet” (Chicago Tribune). The group began in 1996 as a six entrepreneurial Oberlin Conservatory students and quickly became “a brand-name…defined by adventure, vibrancy and quality….known for performing from memory, employing choreography and collaborations with theater artists, lighting designers and even puppetry artists” (Detroit Free Press).

    Over the course of two decades, Eighth Blackbird has commissioned and premiered hundreds of works by dozens of composers including David T. Little, Steven Mackey, Missy Mazzoli, and Steve Reich, whose commissioned work, Double Sextet, went on to win the Pulitzer Prize (2009). A long-term relationship with Chicago’s Cedille Records has produced seven acclaimed recordings and four impressive GRAMMY Awards for Best Small Ensemble/Chamber Music Performance: for strange imaginary animals (2008), Lonely Motel: Music from Slide (2011), Meanwhile (2013), and Filament (2015).

    Filament centers around a live recording of Philip Glass’s early masterpiece, Two Pages, and includes world premiere recordings of works by Bryce Dessner (Murder Ballades), Nico Muhly (Doublespeak), and two remixes by Son Lux, whose tracks gather sounds from the other compositions on the album, stringing together the album’s musical ‘filament’ and adding the voice of Shara Worden (of My Brightest Diamond). Filament was selected as Album of the Week by WQXR/Q2 Music, Seattle’s Second Inversion, and the Chicago Tribune. The San Francisco Chronicle called it “wonderful…a fine release…comprising both restless energy and reverence.”

    The centerpiece of Eighth Blackbird’s 2015-16 touring season is the concert-length production Hand Eye, which pairs Eighth Blackbird with Sleeping Giant—a superstar composer sextet (Timo Andres, Andrew Norman, Christopher Cerrone, Jacob Cooper, Ted Hearne, Robert Honstein) who each contribute one movement to the piece. For the fully produced version performed in select cities, the evening is complemented with projections by the acclaimed visual performance designer Deborah Johnson, aka CandyStations. The New York Times says,  “Each piece of this diverse, eclectic and colorful suite had its own voice and character, qualities that came through in Eighth Blackbird’s exhilarating performance. Yet, as the creators intended, the overall work had narrative thrust and a structural arc, even a shared aesthetic, common among younger composers today, that values the mixing of styles from all realms of contemporary music.” A recording of Hand Eye will be released April 8 on Cedille Records.

    Eighth Blackbird’s mission—to move music forward through innovative performance, advocacy for new music by living composers, and a legacy of guiding an emerging generation of musicians —extends beyond recording and touring to curation and education. The ensemble served as Music Director of the Ojai Music Festival (2009), enjoyed a three-year residency at the Curtis Institute of Music, and holds ongoing Ensemble-in-Residence positions at the University of Richmond and the University of Chicago. The 2015-16 season brings a lively residency at Chicago’s Museum of Contemporary Art, featuring open rehearsals, an interactive gallery installation, performances, and public talks.

    Eighth Blackbird’s members (Nathalie Joachim, flutes; Michael J. Maccaferri, clarinets; Yvonne Lam, violin & viola; Nicholas Photinos, cello; Matthew Duvall, percussion; Lisa Kaplan, piano) hail from the Great Lakes, Keystone, Golden, Empire and Bay states. The name “Eighth Blackbird” derives from the eighth stanza of Wallace Stevens’s evocative, aphoristic poem, Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird (1917). Eighth Blackbird is managed by David Lieberman Artists’ Representatives.

    https://soundcloud.com/eighthblackbird


    httpimageskultureshocknet000120-cd68643676602e9941f8184281b409cbjpg



  • edited July 2016
     

    Jherek Bischoff - Cistern


    Cistern is the second album by prodigiously talented multi-instrumentalist and composer Jherek Bischoff. Gloriously cinematic, these modern orchestral recordings showcase Jherek’s unerring ability to pull at the heartstrings. It comes hot on the heels of Strung Out In Heaven, a moving string quartet tribute to David Bowie, conceived with Amanda Palmer and featuring the significant talents of Anna Calvi, John Cameron Mitchell and Neil Gaiman. A prolific and divergent collaborator, working with the likes of David Byrne, The Kronos Quartet, Caetano Veloso, Xiu Xiu and Australian star Missy Higgins, it can be difficult to pin the real Jherek Bischoff down. Here then, is an intensely personal work. Like his previous album Composed, Cistern is a real labour of love.

    This is a record intrinsically linked to the space in which it was conceived, born from time spent improvising in an empty two million gallon underground water tank. A space which forced Bischoff to slow down, to reflect, to draw on his childhood growing up on a sailing boat - an unexpected journey of rediscovery, from the city back to the Pacific Ocean via the Cistern.

    Jherek first discovered the cistern while mixing previous album Composed at Fort Worden, an old army base in Washington state. Intrigued by rumours of a 45 second reverb and Pauline Oliveros’ 1989 Deep Listening album (which was recorded in the same space), his adventurous spirit drew him to this subterranean world to explore the acoustic possibilities. Hooking his computer and bass amp up to his car battery and armed with an arsenal of instruments he descended into the darkness.

    “I spent three days in the cistern improvising, one day by myself and two days with a couple friends I invited,” explains Jherek. “They were fascinating days of music-making. I found it so interesting how much the space itself seemed to tell us how to play, in essence becoming a collaborator. Things certainly worked best when we slowed down and gave the room time to sing.”

    Being forced to work at this pace ignited something in Jherek. What started as musical experimentations soon allowed time for reflection and recollections of a slower pace of life, prompting a deeper emotional response to the space that stayed with him long after his visit. “The experience of being in that space brought back so many memories of my time spent travelling by sailboat on the open ocean. Compared to city life, the pace of moving on the ocean and the speed at which you travel is so slow.”

    Practical implications thwarted plans to record a chamber orchestra in the cistern, not least the lack of adequate oxygen. Instead, the record was realised in Future-Past Studios in Hudson, NY, a converted 19th-Century church. Enlisting the New York based Contemporaneous ensemble, and using the church’s reverberant spaces, Jherek set about recreating the immersive sound world of Cistern. This is an album of sumptuous dynamics. Jherek revels in exploring the musical space afforded him by the lengthy reverb tails, and is unafraid to unleash the full power of the orchestra when necessary.

    Broad vistas are painted in cerulean tones on ‘Headless’ and the meditative ‘Attuna’, while ‘The Wolf’ offers a glimpse into murky depths. The album builds to the climactic title track, one of the first to come from those early improvisations: ‘Cistern’ is majestic, huge in scope and utterly devastating.

    Fittingly, the journey ends on ‘The Sea’s Son’, where the pace is slowed and buoyed on swelling strings, and the lines between Jherek as musician, collaborator, composer, arranger and producer vanish on the horizon. It is here that he is most at home. It took an empty water tank to inspire his return to the sea.

    - The Leaf Label - Emusic

     

  • edited August 2016
    Out on Ondine (no homepage found) from the late Einojuhani Rautavaara who seems to have been active composing up until recently.

    Gerald Finley, bass-baritone
    Mika Pohjonen, tenor
    Helsinki Music Centre Choir
    Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra
    John Storgårds, conductor

    Rubáiyát (2015) is a song cycle based on the poetry of Omar Khayyam (1048–1131). The work was written for Gerald Finley who in this recording sings the solo part of the orchestral version of the work.

    Balada (2014), based on texts by Lorca, is a large-scale work for tenor, mixed choir and orchestra. Tenor Mika Pohjonen sings as the soloist. This cantata was premiered in Madrid in May 2015.

    Into the Heart of Light (Canto V; 2012) is the composer’s latest installment in a series of works for string orchestra that share the title Canto. Rautavaara wrote the first of his Cantos in the 1960s, and each piece in the series have represented well the latest stylistic developments by the composer.

    The concluding work of the recording is Four Songs from the opera Rasputin. These dramatic songs were arranged by the composer for mixed choir and orchestra in 2012.

    In the last two decades the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra - conducted in this present recording by John Storgårds - has released several award-winning recordings of the music of Einojuhani Rautavaara.
    - Boosey & Hawkes - Linernotes at:


    - I might add an E.R biography at some point . . .
  • edited August 2016
    To my surprise, this thread have reached 4k views with just 277 posts.
    It means to me that I must be doing something of value.

    - Some time ago I posted a flagcounter saying that there has been visits from 24 different countries, but just 1500 views. It hasn't moved for a very long time, though . .

    But whatever the stats are, here's fantastic news from Morton Subotnick and his wife Joan Labarbara:

    Morton Subotnick is a living legend in the development of electronic music. A leading innovator in works involving instruments and other media, he used many of the important technological breakthroughs of his time in his work as a composer. Many of his compositions contain electronic or computer-generated parts. The works compiled on this CD form part of the larger work "Music for The Double Life of Amphibians", conceived as a symphonic poem, the title of which can be understood as a metaphor: "The metaphor suggests that the ‘doubleness’ of the amphibians, needing its past-present environment (the water) while reaching for a new present-future world (the air), is our ‘doubleness’ – the past-present and present-future – that beast-spirit and angel-spirit in us all." (Subotnick)

    "Axolotl" is a Mexican salamander with two filigree wing-like appendages, extending from either side of the body. These are its lungs for the future transition from water onto land, but the axolotl never goes through the final stage of its potential development – it never reaches air – it remains forever in water.

    "Ascent Into Air" starts with section 1 as a dark and intense musical environment without articulation of rhythmic or melodic material. This is followed by more dance-like materials in section 2. The third section is a playful interaction between the pianos, percussion and computer sounds which flows into the fourth section which is more emotional and forceful – even violent. The last section transforms into an ethereal, flowing chorale-like material.

    "The Last Dream of the Beast" is a theatrical work, an electronic media drama in which both music and images will be emotional, clearly articulated, forceful and at times violent. "The Beast" means a creature caught between man and beast.

    "A Fluttering of Wings" is in four parts played without pause. The opening is fast music of continuous semiquavers. The dance is also quick and continuous. In the third section, the music pauses for the first time. Here individual plucked notes and chords are altered by frequency changes produced by the electronics which help to create a halo-like sound. The final song hovers quietly while the landscape gradually evolves into its ultimate ecstatic form.
    - Wergo.

  • edited August 2016
    News from Victoire double bass player Eleonore Oppenheim:
    Composers: Angelica Negron, Florent Ghys, Wil Smith, Jenny Olivia Johnson, Lorna Dune

    Home, the debut solo album from bassist Eleonore Oppenheim, is a musical core sample in which each track represents a different approach to the double bass as a modern solo instrument, and to the ways in which it can interact with electronic media. By turns glitchy and pure, gritty and shimmering, Home releases the bass from its traditional obligations and takes the listener on a surprising, unfettered journey through several strata of sound which explore the breadth of the instrument’s emotional and physical range. This album is part of a years-long collaborative commissioning project that Oppenheim embarked on in 2006, that includes works by some of today’s most innovative and original early- to mid-career composers. Not beholden to any one style, all of the pieces draw from a variety of influences, from noise rock to jazz and synth pop. Several of the pieces also incorporate Oppenheim’s unadorned, folky voice, which blends and dialogues with the bass, acting both as another texture and as an offshoot of the instrument.

    “Quietly virtuosic” (Alan Kozinn, the New York Times) double bassist and electric bassist Eleonore Oppenheim has a reputation as both a valued ensemble player and an engaging soloist. Her “…subtle expressivity” and “…particular eloquence” (Joshua Kosman, the San Francisco Chronicle) have made her a worthy collaborator for composers of her generation, and through these relationships she has built a rich repertoire of solo pieces. Eleonore has performed and recorded with a variety of different artists and groups, among them the Philip Glass Ensemble, Tyondai Braxton, Bang on a Can, Wordless Music Orchestra, Meredith Monk, My Brightest Diamond, Signal Ensemble, Steve Reich, Jonny Greenwood, and the “All-star, all-female quintet” (Time Out New York) Victoire, of which she is a member.
    - Innova Recordings
     . . . . ."A musical omnivore and polyglot, Eleonore is at home in a wide range of musical idioms, and has worked with a variety of different artists and groups, among them the Philip Glass Ensemble, Tyondai Braxton (Battles), the Wordless Music Orchestra, Shara Worden (My Brightest Diamond), Ensemble Signal, Norah Jones, Bryce Dessner (the National), Meredith Monk, Jeff Mangum (Neutral Milk Hotel), Steve Reich, and Jonny Greenwood (Radiohead).
    Eleonore also performs and records regularly with the “All-star, all-female quintet” (Time Out NY) Victoire, whose debut album Cathedral City reached top-10 and best-of lists in the New York Times, Time Out NY, and NPR in 2010, and whose latest album Vespers for a New Dark Age, a collaboration with Wilco drummer and percussionist Glenn Kotche, was released on New Amsterdam in 2015.
    She has appeared at a number of national and international festivals and venues, most notably the Norfolk Chamber Music Festival, Ravinia, Spoleto USA, the MADE Festival in Sweden, Festival de Otoño Madrid, and Carnegie Hall, BAM, Lincoln Center, the Guggenheim and Whitney Museums, the Barbican Centre, the Pritzker Pavilion in Chicago’s Millennium Park, Disney Hall, and the Sydney Opera House and Melbourne Recital Centre in Australia.
    Eleonore was a Bang on a Can Fellow in 2006, where she met many of the fantastic musicians and composers she now collaborates with. She is currently a doctoral candidate at SUNY Stony Brook, and is also an alumna of the Yale School of Music and the Juilliard School."
    Second Inversion review.


  • edited August 2016

    - In the late 1980s, composer David First acquired a Casio CZ-1000 to create microtonal drones with the assistance of a Tascam Portastudio. An overdubbed demo piece called Four Casios—a wry, quasi-parodic homage to Steve Reich’s Four Organs credited to the technically non-existent World Casio Quartet—led to performance requests and the consequent formation of a real World Casio Quartet


     David First, Esther Sandrof and Brian Charles on Casio CZ-1000 and Kevin Sparke on Casio CS-101

    David First’s Gramavision Session Liner Notes:

    - "The WCQ was born out of a misunderstanding. In 1986 I purchased a Casio CZ1000 digital synthesizer in order to further my ongoing experiments with microtonal drones. Prior to this I had been using an old Heathkit tone generator, overdubbing pitches on a Tascam Portastudio. Using an electronic tuner to measure deviations, I would transcribe my results and have them realized by members of my ensemble at the time, The Flatland Oscillators. Yearning for a more elegant workflow, I began using the Casio for this same purpose. At first, I used the pitch control on the Tascam to bend things toward the relationships I was looking for. But then a better solution revealed itself. As with most synthesizers, it was possible on the CZ1000 to detune one oscillator against a second oscillator to create chorusing effects. Which meant less than nothing to me until, fiddling around one day, I figured out a way to shut off the main oscillator’s amplitude envelope, leaving the detunable oscillator, with its 61 discrete steps per ½ step (or 732 pitches per octave), all alone and available for microtonal duties.

    I was now able to create repeatable results—with precise detune rates assigned to each pitch. The first work I made I called Four Casios (an homage to Steve Reich’s Four Organs), and I began including it on demos I sent to potential performance spaces, on grant applications, etc, with the cheeky appellation “The World Casio Quartet”. I probably should have known that people would not realize that it was a bit of a send-up and, indeed, that was exactly what happened—not long after the first batch went out I received a request from a space that was interested in arranging a performance by The World Casio Quartet.

    Luckily, I was already beginning to think in this direction anyway. I was growing weary of asking people to interpret my scores on instruments not truly designed for such things. And since these CZ1000s were fairly inexpensive ($259 as I recall) and so ubiquitous at the time, it was easy to find three other members of my ensemble that already had one. And thus the work (and fun) began.

    From 1987 to 1991, the WCQ was my main compositional outlet. We played live quite often both around NYC and out of town, working through various procedures I’d developed. For the most part this consisted of using the instrument’s keys as triggers rather than as pianistic, melody/harmony manipulators—we rarely used more than one at a time. The real action would be happening in the program banks where, for each particular piece, there would be dozens of iterations of the same exact sound differing in the detune rate only (from 0-60). These program banks became the playing arena and the virtuosity was in switching patch buttons smoothly between each new event. There was also real-time use of the detune function itself, whereby one would be asked to execute glissandos between two given values, as well as glacially slow rocking of the good ol’ pitchbend wheel. I would often use this last device as a wildcard to subvert and enhance more deliberate, predetermined elements. This was important, as I was always on the hunt for unique flaws in a room during sound check—a window, air duct, or heating pipe that I could get to rattle sympathetically with a particular frequency. Inevitable apologies from the sound person would follow, but I had found just what I was looking for.

    The recordings here were done in a single one-day visit to Gramavision Studios in lower Manhattan. Only one piece was released prior, and since the masters were on 2” reels, I hadn’t heard the rest till the fall of 2015 when I went with my friend, Garry Rindfuss, to his old stomping grounds, Avatar Studios (née The Power Station), to have them digitally transferred. Listening to the stuff now, I’m struck by how free it all sounds—I had yet to really dive into any microtonal or just-intonation tuning theory and was merely following my ear and intuition. I miss that innocence sometimes…"
    - Pogus Productions  -  Youtube



    More David First at Emusers
  • edited September 2016
    Very much recommended to everyone with a soft spot for Colin Stetson:

    "A musician is an ambassador who presents the views and values of a culture, a catalyst of thought and emotion, who employs sound to communicate in a universal language."
     

    - "On his debut album, Rushing Past Willow, saxophonist and composer Nick Zoulek refines the idiomatic sound of the saxophone and brings the fruits of this intense research and dedication to the wider world.

    Zoulek’s works for solo alto, tenor and bass saxophones were conceived as improvised moments and refined over a decade of performance and reflection. They coalesce into a narrative that is set against a solitary willow tree, serene and poised, serving as witness to a story of lost love, compassion, connection, cognition, perception, chaos, and time.

    Through repetition, vocal techniques, circular breathing and unconventional articulation, Zoulek pushes past the typical sound of the saxophone. What often begins as a recognizable line eventually circles back on itself, erasing ideas about beginnings and endings in the process. Recorded with an array of carefully placed microphones, the live performances were assembled into an immersive whole by sound artist Jason Charney.

    At once evocative and contemplative, Rushing Past Willow is an invitation to know an instrument better and, through it, the energetic world."

    Innova Recordings

    - "A modern artist with an impassioned eye toward the unification of contemporary art and sound, American saxophonist Nick Zoulek’s focus on collaboration, improvisation, and commissioning new works has led to a diverse portfolio of distinctive performances and artistic ventures. Working with a unique array of musicians and performers, including Wildspace Dance Company, multimedia musicians Netmoiré, and saxophonist Tommy Davis as part of Duo d’Entre-Deux, Nick’s craft has been lauded as “a delight”, and with the capacity to “[take] you to other worlds” (Milwaukee Magazine). Uniquely skilled as a bass saxophonist, the prowess and versatility Nick displays on the instrument has been praised as “[b]eautiful harmonies [singing] in contrast to mysterious knockings and hums, and finally to ungodly, soul-shattering blasts” (Shepherd Express).

    Zoulek is currently pursuing his DMA in Contemporary Music Performance at Bowling Green State University. He has studied under John Sampen, Jean-Michel Goury, Matt Sintchak, and Jon Amon."



  • edited September 2016

     

    - "Ecstatic Music: TAK plays Brook presents four recent works by composer Taylor Brook, interpreted by TAK Ensemble, a “stellar” quintet (flute, clarinet, violin, percussion, and voice) featuring some of New York’s most adventurous new music performers. The album is the product of years of collaboration between Brook and TAK, and captures the range of Brook’s compositional voice, as well as TAK’s dedication to bold, highly communicative new music.

    Ecstatic Music, the album's title track, is a frenetic and virtuosic work for violin and percussion, performed brilliantly by the violinist Marina Kifferstein and percussionist Ellery Trafford. The work's ecstatic state is achieved through a musical language that employs fragile instrumental techniques and microtonal tuning systems. Throughout Ecstatic Music, the violinist and percussionist (playing two microtonally tuned guitars) work as a single unit, often playing in rhythmic unison to create a truly otherworldly sound.

    The haunting song cycle Five Weather Reports uses text from David Ohle's novel Motorman to comment on current environmental and societal concerns. The five songs, performed exquisitely by soprano Charlotte Mundy and her instrumental colleagues, showcase the group’s ability to find extreme, powerful contrasts of sound, as they blend various timbres and extended techniques to create striking new textures.

    Idolum draws connections between the work's title, which suggests a phantom or spirit, and the sensors that control the piece's guitar machines. As Brook explains in his notes, the title also refers to the nature of music which, "can become a spell or hypnosis, pulling thought and emotions this way and that." Amalgam explores ways in which sonic and musical amalgamation can be achieved through orchestration. In the first half of the piece, Brook presents a fusion of sound in the instrumental consort, matching disparate musical elements to create a unified monophonic texture. The work's second half achieves a different type of unity, with single lines fused into heterophony united through connection and contrast. In keeping with the rest of the album, this work celebrates the virtuosity of the individual voices and explores the possibilities of this unique ensemble blend."

    - New Focus Recordings


    - "Taylor Brook has studied composition with Brian Cherney in Montreal, Luc Brewaeys in Brussels, and George Lewis, and Georg Haas in New York. Brook has also studied Hindustani musical performance in Kolkata, India, with Pandit Debashish Bhattacharya.

    Brook writes concert music, music for video, and music for theater and dance. His work has been performed around the world and has been described as “gripping” and “engrossing” by the New York Times. Brook has won numerous awards and prizes for his compositions, including the MIVOS/Kantor prize, the Lee Ettelson award, and five SOCAN young composers awards. Brook has been a finalist in the Gaudeamus prize and was awarded honorable mention for the Jules Leger prize two years in a row. His music has been performed by ensembles and soloists such as the Nouvel Ensemble Moderne, Quatour Bozzini, JACK Quartet, MIVOS quartet, Talea Ensemble, Ascolta Ensemble, and many others.

    Brook’s current projects include a new piece for Talea Ensemble, an album of his music with TAK ensemble, and a piece for solo flute and ensemble for Enesmble Contemporaine de Montreal. Brook holds a master’s degree in music composition from McGill University. He currently resides in New York City, where he is completing a doctorate in music composition at Columbia University."



    - "TAK is a quintet that delivers energetic and virtuosic performances of contemporary classical music and “impresses with the organicity of their sound, their dynamism and virtuosity — and, well, just a dash of IDGAF as they slay the thorniest material like it’s nothing” (Q2 Music). Described as “stellar” (Oneirics), and note for their “restless strands of ever ­shifting color and vigor” (Feast of Music), TAK concerts are consistently dynamic and engaging. Dedicated to the commission of new works and direct collaboration with composers and other artists, TAK promotes ambitious programming at the highest level, fostering engagement both within the contemporary music community, through bringing in guest artists and collaborators, and the musical community at large. Through working with installation artists, theater companies, and video artists, TAK aims to broaden the scope and diversity of their audience interaction.

    The members of TAK are each "individual virtuosos" in their own right (Lucy Shelton), and have performed individually across North America and Europe with ensembles such as the London Sinfonietta, International Contemporary Ensemble, JACK Quartet, Wet Ink Ensemble, and Grammy­-winning ensemble Roomful of Teeth. TAK has performed throughout New York City in spaces such as Roulette, New Amsterdam Records Headquarters, DiMenna Center for Classical Music, and Issue Project Room. In recent seasons, they have been invited to perform in collaboration with the American Composers Alliance, Innovations en concert (Montreal), the Queens New Music Festival (Queens, NY), and the Public Theater (NYC); they have held artist residencies at Avaloch Farm (New Hampshire) and Mount Tremper Arts (New York). TAK has had the pleasure of working with esteemed composers Mario Diaz de Leon, Lewis Nielson, Tyshawn Sorey, Sam Pluta, Ashkan Behzadi, Natacha Diels, David Bird, and Taylor Brook, among many others. 

    TAK is dedicated to working with young composers, and has collaborated with a number of university composition programs to produce concerts of new commissions. Among these institutions are the Oberlin Modern Music Guild, the graduate composers of the "First Performance" student organization at New York University, and both the graduate and undergraduate composers of Columbia University for their Columbia Composers Concerts. 

    Upcoming projects include a commissioning collaboration with Montreal-based, Architek percussion quartet; performing at i/o Fest at Williams College; headlining Niente/Forte Festival in New Orleans; performing works by students of University of New Orleans; performing works by Columbia graduate Composers; and the premiere of JingJing Luo’s ASHIMA presented by American Opera Project."



  • Bedroom Community news:

     
    Music composed by Nico Muhly & Valgeir Sigurðsson
    Produced by Valgeir Sigurðsson
    Orchestrated & Conducted by Nico Muhly

    - "The Scent Opera, a strange olfactory & music collaboration that dates back to 2009, is the first release on Bedroom Community’s HVALREKI digital-series. Written by Nico Muhly & Valgeir Sigurðsson for Green Aria: A Scent Opera. ‘An opera for your nose’ by Stewart Matthew, with scents by Christophe Laudamiel. Premiered at New York’s Guggenheim Museum in August 2009, this is the first time the recording has been released.

    The opera’s premise is that a sequence of smells guides us through a oblique parable about industrialisation, through short episodic bursts of information. Some smells are dirty, like the rubber of a train in Paris, and others are classically blended harmonically well-rounded scents. Occasionally, a clean, neutral, pure sound arrives as a little flute-scented garden which should have the effect of clearing the chaos of the surrounding music (and, indeed, smells).

    Nadia Sirota and Helgi Hrafn Jónsson join us as two of the essential voices that bind the narrative together. The multivalent collaboration yielded many surprising results: a 14-minute score that is funny, aggressive, shape-shifting, electronic, acoustic, and strange."
    - Emusic
  • edited September 2016
     
     An operatic oratorio for four singers, piano trio, percussion and chorus by composer Andrew Staniland and poet Jill Battson

    Wayne Strongman, Conductor 
    Neema Bickersteth, soprano; Krisztina Szabó, mezzo soprano; Peter McGillivray, baritone; Marcus Nance, bass-baritone 
    The Elmer Iseler Singers
    The Gryphon Trio
    Annalee Patipatanakoon, violin; Roman Borys, cello; Jamie Parker, piano
    Ryan Scott and Mark Duggan, percussion

    Dark Star Requiem is at once intended to be challenging and joyous, complex and beautiful. A sequence of 19 poems charting a short history of HIV AIDS unfolds over the course of 14 musical movements. The poems vary stylistically from linked haikus, to ghazals, to praise poems and back to free verse. The musical movements are unified through a haunting melody and driving rhythm derived from the numbers attributed to HIV-1 and HIV-2 by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses: 00.061.1.06.009. and 00.061.1.06.010. In musical terms these numbers are interpreted in both melody and rhythm.
    - Canadian Music Centre (Centrediscs)

    Composer Andrew Staniland has firmly established himself as one of Canada’s most important and innovative musical voices. Described by Alex Ross in the New Yorker magazine as “alternately beautiful and terrifying”, his music is regularly heard on CBC Radio 2 and has been performed and broadcast internationally in over 35 countries. Andrew is the recipient of the 2009 National Grand Prize in EVOLUTION, presented by CBC Radio 2/Espace Musique and The Banff Centre, top prizes in the SOCAN young composers competition, and the 2004 Karen Keiser Prize in Canadian Music. As a leading composer of his generation, he has been recognized by election to the Inaugural Cohort of the College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists Royal Society of Canada in 2014.

    Andrew has been Affiliate Composer to the Toronto Symphony Orchestra (2006-09) and the National Arts Centre Orchestra (2002–04), and has also been in residence at the Centre du Creation Musicale Iannis Xenakis (Paris, 2005). Recent commissioners include the Gryphon Trio, Les Percussions de Strasbourg, the Toronto Symphony, cellist Frances-Marie Uitti, and American Opera Projects. Andrew is the lead composer/educator with the Gryphon Trio’s Listen Up! education initiative, created and produced in collaboration with the Gryphon Trio and music educator Rob Kapilow. Andrew also performs himself, both as a guitarist and working with new media (computers and electronics). Andrew is currently on faculty at Memorial University in St John’s Newfoundland.


    - This album will with no doubt show up on my 2016 list and I will be surprised if it doesn't show up on other lists.

  • edited September 2016
     released April 8, 2016 and finally on Emusic and totally awesome !

     
    Colin Stetson: Alto, Tenor, Bass Saxophones; Contrabass Clarinet; Lyricon
    Dan Bennett: Tenor, Baritone Saxophones; Clarinet - Greg Fox: Drums - Grey Mcmurray: Guitar - Gyda Valtysdottir: Cello - Justin Walter: Keyboards, EVI - Matt Bauder: Tenor, Baritone Saxophones; Clarinet - Megan Stetson: Voice - Rebecca Foon: Cello - Ryan Ferreira: Guitar - Sarah Neufeld: Violin - Shahzad Ismaily: Synth
    "We all have those moments when we experience a piece of music that transforms us, and this was one of those moments for me," says Stetson. "Over the years, I went on to listen to this record countless times, always determined to absorb every instance of it, to know it throughout and fully. And this dedication to a thorough knowledge of the piece eventually gave way to a need to perform it." "The concept was simple, and true to the original score. I haven't changed existing notation, but rather have worked with altering instrumentation, utilizing a group consisting heavily of woodwinds, synthesizers, and electric guitars... The arrangement draws heavily from the world of black metal, early electronic music, and from my own body of solo saxophone music. The result is an intact rendition of Henryk Gorecki's 3rd Symphony, though one which has been filtered through the lens of my particular musical aesthetic and experience."
    - Colin Stetson.

    - "This record is a massively collaborative effort, but Stetson has always been collaborating. He brought in Laurie Anderson and Shara Worden to narrate the events residing over ‘Judges’ and brought Justin Vernon in for a lush cover of the standard “What Are They Doing In Heaven Today?”; he’s made avant-garde horn sludge with Mats Gustaffsson and paired with violinist Sarah Neufeld for a record of rigid but terse musical exercises. And for many years, he’s been on the other side, a sideman belting it out for the pop songs of TV On the Radio, Arcade Fire and recently Animal Collective. ‘Sorrow’ isn’t his first collaborative effort, merely the latest, one where he celebrates not only the musician that gave him “Symphony No. 3” but all the artists who helped him realise it. It sounds devastating, but what a loving thing this record is.



    With an orchestra large enough to recreate the scope of the third symphony -- some Constellation mainstays such as Neufeld and Rebecca Foon appear, along with soprano vocalist Megan Stetson and guitarist Ryan Ferreira, among others -- Stetson manages to create the honouring and tactful arrangement of the piece he was looking for, straying into new territory only on occasion, and otherwise merely clarifying the grandiosity of Gorecki’s work with electronic instruments and extra modernised bluster. It opens on booming bass notes provided by Stetson himself before that crashing cyclical motif parades through the timbres; the piece eventually finds Megan Stetson’s ascendent voice, pairing it with flicks of the guitar and suppressive percussive weather -- Stetson cites a minor black metal influence on this record, and it’s in these subduing cymbals you’re going to hear it.



    The electronics heard passing through “II’, alongside delayed guitar create new, emptying ground that gorgeously retread the course of Gorecki’s symphony -- it’s essentially a mood-setting duet between Ryan Ferrerira and Justin Walter, like a Godspeed record recorded underneath the composition -- hiding underneath Stetson’s bass sax, a slew of strings and Megan Stetson’s tethering vocal. When listening to this record, moments like this feel subliminal, almost impossible to anticipate underneath the epic, narratively bold piece Stetson is working with.



    Gorecki’s piece was ripe with melodic refrains but also compelled by noisy, inaccessible discordance, and hearing each and every sound of Stetson’s rendition works the same way, to the point where I once again wonder if this piece is about fear or hope. I guess both? There’s a moment about six minutes into “II” where Steson’s vocal rises up alongside a lethargic and bright string motif, before a tinny drumbeat breaks in -- it sounds like a flower rising out of dead ground. Whatever this piece implies, Stetson keeps it beautiful."

    - Norman Records - A Closer Listen

  • edited October 2016
     

    - "Tim Catlin formed the Overtone Ensemble in 2012 in order to perform works using his self-made "Vibrissa" instruments. Each instrument consists of twelve vertically mounted aluminium rods that are longitudinally stroked by hand to produce ethereal "singing" tones. The long sustaining nature of the rods sound and microtonal tunings allow players a sonic palette of complex textures and harmonic complexity. Other instruments used include massed hand-bells, quarter-tone bells, e-bowed acoustic guitars, re-tuned glockenspiels, wineglasses and long wire instruments.

    The ensemble's compositions utilise acoustic phenomena arising from microtonal tuning such as phasing, combination tones and sympathetic vibrations, as well the effects of room resonance. All sounds are acoustic in origin without effects or sound processing. The results are works of shimmering intensity and pulsating beauty.

    The Overtone Ensemble are: Tim Catlin, Atticus Bastow, Philip Brophy and David Brown.

    Since forming in 2012 the group have been well received at festivals such as Slow Music, NOW now, Sound Out, Light in Winter and Liquid Architecture as well as various galleries and clubs within Australia. Group members have a long history of involvement in the experimental music, sound art and improvised music both within Australia and internationally."

    - Important Records

     


  • edited October 2016
    Bedroom Community news:
    - "Nico Muhly is a virtuoso of keeping in touch, a hub for the vast network of friends and collaborators around the world that he's constantly checking in on with with personal or musical questions or scandalously inappropriate humor. Even when he is the only person awake in a hotel room in the middle of the night on a strange continent, there is someone, somewhere, that he can ping—What's going on? What's happening? How about now?—to satisfy his his need for human connection.

    Keep in Touch, especially in its original version, was premised on the fear of never quite managing to make that connection. Its two soloists—violist Nadia Sirota and vocalist Anohni, of Antony and the Johnsons—were recorded separately, so that Anohni was virtually present, her part constructed from pass after pass of vocal improvisations, while Nadia's was added later, all in one long, live take.

    But in reality, Nico's connection with the musicians on Keep in Touch—not just Nadia and Anohni, but also electronic musician Valgeir Sigurðsson, who realized and recorded the 2006 release—was never really broken. It was one of Nico's earliest collaborations with these singular musicians, with whom he has returned to the studio many times in the intervening decade. Nadia especially remains one of Nico's closest friends, even as their ever-more-hectic working schedules means that they're more likely to see each other IRL about once a month, rather than once a week.

    The Alarm Will Sound version of Keep in Touch here was created by another of Nico's close friends, AWS percussionist Chris Thompson, who has managed to approximate every one of Valgeir's samples and Anohni's vocalizations, no matter how seemingly inimitable, for live performance. In a sense, it is of a piece with AWS's transcriptions of Aphex Twin or of the Beatles' musique concrète "Revolution 9," offering a new perspective on the compositional craft that went into an electronic piece by connecting it to the tradition of notated music. Here, a work for viola and tape becomes a miniature viola concerto for Nadia, Chris and their Alarm Will Sound bandmates.

    When Nico had the opportunity to write a bona fide viola concerto, there was no question that the piece would be premiered by Nadia, whose input has influenced Nico's writing throughout their history of intimate collaboration. And Nadia points out that Nico's compositions, in particular Keep in Touch, have influenced her playing: Valgeir's unforgiving recording of those sessions, actually designed to highlight the flaws in her sound, encouraged her to play more boldly and transparently—"to show my work," she says, in what has become one of the defining features of her style.

    And so Nico Muhly's Viola Concerto demands that the performer do exactly that, through an immense range of highly exposed material. The piece demands a virtuosity of expression, forcing the viola to navigate extremes of register and the huge leaps between them, or to freight a naked, sustained note with rapidly changing musical and psychological dynamics. The piece's emotional climax is arguably not the final movement's thunderous tutti playing of the full symphony orchestra, but poignant, soliloquy-like unaccompanied cadenza in which the viola attempts to recover between those outbursts. It's a moment of terrible loneliness Nadia likens to a private prayer. And that prayer, as the orchestra picks up the material from the viola, seems to be answered—but only briefly, before the piece descends into panic once again.

    While the piece may have a tragic ending, as Nadia believes it does, this concerto's very existence suggests a far less lonesome narrative for its real-life creators. Listen to the inquisitive slide of her fingers up the neck of the fiddle throughout the Viola Concerto, and compare it to similar moments in Keep in Touch: the concerto is full of these musical signatures, what Nadia would call friendly "in-jokes" if the extensive documentation of her professional relationship with Nico hadn't already let the whole world in on them. This recording is a public exchange of love letters between two friends, a document of two artists growing up—and maturing—together, to create the most affecting and profound collaborations of their intertwined musical lives."
    Bedroom Community - Emusic


    Alarm Will Sound
  •  
    Paul Livingstone ~ sitar, fretless guitar & requinto
    Pedro Eustache ~ bansuri, flutes & world winds
    Partho Sarothy ~ sarod
    Peter Jacobson ~ cello
    Abhijit Banerjee ~ tabla
    Dave Lewis ~ drums
    Somnath Roy ~ ghatum & folk percussion

    ‘Ahimsa, Love is the Weapon of the Brave’ is a new release featuring the music of Arohi Ensemble weaving the classical ragas & intricate rhythmic architectures of India with the counterpoint of chamber music and gamelan in a synthesis of global musical traditions.  A collaboration of leading creative artists from India, Venezuela & Los Angeles, Arohi include three disciples of the legendary ‘godfather of world music’ Pandit Ravi Shankar.

    Arohi features music of composer/sitarist/activist Paul Livingstone in a cohesive and compelling blend of and sitar, sarod, bansuri (bamboo flute), cello, tabla, ghatum (clay pot) and drums with a sprinkling of vocal chant.  Featured on multiple Grammy winning records these artists bring these classical forms of east & west
    into s contemporary format of ragajazz chamber music.

    Arohi means ‘ascending melody’ and Ahimsa is the Sanskrit word for ‘nonviolence’.  The release is dedicated to the courageous form of conflict resolution which faces a violent aggressor with nothing but ‘soul force’.  The music journeys from meditative ragas to dynamic polyrhythms and improvisations expressed in the free spirit of jazz; move through this music with us in the spirit of ahimsa.

    Innova Recordings  -  https://soundcloud.com/paul-livingstone


  • edited October 2016

     

     

    - "The country has fallen into chaos as an undefined war rages on U.S. soil. Roads are closed except for military use. There is no work. Progressively, the schools close. Food runs out. The power gets shut off. Neighbors mysteriously vanish. Those without homes beg for food at the porches of those who do, but no one has anything to give.

    A family of five — two parents, two sons, and a young daughter, Lisa — do what they can to survive. They eat wild grass from the yard. The father goes hunting every day, but all the animals have fled. “They know something we don’t,” he says. One day, Prince arrives.
    Prince, a man in a dog suit, befriends Lisa and provides her with an escape from the isolated boredom of her life. Lisa’s mother supports this friendship. Prince is her pet, though Lisa’s father, Howard, opposes it. Howard confronts Prince. “Stand up,” he says. “You’re a human being, for God’s sake. Stand up like a man. . . I’ll give you my own clothes if you’ll . . . stand up like a man and talk to me. I know you can talk.”Prince barks; Howard chases him away. Conditions continue to worsen. It’s winter now. Dark early, and cold. The family hasn’t eaten in weeks, maybe months. “I wish I had a steak,” says one brother. The other brother adds “I heard in China people eat dogs.” There is silence in the room."

    - Vision Into Art

    More David T. Little at Emusers here and here.


  • edited October 2016
     I guess it's that time of the year where the new releases are pouring in . . . :)

    Alpha Classics continues its collaboration with the Ensemble Intercontemporain and presents a programme devoted to compositions by its conductor and artistic director, Matthias Pintscher. Bereshit, ‘in a beginning’ in Hebrew, is a piece on the subject of divine creation. The architecture of the work refers to the idea of the growth of the elements out of nothingness to their finished state: the colours, the harmonies are therefore always redefined by what precedes and follows them. Songs from Solomon’s garden – still in a highly spiritual dimension – explores amorous passion through the shir ha shirim (Song of Songs). The poetic density of this text is underlined here, with the only repeated phrase of the work taking on a quasi-incantatory signification: ‘she-cholat ahava ani’ (for I am sick of love).
    - Alpha Classics.

    Matthias Pintscher
    - "is the Music Director of the Ensemble Intercontemporain. Beginning in 2016/17 he also takes up post as Principal Conductor of the Lucerne Festival Academy. He continues his partnerships with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra as its Artist-in-Association, and with the Danish National Symphony Orchestra as Artist-in-Residence. Equally accomplished as conductor and composer, Pintscher has created significant works for the world’s leading orchestras and regularly conducts throughout Europe, the U.S., and Australia.

    Highlights of the 15/16 season include conducting debuts with the Berlin Philharmonic, Toronto Symphony, Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, and Prague Philharmonia; a U.S. tour with the Ensemble Intercontemporain; and the premiere of his new cello concerto by the Danish National Symphony and Alisa Weilerstein. Last season, Pintscher made debuts with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, National Symphony Orchestra, and the Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks.

    A successful and prolific composer, Pintscher's music is championed by some of today's finest performing artists, orchestras, and conductors. His works have been performed by such orchestras as the Chicago Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Berlin Philharmonic, London Symphony Orchestra, and the Orchestre de Paris. His works are published exclusively by Bärenreiter, and recordings of his compositions can be found on Kairos, EMI, Teldec, Wergo, and Winter & Winter. 

    Pintscher also works regularly with leading contemporary music ensembles such as the Scharoun Ensemble, Klangforum Wien, Ensemble Modern, and Avanti (Helsinki). He has curated the music segment of the Impuls Romantik Festival in Frankfurt since 2011, and in September 2014 joined the composition faculty at the Juilliard School."


    - Fascinating !
  • edited October 2016
        
    "There are certain types of music that affirm and triumph. Others suggest a distance, a gentle journey towards far-off lands. Jérôme Combier is of this race of vagabonds. His music plunges the listener into a deep, rarefied atmosphere, dense with multiple, ghostly apparitions that set the imagination free. Here and there, a line of shadows interferes between the real voices, as if coming out of nowhere. Straight away, Combier’s music does away with the references of pitches, the distinction between sounds, breaths and friction, gone into more deeply with the electronics and closely connected to rainfalls of sand, murmurs of the wind… The electronics have this function, eroding the sonority borne by the instruments, diluting harmonies and scales in gentle saturations, sounds loaded with grain. The works brought together in this album, performed by the nec plus ultra of the music of our time, immerse us in a diaphanous glow.
    - Aeon

    Jérôme Combier
    - "studied composition, style, analysis, and orchestration with Hacène Larbi, and then later, in 1997, at the Paris Conservatory with Emmanuel Nunes and Michaël Lévinas. In addition, his university studies lead to a master's degree on Anton Webern with mentor Antoine Bonnet ("Le principe de variation chez Anton Webern"). In 1995 he was a finalist in the Griegselskalpet competition in Oslo. In 1997, he founded the Cairn Ensemble, and is now the artistic director. Jérôme Combier received the "Vocation" Prize (awarded by the Bleustein-Blanchet Foundation) and the Pierre Cardin prize. In September 1998, he participated in the composition session at the Fondation Royaumont, and as part of a cultural exchange, was in residence in Japan for two months. In 2001-2002, he was chosen to participate in the composition and musical computing cursus at Ircam. For two years, between 2002 and 2004, he developed composition and conducting programs in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan with support from the Paris Conservatory for the conservatories in Tashkent and Almaty, and then the following year was in residence at the Villa Medicis. There he met Raphaël Thierry who made the visual installations for the cycle Vies Silencieuses written for the Cairn Ensemble. The cycle was recorded in 2007 by the Aeon label. In the Sabine villages, in Rome, he and painter Xavier Noiret-Thomé were part of the exposition "20 eventi" directed by Guiseppe Penone. In 2002, he wrote Pays de vent, Les Hebrides for the National Orchestra of France, which was heralded by Unesco and recorded by Motus editions. Jérôme Combier was quest composer at the Why Note festival in Dijon, Tage für Neue Musik in Zurich, the festival of Aix-en-Provence, the Adelburgh Festival, and the Witten Festival. His compositions for Ensemble Recherche and Ensemble Intercontemporain were part of the Autumn Festival in Paris. In collaboration with Pierre Nouvel, he created the installation Noir Gris for the Beckett exposition organised by the Centre Georges Pompidou."

  • edited October 2016
    From february and totally forgotten about.

     

    The CD’s largest piece is Davis’s 19-minute On the Nature of Thingness (2011). Written for soprano and ten instrumentalists, the work received a glowing review of its premiere in the New York Times: “Tony Arnold offered dramatic, multihued interpretations of the four texts… of this colorful song cycle.” 

    Davis wrote Ghostlight for ICE pianist Jacob Greenberg, who premiered it at Lincoln Center’s Mostly Mozart festival in 2013. The piano is “prepared” by placing objects on or between the strings of certain notes to create microtonal beatings and gong-like sounds. Seen and Heard International commented Ghostlight is “a fine new solo piano journey” producing “tingling sonorities from the instrument’s strings.”

    Another Davis piece is On speaking a hundred names (2010) for bassoon and electronics, written for and premiered by ICE performer Rebekah Heller. The New York Times commented the premiere was “played with flair by Rebekah Heller. She deftly illuminated its eclectic moods and myriad timbres —  which ranged from breathy, guttural noises to rhapsodic melodies in a high register.” 

    Chen’s four works on the CD employ imaginative, unusual instrumentation. For Hush (2011), dedicated to her daughter, Zoe, Chen aimed for a childlike energy in preparing a piano by applying parts of a broken music box, such as the wheel, screws, and bolts, to the strings, to produce sounds that resemble a toy piano. Additional sounds come from a music box, metallic bowls, and a miniature toy piano.

    Premiered at the Mostly Mozart Festival in 2012, Chimers (2011) was inspired by the magic chimes used in The Magic Flute that protect Papageno and Tamino. Chen adapted this sound world to her toy piano, along with toy piano rods standing upright on the toy piano. These rods are played with tuning forks both as mallets as well as their more “conventional” approach, resonating against the body of the piano.

    Chen created Mobius (2013) with her longtime partner Rob Dietz for customized music boxes. In real-time, a performer punches holes into a strip of paper, that is hand-cranked through a music box, each hole allowing a music box tine to sound. The strip is taped together in a Mobius fashion so that a second music box plays the notes upside-down. These acoustic sounds are also digitally processed, resulting in a rich collage of music box timbres.

    Chen’s Beneath A Trace of Vapor (2011) was written for flutist Eric Lamb, who is accompanied by recorded sounds of his improvisations, inhales, and exhales.

    - Starkland


    Phyllis Chen
    - "is a pianist, toy pianist, and composer, described as “a dazzling performer who wrings novel sounds from the humble toy piano,” (New York Times). Recognized by the Chicago Reader as “one of the world leading proponents of the toy piano,” she is the founder of UnCaged Toy Piano, dedicated to expanding the repertoire for toy piano. Chen’s compositions have been described as “spellbinding” (New York Times) and “mesmerizing” (Chicago Reader). She is one of the composers for the one-woman play, The Other Mozart, about Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s forgotten sister Nannerl,  performed and written by Sylvia Milo. In 2015, Chen finished a work, commissioned by the Singapore International Festival of the Arts, for the avant-garde pianist/toy pianist Margaret Leng Tan. Chen will compose a new work, for the JACK Quartet and toy piano, set to premiere at the Look & Listen Festival in May 2016. She is a founding member of the International Contemporary Ensemble, and has previously released four albums on Concert Artists Guild, cerumenspoon, New Focus Recordings, and fyo records." 

    More Phyllis Chen at Emusers

    Nathan Davis
    - “writes music that deals deftly and poetically with timbre and sonority” (New York Times). Lincoln Center inaugurated the Tully Scope Festival with the premiere of his landmark work Bells and has presented other premieres at the Mostly Mozart Festival. He has been commissioned by ICE, American Opera Projects, Calder Quartet, Yarn/Wire, Steven Schick, Donaueschinger Musiktage, and the Ojai Festival (with sound sculptor Trimpin). Davis’s music has been performed at New York’s Carnegie Hall, Park Avenue Armory, Miller Theatre, (Le) Poisson Rouge, and Roulette; in a portrait concert at Spoleto USA; and internationally at Darmstadt, Helsinki Musica Nova, Aspekte Salzburg, and Acht Brücken Köln. He has received awards from Meet The Composer, Fromm Foundation, Copland Fund, Jerome Foundation, MATA, and the American Music Center. With Phyllis Chen, Davis scored Sylvia Milo’s acclaimed monodrama The Other Mozart. As a percussionist, he is a member of ICE and has appeared as a concerto soloist with the Seattle Symphony, Tokyo Symphony, and Nagoya Symphony."


    - A Live version of the last track and totally gorgeous !


  •  

    Scanner - Choral ReWorks

    - "Five re-workings of choral works by Britten, Burton, Bennet, Elgar and Hensel, commissioned by the National Portrait Gallery in London for the launch of their Choral Audio Guide on 14 October 2016. The works were installed in five separate locations within the gallery itself but I felt it might be of interest to others to be able to hear these works as they were intended to."
    http://www.scannerdot.com/
  • edited October 2016
      
    "Composer David Smooke (Peabody Conservatory of Music faculty member) is a sonic tour guide, taking the listener on a journey that explores, in his own words, “alien topographies” and “unreal landscapes.”

    - "Called “an impressive, eclectic composer” (Time Out New York) and possessing “some of the most uninhibited brain cells around” (Washington Post), composer David Smooke (Peabody Conservatory of Music faculty member) is a sonic tour guide, leading his listeners on a polystylistic and expressive journey. Smooke employs a wide range of compositional techniques to paint his individually unreal soundworld, including microtonality, a deft timbral and orchestrational brush stroke, and extended performance techniques. This release features his works across the instrumental spectrum, from the title track which is a toy piano concerto with wind ensemble to the eerie piano solo, Transgenic Fields, to the multi-track composition of layered bassoons, 21 Miles to Coolville. Smooke is the toy piano soloist with the Peabody Wind Ensemble in Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death, a piece with a fascinating inspiration. The medical examiner’s office for the state of Maryland in Baltimore houses several doll-like structures that are used for forensic investigations. Smooke evokes the intersection between the childlike and the macabre by integrating the toy piano into twisted microtonal harmonies in the wind ensemble, and some wonderful cameo appearances of a microtonally tuned banjo. The instrumental colors in the work are striking and reminiscent of Messiaen, and the soundworld Smooke has created is simultaneously riveting and unsettling. Transgenic Fields, dusk is as introverted as Nutshell is chaotic, as steady left hand chords with uneven right hand figuration suggest microscopic changes that have macro-implications. A Baby Bigger Grows Than Up Was, based on a text by Michael Kimball, is written for the unconventional loadbang quartet (baritone voice, trombone, trumpet, and bass clarinet). Fragmented texts are repeated to the point where they lose semantic meaning and become pure sonic events, not unlike how children mindlessly repeat words as sounds in the process of learning them. Some Details of Hell engages with the other end of life, setting a text by Lucie Brock-Broido about a death bed scene in a hospital. down.stream and 21 Miles to Coolville are both innovative additions to two growing corners of the repertoire, works for instrument plus loop pedal, and works for multi-tracked layered of one instrument (a la Reich’s counterpoint series). down.stream mines a surprising new vocabulary of sound from the toy piano and reaches a cathartic climax, and 21 Miles finishes the recording off with an optimistic portrayal of a road trip in the Appalachian foothills."
    - New Focus Recordings - Emusic

    - "My music is about exploding boundaries in the continuing search for transcendence. These metamorphoses manifest themselves through the physical instrumentation, the musical development of material and the dramatic through-line of the compositions. Disjointed stases of sound coalesce unexpectedly into regions of clarity defined by funk-style grooves or long sinuous melodies; traditional instruments joyfully explore noise-based sonorities. I am fascinated by the sonic images that surround us in our daily life and reflect these quotidian experiences by musically evoking the sense of natural yet impossible landscapes replete with refracted and distorted birdcalls, oddly-voiced machines, and pulsing yet unpredictable rhythms similar to tidal wave patterns or crowd flows. The underlying gestural language of my music recalls the experimental post-punk goth and progressive rock music of my youth—which inspired my original interest in art music. Both of these obsessions impelled me towards the microtonality that often provides the basis for my harmonic universe. Each piece considers the drama of performance and narration, reflecting my years working in theater as a director, producer and stagehand, while my deep love for the visual arts has led me to collaborate on multi-media installation works and performance art."
  • edited November 2016
       
    Caleb Burhans, viola - Caroline Shaw & Ben Russell, violin - Clarise Jensen, Cello
    Carolina Eyck, Theremin

    - "Eyck composed these six Fantasias specifically for the 12” vinyl LP format, a practice reminiscent of early-60s Nonesuch releases. All performances were recorded in full takes with no editing. American Contemporary Music Ensemble (ACME) tracked Eyck’s scores first, and then Eyck overdubbed her deft, fluid, single-take improvisations—thus the fitting title Fantasias. The result is an organic virtuosity that leads the listener through a wide range of sonic environments across the six pieces.

    Eyck’s striking theremin performances on Fantasias showcase her dead-aim intonation, her command of microtonality, her fluid melodicism, and—perhaps most importantly—her utter lack of self-consciousness as an improvisor. This latter quality is no accident, as Eyck has practiced improvisation for years, and has even studied techniques typically aimed at athletes for entering flow-states and shutting down critical inner dialogue.

    Eyck’s compositions range from slow-evolving arpeggiations reminiscent of Reich and Glass (see “Oakuunar Lynntuja” and “Dappa Solarjos”), to alternative bowing and fingering techniques that achieve an ethereal ambience (see “Leyhomi”), to athletic explorations reminiscent of Bartók’s String Quartets (see “Dappa Solarjos”). The titles were devised by Eyck and producer/label-head Allen Farmelo by scanning multiple Scandinavian languages for pleasing lingual combinations (a technique inspired by Canadian-Icelandic ecological poet Angela Rawlings). Conceptually, Eyck has located all of this music within her vivid childhood memories of the woods of northern Germany where she grew up. However, Eyck remains pointedly cognizant that this setting—and the young girl’s imagination that once enlivened it—act as metaphors for the context and mental state one needs to sustain creative presence. In a sense, the Fantasias stand as a metaphor for the very thing that made them possible. . . ."

    - Butterscotch Records - Second Inversion Review  



    - "At the age of 7 Carolina got her first theremin lessons by Lydia Kavina. After her debut in the Berlin Philharmonic in 2002 she has been invited to various concerts and festivals in the whole world. It was not long before she was known as one the best theremin soloists worldwide.

    As a soloist and chamber musician she has given concerts worldwide and collaborated with Heinz Holliger, Robert Kolinsky, Gerhard Oppitz, the conductors Andrey Boreyko, Michael Sanderling, Gürer Aykal and John Storgårds, the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra, the HR-Symphony Orchestra, the Dresden Philharmonic, the Bern Symphony Orchestra, the Essen Philharmonic Orchestra, the Lapland Chamber Orchestra, the Heidelberg Symphonic Orchestra, the Mozarteum Orchestra Salzburg and ACME, the American Contemporary Music Ensemble. . . . ."


  • edited November 2016

     
    EFTERKLANG & THE HAPPY HOPELESS ORCHESTRA
    Leaves: The Colour of Falling

    Vocalists:
    Lisbeth Balslev (soprano)
    Morten Grove Frandsen (countertenor)
    Katinka Fogh Vindelev (soprano)
    Nicolai Elsberg (bass)
    Casper Clausen (Efterklang)

    Musicians:
    Mads Brauer (electronics, Efterklang)
    Rasmus Stolberg (bass, Efterklang)
    Bjarke Mogensen (accordion)
    Jenny Lüning (bratsch)
    Josefine Weber (bratsch)
    Marie Louise Lind (cello)
    Josefine Opsahl (cello)
    Ying-Hsueh Chen (percussion)
    Sara Nigard Rosendal (percussion)
    Michael Min Knudsen (harmonium, celeste)

    - "In the summer of 2015 ‘Leaves – The Colour of Falling’ was performed at 16 sold out nights in the 1000 m2 nuclear basement of the former Copenhagen Municipal Hospital. The opera was commissioned by Copenhagen Opera Festival who produced it in collaboration with the local theatre Sort/Hvid. The scenography was made by Marie Rosendahl Chemnitz and it was staged by Christian Lollike. The result was 16 horrifying, fascinating and mysterious evenings received by an enthusiastic audience and with great reviews to follow. The set-up in the basement can never be remade, but the opera will be granted new life with this release and the coming concerts with Efterklang & The Happy Hopeless Orchestra.

    The lyrics for ‘Leaves – The Colour of Falling’ are written by the poet Ursula Andkjær Olsen and transformed into a musical piece by Efterklang and Karsten Fundal. Together they have experimented with musical tradition from both the rhythmical and classical world. This release shows you a way into the exciting world of opera as well as challenging the genre and the discography of Efterklang and Fundal.

    The 10 tracks of the release span around 1 hour, and do not follow the traditional linear configuration of an opera. Karsten Fundal explains his thoughts on Leaves:

    “We wanted to break down the conventions of the opera as a genre. The result is a song cycle about a cult located beneath the ground while the earth might be experiencing its downfall above ground. It’s about loss – loss of identity, loss of love and loss of life itself. We wanted to create an opera for the mood you’re put in when you on a beautiful autumn day see how a brown leaf falls from a tree in the garden – the beautiful swaying fall signifying that everything will perish.”

    ‘Leaves – The Colour of Falling’ features appearances from the legendary danish opera star Lisbeth Balslev, the countertenor Morten Grove Frandsen (one of Denmark’s most promising opera talents), Nicolai Elsberg (known for his formidable bass), and Katinka Fogh Vindelev (who has been touring with Efterklang for many years).

    ‘Leaves – The Colour of Falling’ was recorded by Francesco Donadello and Michael Bojesen was the conductor during the recordings.

    - Tambourhinoceros.


    The Happy Hopeless Orchestra

  • edited November 2016
      
    - "News from Afar presents five compositions (2010-2015) by David Evan Jones (b. 1946) all of which integrate computer processed news broadcasts with instruments performing live. These pieces transform reports of the difficult news of our day and bring them into the contemplative frame of the concert hall.

    Each piece refers to a recent news event with local and international significance: the seminal 2013 Gezi Park demonstrations in Istanbul, the massive 2011 Tsedek Chevrati (“social justice”) demonstrations in Israel, the 2010 attack by North Korea on South Korea’s Yeonpyeong Island, the ongoing protests over the construction of a naval base on South Korea’s Jeju Island... Each broadcast is in the language of the country in which the event occurred. In performance (and in the videos listed just above) translations are projected as supertitles.

    The news broadcasts were selected for their content and with close attention to voice qualities, speech rhythms, and intonation contours of the speakers. The broadcast voices were slowed (time-stretched) and gently stabilized into intelligible pitches in a way that generally preserved the original intonation contours. The stretched speech rhythms were edited somewhat so as to correspond occasionally to points of rhythmic emphasis.

    As with most text-setting, the news broadcasts and the music imply interacting narratives. What makes the current project unique is the unification of these two elements by means of the detailed integration of speech rhythms and pitch intonations from “found audio” with the melodic/harmonic/rhythmic structures of the music."


    David Evan Jones is a composer with publications in chamber opera, chamber music, computer music, and contemporary music theory. Some of his theoretical and compositional work focuses on structural relationships between phonetics and music.

    Jones has worked extensively in computer music, composing in residence at the Elektronmusikstudion (EMS) in Stockholm, at L'Institut de Recherche et de Coordination Acoustique/Musique (IRCAM) in Paris, and at Bregman Electronic Music Studio at Dartmouth College (USA) where he co-founded, with Jon Appleton, the Dartmouth graduate program in Electro-Acoustic Music. 

    Jones' compositions have been recognized by grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the California Arts Council, and the New Hampshire Arts Council.  He has been honored by a first prize award in the Premio Ancona International Composition Competition (Italy), first prize in the national competition sponsored by the American New Music Consortium, and first prize in the MACRO International Composition Competition (USA). He has received Honorable Mentions in the Prix Ars Electronica, Austria, and in the Bourges (France) Electro-Acoustic Music Competition. 

    His articles have appeared in Perspectives of New Music and Computer Music Journal.  His compositions are published by Dorn Publications, American Composers Editions, and on compact disks from Wergo Records, Centaur Records, Contemporary Recording Studios, Musical Heritage Society, and Composers Recordings Inc. 

    His first chamber opera, Bardos, received its professional premiere at Hoam Hall in Seoul, Korea in 2004.  He has recently published a CD of "Neo-Balkan Jazz and Concert Music" on Centaur Records and is at work on a second CD of recent chamber music.  

    Jones is Professor of Music at the University of California Santa Cruz."

    - American Composers Alliance

  • edited November 2016
     
    Composers: J.S. Bach, Caleb Burhans
    Clara Iannotta, Matt Marks, Andrew Greenwald

    Violinist Yuki Numata Resnick has had J.S. Bach on the brain for as long as she can remember. An active performer with Talea Ensemble and the American Contemporary Music Ensemble (ACME), Numata Resnick steps out of the chamber music setting on her debut solo album For Ko. to explore her obsession with Bach through the context of new original works written for her by composers Caleb Burhans, Andrew Greenwald, Clara Iannotta, and Matt Marks.

    Like Shakespeare to theater, Bach is so central to the Western art music canon that he is impossible to avoid, yet almost as difficult to make one’s own. Thus, the idea for this album is simple: create a dialogue between old and new by commissioning a series of works that would sit alongside — and indeed within — one of Bach’s great contributions, the Partita No. 1 in B minor.

    Using the Partita as a point of departure, each composer creates unique sound worlds that take the listener on an unexpected journey from a post-minimalist, foggy memory of Bach to a children’s story about a monkey named Trunket. The resulting album does more than just recite Bach -- it finds and grounds the great composer in a personal space that’s at once intimate and welcoming.

    - Innova Recordings.


    Yuki Numata Resnick

  •   

      

    Jon Gibson, winds, keyboards, autoharp, ambient recording, soprano saxophones; Joseph Kubera, keyboards; David Van Tieghem, percussion

      In Relative Calm, I am very much involved with texture and collage, and it is mainly intuitive. I don't want to be compulsive about the concepts that may inspire a piece. An idea may look wonderful on paper, and may feature an exciting and innovative formula, but the music must sound. Some composers care only about the idea … but I care only about the actual sound of the music.      

    - Jon Gibson


     Jon Gibson (b. 1940) is a New York City–based composer, multi-wind instrumentalist and visual artist who has been a part of the new-music scene for over four decades. During this time his creative output has included music for solo instruments, various ensembles, dance, music theater, film, and opera.

    In addition to the artists mentioned in the liner notes, Gibson has also performed and
    collaborated with a host of other musicians, choreographers, and artists, including Harold Budd, Peter D’Agostino, David Behrman, JoAnne Akalaitis, Miriam Seidel, Steve Reich, Terry Riley, La Monte Young, Thomas Buckner, Petr Kotik, and Christian Wolff. He has been a member of the Philip Glass Ensemble since its beginnings. Gibson is also involved in an ongoing collaboration with the Nina Winthrop and Dancers Dance Company, composing and performing the music for more than seven dance productions over a period of twenty years.

    Gibson’s opera, Violet Fire, composed in collaboration with librettist Miriam Seidel, is about the inventor Nikola Tesla. It received its world premiere at the National Theater of Belgrade, and was presented at BAM’s Next Wave Festival in October 2006. Gibson has received grants from the New York State Council for the Arts, The National Endowment for the Arts, the Rockefeller Foundation, the New York Foundation for the Arts, the Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust, and Meet the Composer.

    His music can be heard on the New World, Superior Viaduct, Tzadik, Orange Mountain Music, New Tone, Point Music, and Lovely Music labels and he appears on recordings by Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Alvin Curran, Arthur Russell, and Robert Ashley, among others.

    - New World Records

  • edited November 2016
    Brilliant stuff from a member of the Norwegian trio Hemmelig Tempo,
    - out on Ugh Records

    - "2016 has proved to be quite an active year for Hemmelig Tempo. Following their performances with Carte Blanche and the release of Are You Part of Some Kind of Cult?, we see the release of Professor Waffel's solo album Assemblages on Ugh Records.

    Assemblages developed from Professor Waffel's idiosyncratic compositional technique which we see hints of in his work with Hemmelig Tempo, but coming into full life here. The work is constructed around tiny sampled fragments of classical modernist and ethnic music, field recordings and foley. These fragments are re-assembled in an audio editing program like a complex puzzle and subsequently combined with improvised performances on a range of instruments and objects ranging from flutes, brass, contrabass and percussion to analogue synthesizers, ethnic instruments such as Shakuhachi, Mezzoued and Anklung, several instruments constructed by Professor Waffel, and various objects such as typewriters, creeky doors and bow and arrow. Field recordings of chain saws, pinball machines, bees, etc. are incorporated harmonically and rhythmically into the compositions to create musical assemblages in which virtually everything is possible.

    The work may share some similarities with Berio’s Sinfonia (which was also referred to as an assemblage by Berio), but the compositional technique owes far more to Stravinsky’s Russian period and the emphasis on musical collage and juxtapositions, as well as the "combines" of the late neo-dadaist artist Robert Rauschenberg."

    - "By liberating the possibilities of sound from the inherent constraints and limitations of the symphony orchestra, Professor Waffel creates a Vareseian world of dramatic juxtapositions of timbre, an elaborate tapestry with violently rugged seams. Furthermore, genres are mixed at will: musique concrete, symphonic music, text-sound poetry, electronic experiments and jazz assembled together. '

    As always, Professor Waffel's tongue-in-cheek attitude is never far away, as in the brief duel between a bee-hive and a snare drum roll ending Assemblage No. 7, or the Sonata for Door and Vacuum Cleaner which was given to Karl Heinz Stockhausen during his visit to Norway in 2005, and subsequently developed into Assemblage No. 6. And of course one is lead to wonder whether the musically transcribed news report of the murder of John F. Kennedy in Assemblage No.1 is some kind of satirical commentary on the current state of affairs in the US. However, the work was in fact composed in 2004-2005, predating both the recent elections and Professor Waffel's work with Hemmelig Tempo.

    On a philosophical level, Assemblages draws slightly on the work of the social anthropologist Roy Wagner and his semiotic theories on creativity. Briefly put, the comparison or juxtaposition of two ideas, or in this case, musical fragments, inevitably creates some sort of semiotic debris, resulting in innovation in the way that fusion derived from jazz and rock, or in the way the Comte de Lautréamont’s, description of a chance meeting on an operating table between an umbrella and a sewing-machine inspired surrealism. Here, in a post modern tradition, musical genres are freely juxtaposed and interpolated. Atonal passages are released by gravity towards certain keys, pointillism may frame free improvisations, and jazz grooves may appear out of nowhere spiced with exotic instruments from unknown cultures."
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