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Archive for October, 2009

Espers
III
Drag City CD

Given the number of solo efforts and other bands that spinoff from Philadelphia-based outfit Espers, it’s fair to say that they are the supergroup of the city’s burgeoning psych-folk scene. Espers started out as a trio with frequent guests. On their latest LP, III, they’ve grown to a quintet: Greg Weeks, Meg Baird, Helen Espvall, Otto Hauser, Brooke Sietinsons. Correspondingly, their sonic and musical reach has grown as well.
Thus, the music-making shines on “I can’t see Clear,” a ’60s-inspired pop-folk with white-hot guitar breaks offsetting amiable duet vocals. But Espers has also got a penchant for drone-heavy improvisation and Eastern-tinged percussion, exhibited on “Colony.” When the vocals enter, they add a whirling dervish of trippy harmonies.
“Another Moon Song” finds the band stretching out on an expansive jam with some impressive long-form guitar solos. There’s even a bit of pastoral-prog mysticism and atmospheric strings to be found on “Trollslända.”
While III finds Espers as elusive to pin down as ever, they prove equally impressive in each of their many guises.

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I spoke with Joshua Bell earlier today. While a full article will be up on the homepage later this week, I thought I’d share a bit of our conversation as it pertained to recently departed composer Nicholas Maw.
Bell received a Grammy Award for his 1999 recording of Maw’s Violin Concerto.  During our conversation, he mentioned how important the piece was to him, and that he wished he was able to programSince then, he’s also worked with composers Aaron Kernis, Edgar Meyer, and John Corigliano (recording the latter’s Red Violin).

I spoke with Joshua Bell earlier today. While a full article will be up on the homepage later this week, I thought I’d share a bit of our conversation as it pertained to recently departed composer Nicholas Maw.

Bell received a Grammy Award for his 1999 recording of Maw’s Violin Concerto.  During our conversation, he mentioned how important the piece was to him, and that he wished that he was able to program it more.

“It’s a huge piece, and very challenging, so it’s not something I can just brush up quickly. I need a couple of weeks of steady practice time to get it back in shape.”

“When I was recording the Maw concerto, it was at a point in my career when I wasn’t as comfortable as I am today working  with a composer to make sure that the passage work in the piece is as idiomatic and playable as possible. Maw wasn’t a violinist, and sometimes the choices he made have limited the amount of performers willing to face down the concerto’s challenges.”

“A piece I premiered later on,  John Corigliano’s Red Violin, has subsequently been taken up by a number of violinists. By that time, I was more comfortable suggesting a few changes to a composer to make things work well.”

“Of course, another programming challenge facing the Maw concerto is that it’s quite a long piece; he was a gifted composer who had a lot to say.”

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Rehab
Anything by Iron Maiden
With or without you
While my Guitar Gently Weeps
Metal Machine Music
Freebird
MOST things by Godspeed You Black Emperor
Stairway to Heaven
Anything by Ferneyhough
Bolero
Billy Joel’s output in its entirety (thank goodness!)

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Nirvana’s 1989 debut LP Bleach is being reissued by Sub Pop on November 3, 2009. Remastered, given the deluxe art treatment, and released with bonus live tracks from a 1990 show in Portland, Bleach will doubtless prove an ear-opener for those more familiar with Nirvana’s second LP, Nevermind. One only wishes that Kurt Cobain were here to celebrate the album’s twentieth birthday.

Sub Pop is sharing an MP3 from the Portland show (linked below).

MP3: Scoff (live version, 1990)

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Serious Fun

David Rakowski

Winged Contraption; Piano Concerto; Persistent Memory

Marilyn Nonken, piano; Boston Modern Orchestra Project; Gil Rose, conductor

BMOP Sound CD

Composer David Rakowski’s jocularity is well known. His many piano etudes (88 at last count) feature a number of sly allusions to other styles and works, as well as more overt zaniness; one even requires the performer to play pitches with their nose! His previous concerti have featured various subterfuges in which the soloist is upstaged by the orchestra. And, famously, goofiness abounds on his website. But alongside Rakowski’s penchant for light-hearted expression are consummate craftsmanship and music of considerable poignancy. BMOP’s recording features three ensemble works that highlight both Rakowski’s eloquence as an orchestrator and his ability to evoke a wide spectrum of emotions in music.

Persistent Memory was written while the composer was a fellow at the American Academy in Rome: a period in which the composer experienced adversity and loss on several fronts. Cast in two-movements, it features an elegy suffused with considerable melancholy and long arching melodies reminiscent, without overt homage, of the Copland “Americana school.” This is juxtaposed with rejoinders: tart brass punctuations and, in the second movement, a defiant scherzo – featuring tour de force writing for the winds – and a series of variations that refract the elegy’s material through a multi-colored prism.

The CD’s title work was composed as a sixtieth birthday tribute to Martin Boykan. The pre-compositional conceit for the piece is that it is exactly sixty pages long – again a glimmer of Rakowskian witticism. But composer imparts considerable gravitas here as well. The texture features angst-laden horn-writing and Bergian dissonant string verticals that belie any notions of Winged Contraption as an occasional bouquet. Amid these serious signatures lie percussive adornments and a propulsive clock: an ostinato that manifests variously as repeated note figures (a frequent Rakowski device) and burbling arpeggiations.

Marilyn Nonken has been one of several tireless champions of Rakowski’s solo piano works. It seems particularly fitting that he has fashioned a concerto for Nonken that references several of the etudes composer for her – resulting in a work of ambitious scope and a near-frenetic events structure. Easily one of Rakowski’s finest pieces to date, it features a host of playing techniques – thereby allowing Nonken to exercise both her conventional chops and explore some avant paths along the way.

The first movement’s opening is a master class in the “one-note” introduction. A-natural is treated to dampening, plucking inside the piano, various chordal harmonizations, and gradual haloing by the instruments of the orchestra until it is revealed in relentless repetition as an ostinato – a self-contained first theme group! Repeated single pitches once again provide a motoric canvas upon which a host of coloristic devices and harmonic divergences are imposed. The plucked A-natural returns at the beginning of each movement of the concerto as a centering and invocational device.

While the piano writing is tailor-made to Nonken’s abundant capabilities, she’s also given a chance to exercise a bit of whimsy in several asides for toy piano. The concerto also features a few other unconventional touches, such as the inclusion of a novelty percussion item called chatter-stones. And although one is glad for Rakowski’s occasional digressions into humor and his imaginative textural additions to the proceedings, the most striking moments in the concerto feature elegant writing for the conventional instruments in the band. Wind solos and keening string sostenuto passages accompany piquant, colorful verticals in the piano – and that irrepressible plucked A! – in a gorgeous slow movement.

The scherzo, on the other hand, focuses on short rhythmic cells and terse orchestral interjections. It also revels in adroitly jazzy piano-writing. The orchestra answers these swinging signatures with sassy horn blats and suavely articulate strings: hallmarks of a bygone era of cinematic music warmly recreated here.

The repeated note device reappears in the last movement, leading to a quote from Rakowski’s first piano etude, “E-Machines.” The quote references still another quote (a quote within quote!) of Beethoven’s Für Elise. Nonken records Rakowski’s cadenza for the CD, but it’s worth mentioning that the composer let her create her own for the premiere – such is the trust and close working relationship of creator and interpreter here.

The other interpreters on the scene, Gil Rose and the BMOP, are sterling in their preparation and superlatively musical. The disc is one of the orchestra’s best thus far, and the weightiest and most satisfying in Rakowski’s discography to date. Serious fun indeed!

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