Showing posts with label avant-garde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label avant-garde. Show all posts

Monday, 30 January 2023

BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra Plays Xenakis, Debussy, Ligeti & Bartók (15 December 2022)

Concert broadcast from Glasgow last month, with the announcer opening on a Xenakis quote: "savageness is part of everyday life".  With such a weighty introduction, you'd be expecting some fireworks, and the musicians of the BBC SSO certainly deliver in the opening blast of Xenakis' computer-composed Atrées.  But there's subtlety too, in the sumptuous rendering of Debussy's Jeux that fills out the concert's first half.

Ilan Volkov, a conductor I always like for his relish for the avant-garde, talks us through the tuning used for Ligeti's Ramifications before taking the two groups of strings into the piece's still-remarkable miasma of sound.  The grand finale is another landmark in 20th century music, Bartók's Music For Strings, Percussion & Celesta, sounding riveting all the way from the grand sweep at its outset through the eerie third movement and beyond.

pw: sgtg

Iannis Xenakis at SGTG:
 
György Ligeti at SGTG:

Monday, 5 December 2022

Annie Gosfield - Flying Sparks And Heavy Machinery (2001)

Appropriately-titled release from New York-based composer Annie Gosfield (b. 1960, Philadelphia).  This album, her second of four for John Zorn's Tzadik label, presents two works "developed in 1999 during a six-week residency in the factories of Nuremberg" designed to "combine art and industry".  The three-part, 42-minute EWA7 that takes up the bulk of the album is based on the mechanical sounds and rhythms of its titular factory where the premiere performance was held, with the 'Cylinders' portion taken from this original recording.
 
Engines whir into life in the opening section, gradually joined by metallic clangs developing into interlocking rhythmic patterns.  The passages of eerie subtlety in this first movement, with electronics by Ikue Mori, are particularly effective in contrast to the industrial-racket expectations that the next two parts deliver on.  By this point, with drving rhythms underpinning the other noises, comparisons with Einstürzende Neubauten are inescapable, but honestly, who cares - if you like this sort of thing, Gosfield puts it together really, really well, and it's such riotous fun to crank up loud.  
 
The shorter work that closes the album and provides its title takes similar inspiration from industrial sounds, but writes them in to a (slightly) more conventional context for string quartet and percussion quartet.  It's a nice conclusion to a very satisfying album which makes me want to listen to more of Gosfield's music (believe it or not, this one was a charity shop find, earlier this year).

pw: sgtg

Monday, 10 October 2022

Frank Zappa (BBC Symphony Orchestra / uBu Ensemble) - Total Immersion at The Barbican, London (19th March 2022)

With the Proms posts over, here's a 'Total Immersion Day' broadcast from earlier in the year.  Taking a fresh look at the Zappa music of the London Symphony Orchestra, Perfect Stranger and Yellow Shark eras, and more besides, the day's events also threaded in Zappa's formative influences as a composer.  This gives us a great take on Varèse's Intégrals as well as some lesser-known Stravinsky, in his late work written in memoriam of Aldous Huxley and the miniature song-cycle Pribaoutki from 1914.

For Zappa's music, the 'Total Immersion' concerts were divided between the full force of the BBC Symphony Orchestra to play the LSO-era works, and the contemporary ensemble uBu for the rest.  From the former, we get the lushly-orchestrated version of Pedro's Dowry, the complementary ballet pieces Bob In Dacron and Sad Jane, and the full-length Mo 'N Herb's Vacation.  The ensemble play The Perfect Stranger, Outrage At Valdez, Dog/Meat and Be-Bop Tango, giving full vivid life to Zappa's musical colourings.  Taken together, this broadcast is a great presentation of unique music, made even more informative by a couple of chats with Negative Dialectics Of Poodle Play author Ben Watson.

pw: sgtg

Friday, 23 September 2022

Barre Phillips - Mountainscapes (1976)

One of the most satisfyingly avant-garde ECMs from the label's first decade, and also the first appearance in-house for reedsman John Surman, whose association with ECM continues to this day.  Recorded in March 1976, Mountainscapes was the result of the Surman-Phillips-Martin trio being given fresh purpose by the addition of Austrian electronics wizard Dieter Feichtner.  
 
The collision of free jazz and synth ooze makes for a unique and thoroughly enjoyable listening experience, with the tracklist simply a numbered suite to immerse yourself in.  Parts III and VII are duos between Phillips' bass improvisations and the eerie glow of Feichtner's synths, cut from a 40-minute free-form session (imagine that in its entireity sitting in Eicher's vault somewhere...).  The closing piece makes good use of a happened-to-drop-by John Abercrombie, adding another texture to this singular record.

pw: sgtg

Monday, 22 August 2022

Jacob Druckman - String Quartets Nos. 2 & 3, Dark Wind, Reflections On The Nature Of Water (1998)

A sample of the chamber music composed by Philadelphia-born Jacob Druckman (1928-1996).  The most avant-garde piece here, from Druckman's experimental 1960s, is the String Quartet No. 2.  Placed last on this collection, the single-movement work calls for the wildest playing techniques, and contrasts nicely with the album opener, the lengthy light-and-shade of 1981's String Quartet No. 3.  In between are Reflections On The Nature Of Water (1986), a solo marimba suite performed by the composer's son Daniel Druckman, and another pensive, dramatic string piece Dark Wind (1994).

pw: sgtg

The Group For Contemporary Music at SGTG:

Monday, 8 August 2022

BBC Proms 2022 - Hebrides Ensemble Play Xenakis, Messiaen & Ravel (Proms in Belfast, 18 July 2022)

This year's first post from the Proms actually comes from the Waterfront Hall Studio in Belfast, and is an hour-long chamber concert marking Iannis Xenakis' centenary.  To offer up something special for the occasion, the programme starts with an unpublished early piece by Xenakis: a piano fragment from 1949.  Lasting under a minute, it's nice to hear something so rare by Xenakis.  Straight afterwards, the Hebrides Ensemble dive in to the composer's late period with Akea (1986) for piano and string quartet, with the dramatic sonorities making his signature unmistakeble.  Ittidra, one of Xenakis' final works from a decade later, features ghostly, queasy strings, and the Ravel homage À R. (1987) for piano highlights his formative influences, as do the Ravel and Messiaen pieces that fill out a well-chosen programme.

pw: sgtg

Monday, 18 July 2022

BBC Singers: Joby Talbot & Joanna Marsh (2022)

Two 21st century choral works made up this programme from Milton Court Concert Hall, London on 20th May.  The BBC Singers were first enhanced by the live electronic manipulations of Glen Scott, who was the original collaborator with the composer Joanna Marsh.  British-born Marsh (1970-) composed SEEN for the BBC Singers, and this is the work's world premiere with Glen Scott performing the extensive electronic tweaks on stage with them.  After the interval is Path Of Miracles, composed in 2005 by another British composer, Joby Talbot (1971-).  In four parts, marking the main posts on the Camino de Santiago pilgrimage trail, the hour-long work takes texts from several languages and across history to craft an engaging epic immersion in vocal sound.

pw: sgtg

Friday, 15 July 2022

Tangerine Dream - Atem (1973)

Tangerine Dream in the early 70s were making great strides with each album, and now settled into their trio lineup, with this fourth album edged closer to their breakthrough sound.  The grand sweep of mellotron that opens the 20 minute title track was key to this - although Franke's thundering drums still looked back to the sound of Alpha Centauri, Froese's mellotron had established itself in the TD armoury, and Phaedra was only a year away.

Then after five and a half minutes of this dramatic introduction, Atem changes gear into becalmed ambience for the rest of its runtime - another harbringer of the near future.  Three pieces make up the second side of the original LP, starting with the humid junglescape of Fauni-Gena, looking forwards in this case to Froese's second solo album.  Circulation Of Events has the most proto-Phaedra eerie ambience of the whole album - towards the end of the mellotron/organ-dominated piece, a synth pulse gives a foretaste of the epic Berlin-school sequences just around the corner.  TD end the album with one more nod back to their more avant-garde beginnings with the vocal intro to Wahn.  After this they'd become electronic legends.

pw: sgtg

Friday, 8 July 2022

Franco Degrassi & Gianni Lenoci - Franco Degrassi Gianni Lenoci (1998)

Earliest of a handful of collaborations between avant-garde composer and improviser Franco Degrassi (b. 1958, Bari) and fellow Italian Gianni Lenoci (1963-2019), a jazz pianist and composer from Monopoli.  The eight untitled tracks on this album credit both artists with "piano, computer, environmental sounds and acoustical instrument sounds", and after initial tracks focused on piano then concrete sounds, progress to various amalgamations of both.  The piano textures and sounds of the room can be loud and grating, or richly textured and meditative, adding up to just under an hour of closely-observed possibilities in improvised sound.

pw: sgtg

Friday, 1 July 2022

Tangerine Dream - Zeit (1972)

On to the third of four albums making up Tangerine Dream's 'pink years' on the Ohr label, and we land on their first double album, and possibly the most audacious experiment of their career: a "Largo in four movements", each one taking up a side of vinyl.  The classic trio lineup of Froese, Franke and Baumann is now in place, but the Berlin School sequences are still a couple of years away.  Far from being ambient music that floats pleasantly in space, this is dark, heavy sound with enough gravitational pull to suck in planets (I thought for ages that album art was meant to represent a black hole, before figuring out it's just an eclipse, but it still looks great for the sounds within).

Joining the core lineup for Zeit were Steve Schroyder, making his final appearance on organ, and Popol Vuh's Florian Fricke, bringing his giant modular Moog as he was one of only a couple of German owners of the beast of an instrument at the time.  Fricke is featured on all tracks except the second movement.  Four cellists were also invited along, creating the memorable drone that introduces the album.  The resulting double-LP wasn't particularly well received, Ohr unsure how to market such a behemoth - but the right people were listening, including John Peel in England, who would become an even more important figure with the release of Zeit's follow-up.

pw: sgtg

Monday, 13 June 2022

Manchester Collective - Heavy Metal (live at the White Hotel, Salford, 11 Dec 2021)

Broadcast on BBC Radio 3 back in January, the Manchester Collective ensemble (previously featured at last year's Proms - link below) gave this concert on their home turf of music for strings, live electronics and percussion.  The programme gets off to a lively start with Bryce Dessner's Aheym (Yiddish for 'homeward'), written to suggest flight and travel.  Things then settle down momentarily for Dobrinka Tabakova's trio piece Insight (studio recording here).

The first commission of the programme follows, and is introduced by its composer Ben Nobuto.  Serenity 2.0 is intended to evoke pachinko arcades Nobuto encountered in Japan, and its blend of pre-recorded sounds with fractured strings and percussion is a highly enjoyable wild ride towards a calm conclusion.  A couple of years ago, the Proms included a piece for bassoon and distortion pedal - now, here's a cello through a distortion pedal, as the Collective's cellist Stephanie Tress performs Michael Gordon's Industry.  Then to close, we get more pre-recorded sound with live strings in the newly-minted commission Squint, composed by Sebastian Gainsborough aka Vessel.  It's a great end to an ear-bending collection of contemporary music.

pw: sgtg

Manchester Collective at SGTG:

Monday, 6 June 2022

George Russell - Electronic Sonata For Souls Loved By Nature (three recordings)

Electronic Sonata For Souls Loved By Nature is the signature work by jazz composer, theorist and pianist George Russell (1923-2009), presented today in no less than three different recordings.  Got hold of these in a Black Saint/Soul Note reissues box, so more Russell to come.  First up, The Essence Of George Russell, which may or may not contain the earliest recording of the Sonata: it's unfortunately the only thing lacking a recording year in the original double LP's notes.

First a drummer, George Russell's key contribution to jazz was as a music theorist championing the Lydian mode, which influenced everyone from Miles Davis and Gil Evans to the young Scandinavian musicians he'd work with on moving there in the 60s, many of whom would become ECM heavyweights.  Listening back to Terje Rypdal's Odyssey box set after hearing Russell is quite enlightening, for example, and it's Rypdal who is the guitarist on the "Essence" recording of Electronic Sonata For Souls Loved By Nature, the lineup also including Jan Garbarek, Arild Andersen and Jon Christensen (you can probably guess by now what drew me to the Russell box).  On the original "Essence" double LP there were two additional pieces making up side four - only one of these, the enjoyably wild Now And Then (recorded 1966), is included on the CD due to time restrictions.
Electronic Sonata For Souls Loved By Nature, then, is structured in 14 segued 'Events': some where propulsive basslines and funky drums drive it forward, and others where the rhythms fall away and Stockhausen-like taped sounds come to the fore, as well as African field recordings.  The writing for horns can be both tight and melodic and much freer, particularly when Garbarek takes the spotlight (Jan's credited as having a hand in composing some themes, presumably these spotlights).  Taken all together, it's a rich and rewarding immersion in early fusion, avant-garde but accessible jazz composition and judicious electronic/tape music integration.

This next recording, originally released on the Flying Dutchman label in 1971, is perhaps the best known.  Soul Note's later reissue added the "1968" to the album cover - I'm not certain why, as Russell's original liner notes state the recording was made at a concert near Oslo in April 1969.  Perhaps "1968" refers to composer revisions that year, e.g. the reduction to sextet -  the larger group of musicians is slimmed down to just the core lineup, who are the same other than Red Mitchell now playing bass rather than Andersen.  This version also ups the tempo in places compared to the "Essence" recording, the whole thing running under an hour compared to just over the hour mark on Essence. 
Russell revisited the Sonata for this 1980 version, recorded in an Italian studio in June of that year with mostly American musicians.  It's recognisably the same work, two continuous sides with seven Events apiece, so hasn't undergone any major compositional reworking.  The turn-of-the-80s studio fidelity does make the ingenuity of the writing and musicians' interplay come across clearer, so it's a worthwhile contrast to the other two recordings.
 
pw for all: sgtg

Monday, 30 May 2022

Toru Takemitsu - Garden Rain (2005 compilation of LPs released 1973 & 1975)

Nice charity shop find by a composer I'd been wanting to hear more of.  This CD gave the first international reissue to a pair of Japanese LPs from the mid-70s, which together offer a good cross-section of the different ways Takemitsu approached composing for a variety of instruments (as well as a bit of tape music) up to that time.
The "Minatur V" album from 1975 is placed first on the CD - possibly to avoid front-loading it with the most avant-garde music - and thus starts with the calm, accessible brass ensemble piece Garden Rain (1974).  This is contrasted next with earlier writing for string octet, Le Son Calligraphé (1958-60), showing Takemitsu's blend of Japanese and European composing styles already in place, as does Hika-Elegy (1966) for piano and violin.  A solo guitar suite, Folios, brings us back up to date for the mid-70s.  Love the way the guitar's been recorded here, as well as the fine rendition by Kiyoshi Shumara.
"Minatur II", originally released in 1973, is more of an adventure in sound, first pairing an oboe and sho for Distance (1972) then a flute that is sung into, spoken/growled into etc for Voice (1971).  From the same year, Stanza II blends the sound of a harp with concrete sounds and electronic tones on tape, making for an engrossing sonic highlight of the collection.  Lastly, Eucalypts I, a 1970 commission for the Zurich Colligeum Musicum, makes striking use of the resonant properties of the harp, oboe and strings, and Eucalypts II draws out the solo parts from the main work.

pw: sgtg

Takemitsu at SGTG:

Wednesday, 15 December 2021

Konstruktivits - Psykho Genetika (1995 expanded edition, orig. rel. 1983)

Perhaps the best-known release by Glenn Michael Wallis, krautrock fan, Throbbing Gristle assistant and occasional collaborator with Chris & Cosey and Whitehouse.  Using the band name Konstruktivists with interchangeable spellings like the one above, Wallis and collaborators (like Gary Levermore on this one) combined krautrock influences and the best of early 80s industrial to create ominous electronic drones, with tape manipulation, other noises and effects, and occasional eerie vocals - all the good stuff.

Psykho Genetika was one of the first releases (along with the Nurse With Wound compilation Ostranenie 1913) on the Third Mind label, and yep, that's Stapleton's artwork on the cover above.  The original LP release was apparently a bit of a compromise given the label's available resources - on its first digital reissue in 1995, Psykho Genetika included "the full, uncut version" of the album with 33 minutes of extra material, and improved sound.

pw: sgtg

Wednesday, 1 December 2021

Pink Freud - Pink Freud Plays Autechre (2015)

Live album by Polish yass group from Gdansk - and yep, as per the album title and cover, every track is a rendering of an Autechre piece, performed by a jazz quartet with additional electronics.  This followed on from an earlier cover of Goz Quarter on Pink Freud's 2010 album Monster Of Jazz - bassist and bandleader Wojtek Mazolewski is a huge fan of Autechre, and described this project as the realisation of a dream.  Eight tracks written by the IDM duo whizz by with not much in the way of improvisation, but tons of energy making for an exhilarating set.  Can't fault this for being a unique idea that just kind of works in its own weird way.
 
pw: sgtg
 
The actual Autechre at SGTG:

Monday, 15 November 2021

Giacinto Scelsi - Natura Renovatur, Anagamin, Ohoi, Elohim (Orch. Royal de Chambre de Wallonie, 2000)

Icy, ghostly uneasy listening from microtonal magician Giacinto Scelsi (1905-88).  This nice compact album from the Royal Chamber Orchestra of Wallonia contains four of Scelsi's works for string orchestra; as the liner notes point out, this is the ideal force for really exploring in depth how Scelsi's music was so unique.  The continuous shifting of the tonal and harmonic ground beneath your feet, coupled with the various advanced techniques applied to the strings, mean that any temporary refuge in a recognisable chord is likely to vanish into thin air the next moment.  
 
This can be appreciated to its fullest extent on the first and lengthiest piece Natura Renovatur (1967), a rewrite of an earlier string quartet.  The unrelenting darkness of Anagamin (1965) is next, contrasted with the calmer, luminous Ohoi (1966), then to finish comes the brief, but no less eerie Elohim, published posthumously.  Incredible music to get lost in on dark nights.

new link
pw: sgtg

Monday, 8 November 2021

Conlon Nancarrow (performed by Ensemble Modern) - Studies, Tango, Trio etc (1993)

Yvar Mikhashoff (1941-93) was a New York-based pianist, composer and professor; he is notable in relation to Conlon Nancarrow for his ensemble arrangements of Nancarrow's studies for player piano.  A couple of these were heard on this blog last year in a Proms performance (links below) - now, here's an album's worth, filled out by a handful of other Nancarrow compositions.

The seven early Studies presented here were arranged by Mikhashoff in consultation with Nancarrow, who it turned out had envisaged fiendishly complex ensemble arrangements from the outset, perhaps performed by mechanical means.  That the technology wasn't feasible at the time to make this happen led to the eventual adoption of the player piano as Nancarrow's main mode of expression.  The performances here, by Ensemble Modern, are therefore as close as they can be to the instrumentation Nancarrow originally had in mind, and are tons of fun to listen to as they burst into life, like crazed, hyper-polyrhythmic cut-ups of Gershwin or Ives.

Mikhashoff's correspondence with Nancarrow, and his own investigations, also led to the definitive presentations here of some of Nancarrow's lesser known chamber works.  The Trio for clarinet, bassoon and piano (1942) was restored to its complete score here; the Piece For Small Orchestra was written as late as 1986, and the Sarabande and Toccata date back to the 1930s.  Lastly, Mikhashoff had a bit of a thing for commissioning tango pieces from various composers, so Nancarrow duly obliges.  All of it is wonderful, joyously bonkers music from a true original.

pw: sgtg

Conlon Nancarrow at SGTG:

Monday, 1 November 2021

Frank Zappa - Jazz From Hell (1986)

More computer music from Zappa at his Synclavier, with the exception of one Shut Up 'N Play Year Guitar-style live snippet from a 1982 concert in Saint-Étienne, presumably included for a bit of textural variety.  
 
On all of the Synclavier performances, Zappa's increasing adeptness with the system - sampling odd sounds, pairing samples of different instruments together - comes through in the increasing sophistication of these tracks.  Some of them may sound like dated video-game music by today's standards, but they're all remarkable creations for the mid 80s, and remain enjoyable.  The opening Night School, the most straightforwardly melodic piece, is probably my favourite thing here, but the tricksier ones like While You Were Art II, the title track and the polyrhythmic tumble of G-Spot Tornado are lots of fun too.

pw: sgtg

Monday, 25 October 2021

Boulez Conducts Zappa - The Perfect Stranger (1984)

 
Three fine examples of Zappa's writing for orchestra - in this case chamber orchestra, as Pierre Boulez in preparatory correspondence advised that he had Ensemble InterContemporain most closely to hand.  The Perfect Stranger (the album) is filled out by 14 minutes of Synclavier music (the "Barking Pumpkin Digital Gratification Consort" is simply Zappa at his new favourite instrument).  
 
In the longest ensemble piece and title track, the liner notes explain that "A door-to-door salesman, accompanied by his faithful gypsy-mutant industrial vacuum cleaner cavorts licentiously with a slovenly housewife."  A recent live version, conducted by Ivan Volkov, is in the links list below.  The other two Boulez/InterContemporain renditions are Naval Aviation In Art?, first attempted at the 1975 Royce Hall concerts, and an arrangement of the live-improv vehicle Dupree's Paradise (see YCDTOSA 2 for a nice meandering band example).

On the Synclavier, Zappa gives us the twinkling atonality of The Girl In The Magnesium Dress; the Joe's Garage track re-arrangement Outside Now Again; the minute-long note-bending exercise Love Story, and the suitably ominous Jonestown.  He'd later remaster the album in a new mix, different running order and with noticeably different Synclavier instrumentation on Magnesium Dress - this first-pressing CD matches the original vinyl.

pw: sgtg
 
Frank Zappa at SGTG:

Wednesday, 20 October 2021

Renaud François - s/t (1988)

Hour-long overview of French composer and flautist Renaud François (b. 1943), in what appears to be the only album fully dedicated to his music.  François has played extensively as both a solo flautist and as a member of Ensemble 2E2M, who play his compositions here, first on ...Un Regard Oblique... (1983), with its interweaving flute solos as a combination of trombones and tubular bells flesh out the tonal colours.  A solo piano piece, Deuxième Récit (1986) is next, played by its dedicatee Carlos Roqué Alsina.

Sonnet (1983) puts to music a verse by sixteenth century poet Pontus De Tyard, with an interesting combination of bass voice, piano and tuba.  François' work for wind instruments is highlighted in the next two pieces: the ensemble seascape Reflets II (1978) which includes an incredible percussion crescendo, and flute duet Tu/Les Ecoutes (1976).  The album ends with its longest work, Les Chemins De La Nuit (1984) for cello and orchestra, with more percussive fireworks and engrossing layers of tonal shading.  Wish there was more music by François available, this is all good stuff.

pw: sgtg