Recordings found in a private collection stemming from a failed attempt at creating an indigenous market for gamelan music in 1928. The record series from which these recordings came failed miserably, but the performances themselves are quite well-done, and among other things provided inspiration for composer Colin McPhee (whose work is presented at the end of the album). The album starts out with a good deal of the gong kebyar form, with the piece "Kebyar Ding" broken into six movements (for recording onto the old 78s), followed by a pair of short, stand-alone works in the kebyar style. From there, it moves into a few pieces in the pelegongan form, telling a bit of the Calonarang epic, and adding in a pair of original compositions by I Wayan Lotring. A short stop in Northwest Bali for a pair of gong kebyar numbers leads the way to a gender wayan composition (for use with the wayang kulit shadow plays). A short composition in the jangger style is followed by a pair of gamelan angklung works, leading the way to the finale of the album. For the final number of tracks, Colin McPhee himself (along with Benjamin Britten) performs piano transcriptions of the music he was unable to record aurally while staying in Bali. It's a thoroughly detached version of gamelan, free of the ringing intonation that so much defines the genre. Nonetheless, it's an interesting attempt at converting the sounds into those of the piano. Flutist Georges Berrère provides accompaniment as well on a few tracks. It's an interesting mix of the old forms of gamelan and the earliest attempts at Western instrumentation using Balinese music as inspiration. The gamelan represented here is itself enough of a reason to give the album a listen or two, and the piano versions are simply additional treats for the curious armchair music historian.
- Adam Greenberg, All Music
30.10.10
The Roots of Gamelan - Bali. 1928 (1999)
26.10.10
Paul Giger, 'Ignis' (2000)
"Paul Giger, born in Switzerland in 1952, has not been content to remain in the competitive yet artistically safe world that most classical violinists inhabit. Although he has been a leading member of traditional ensembles, he has made the greatest artistic impact as a musician who plays unusual material in uncharacteristic places with unexpected people. As a young man, he wandered through Asia; on an earlier ECM New Series CD (Chartres, ECM New Series 1386 837752-2), he wandered through a cathedral, playing as he went. [...]
Mamoru Fujieda, Patterns of Plants (1997)
Generating melodic material through the micro-changes of surface-electric potential on leaves, Mamoru Fujieda's second Tzadik release was composed completely based on data taken from plants. Combining alternative tuning systems (just intonation, Pythagorean) with traditional instruments of China and Japan (sho, koto and the ancient 25-stringed zither, the hitsu), Fujieda has again created a world of sound never before imagined possible. Delicate and subtle variations of tone and timbre give a whole new life to classical musical forms such as the passacagalia and strophic variations in this bizarre and fascinating mixture of European Medieval music, the traditions of Asia and modern science.
- Tzadik
25.10.10
Thierry De Mey, Pièces électroniques: scies, bonds, empreintes (2004)
Thierry De Mey is a composer and filmmaker. Much of his musical output is written for dance and film. For choreographers, he works as a composer and also a collaborator in the conception of "formal strategies." His main productions and works are Rosas danst Rosas (choreography by Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker); What the body does not remember and Les Porteuses de mauvaises nouvelles (choreographies by Wim Vandekeybus), Musique de table, Poses, Frisking pour percussions, and several ensemble pieces for Maximalist! And Ictus. He has been a guest at the Brussels University, the Montpellier Festival, Musica, IRCAM... Almost 10 years ago, Sub Rosa released his first opus: 'Undo' (SR39). A love of music, rigorous work ethics and a natural gift for disorderliness are what define him; he loves Jimi Hendrix and Paul Valéry, topology, he is also a specialist on mushrooms. Composer of both rhythmical and lyrical music, a supporter of the "back to feeling" movement, through his latest works he builds a bridge between contemporary music and the electronic scene.
Exploring the 5 Works- notes by Thierry De Mey.
1. Silver
The sound material consists of sampled percussion on unorthodox instruments: steel strings several meters long tightened over electric guitar pick-ups, bowed bronze rods, mirrors, tissue paper drums, etc.
2. Proximités
The Italian choreographer Manuela Rastaldi has developed a unique form of virtuosity: the dancers draw their quick movement sequences inches from each other, without ever making contact...
3. Elastique
Where, through a voluntary act of withdrawal, a form of Arte Povera in approaching composition, the piece uses only extremely restricted material produced on a lo-tech "instrument": a rubber band of a few meters long, stretched over two mikes... Explorations out of the usual paths, where the logical development of computer tools has led us inexorably.
4. Landscape 1,2,3,4
Long sonic drifts, so that the "window" of attention (aural or otherwise) can let go of its stubborn anchor points in favour of a meditative mode of perception: the sonic landscape unfolding almost without any intrusive intervention from the conscience. Some things you can think well about only on a train...
5. Water
For six percussionists (double set of cow bells, crotales resonating and oscillating on tympani, water drum, whips, ...), sampled percussion, cello and electronics. Ictus Ensemble: Georges Elie Octors, conductor.
24.10.10
Arvo Pärt, Da Pacem (2006)
"This stunning new collection of short pieces by Arvo Pärt covers a 30 year period of the composer's output. The listener will be both comfortable with and surprised by the changes he's made: his essential style/approach and the beauty of the music remain constant, but Pärt is no whispering new-age poster boy. Sometimes the sound just washes over the listener; more often the small complexities or intensities are the hooks by which we are captivated. "Da pacem Domine" is a prayer for peace. Its different tonal hues thrill as much as they soothe. There's much of Renaissance music in his work--under the layers of sound there is a solid, far more simple core. The Two Slavonic Psalms have a Russian feel unlike most of Pärt's other works, and the first is fleet and perky. The strange "Dopo la vittoria" tells the story of St Ambrose and St Augustine singing the Te Deum composed for his defeat over the Arians; the story part is presented in an odd, chatty manner, but the prayer itself is exclaimed with great dignity. The performances, by Paul Hillier, the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir, and organist Christopher Bowers-Broadbent, do Pärt's ethereal, still, but ever-moving music absolute justice, and the recorded sound is crystal clear." - Robert Levine
Download
Sachiko Kanenobu, 'Misora' (1972)
Willits + Sakamoto, Ocean Fire (2008)
Christopher Willits and Ryuichi Sakamoto's new release, "Ocean Fire", is a sublime soundtrack for the ocean. It is an intense and stirring wash of cascading tones and textured harmony. Willits + Sakamoto surprise with rare form in this collaboration, creating a sound world unlike anything they have produced previously. Each artist has gently pulled the other into new sonic territory. Sakamoto's gorgeous processed piano sound reflects beautiful shimmering clusters of notes, a new aspect of Willits' pioneering guitar/computer approach. Together, their sounds merge effortlessly, creating seamless swells of gigantic melodic waves.
"Ocean Fire" was recorded live at Sakamoto's studio in NYC. The improvisations found their final form through some further editing in the months to come, and final mastering by Clayx in Berlin. We hear the artists exploring their relationship to each other, new sounds, and the ocean's boundless force and importance. This release is dedicated to the healing and restoration of our fragile oceans.
Sakamoto is a living legend in music. His numerous releases in YMO, and his grammy award-willing solo work has inspired two generations of fans and artists. Christopher Willits is an incredibly multi-talented artist who has shown he can do just about anything. In the late-nineties Willits began integrating his guitar playing with unique custom digital processing, and has since become instrumental in redefining the guitar in the digital age. Overlapping all forms of music, sound, and visual art, Willits' work defies genre distinctions while retaining a presence unto it's own."
Adrian Klumpes, Be Still (2006)
"Australian Adrian Klumpes (moonlighting away from his day job in avant-jazz act Triosk) is probably well aware of all the jazz Stereotypes, but instead of using his solo project to show that he isn't afraid of rocking out, he's poked his head into another genre primed for ridicule - avant-classical. Yep Klumpes has taken his trusty piano and used it as the centre point for 'Be Still', but instead of simply leaving it alone as so many solo piano artists have (Gonzalez and Goldmund to name but two) he chops and distorts it to take what might have sounded like simple compositions into another realm entirely. Stuttering keys and clipped reverbs shimmer and sparkle making dense soundscapes, somewhere in-between the haunted work of Deaf Center and 12k's Kenneth Kirschner, who famously recorded 'Post Piano' with Taylor Deupree. Sadly Klumpes' experiments never quite reach the quality of that record, yet he throws enough ideas down into the ring to make 'Be Still' a worthwhile listening experience. The title track is actually the most successful, as Klumpes keeps his laptop glitches to a minimum, allowing high frequency hisses to gently drift over the gorgeous piano parts and introducing new parts subtly and with a cautious ease. As the album progresses, Klumpes experiments with textured ambience ('Why', 'Give In'), introduces incredibly well measured percussive elements ('Exhale') and ends on a glorious combination of styles with 'Passing Pain', which starts off with an almost Tim Hecker style processed granular wave before slowly introducing the piano which weaves 'Be Still' together. A mixed success, but Klumpes proves to have a distinct voice in the genre of modern electro-acoustic piano music, and when he gets it right you don't forget it easily."
- Boomkat
Terry Riley, The Book of Abbeyozzud (1999)
The Book of Abbeyozzud (say "ah-BYE-ah-ZOOD", a word invented by Riley, without meaning) is a planned series of 26 pieces for guitar, multiple guitars and guitar in ensemble. So far, thirteen pieces are completed. Riley writes "All of the pieces have Spanish titles and take a different letter of the alphabet to begin their names. They are also indebted to great Spanish music traditions and to those traditions upon which Spanish music owes its heritage."
23.10.10
Makigami Koichi, Moon Ether (2006)
1. кара дуруяа (Kara Duruya)
2. Lunar Mare 2:43
3. YAbaRA HoE 2:43
4. Moon Ether 4:44
5. Past The Adam's Apple 4:41
6. Sprouting Fingers 7:57
7. Snail Express 4:51
8. Zackly 4:22
9. Li Bai's Moon 6:52
10. Hazy Detail 4:28
11. кара дуруяа (Kara Duruya) 1:46
“Makigami Koichi is one of best voice performer in the world. "Moon Ether" is his improvisation of voice and theremin except 1 & 11 are Asian folksong. This works includes his marvelous Khoomii singing -double voice, humor, free theremin playing, a taste of impromptu talent, sound effect, etc... "Shadowlike, the theremin sings. The ether dances" -Makigami Koichi."
The Cave, Steve Reich (1995)
Tracklist
CD 1
1. Typing Music (Genesis XVI) 2:58
2. Who Is Abraham? 1:33
3. Genesis XII 2:18
4. Who Is Sarah? 3:06
5. Who Is Hagar? 2:37
6. Typing Music Repeat 1:13
7. Who Is Ishmael? 4:42
8. Genesis XVIII 2:32
9. Who Is Isaac? 4:57
10. Genesis XXI 2:36
11. The Casting Out of Ishmael and Hagar 5:25
12. Machpelah Commentary 3:27
13. Genesis XXV (chanted in Hebrew from the Torah by Ephraim Isaac) 1:20
14. Interior of the Cave 4:29
15. Surah 3 (chanted in Arabic from the Koran by Sheikh Dahoud Atalah, Muqri of Al-Aksa Mosque) 4:41
CD 2
1. Who Is Ibrahim? 4:26
2. Who Is Hajar? 3:54
3. The Near Sacrifice 5:05
4. El Khalil Commentary 5:18
5. Interior of the Cave 3:46
6. Who Is Abraham? 6:29
7. Who Is Sarah? 4:23
8. Who Is Hagar? 4:40
9. Who Is Ishmael? 4:04
10. The Binding of Isaac 4:28
11. The Cave of Machpelah 8:44
Download