Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Classical Karnatic Flute




Dr. N. Ramani - Classical Karnatic Flute

Performers:

Dr. N. Ramani - flute
T. S. Veeraraghavan - violin
Srimushnam Rajarao - mrdangam
E. M. Subramaniam - ghatam
Sylvie Lecerf - tampura
From the liner notes:
The classical music tradition in the South of India stems from the same basic historical roots as does that of the North for which roots we have but textual evidence, such as Bharata's Nātyaśāstra (4th Century B.C.) indeed divergence of the two traditions seems only to have commenced around the 14th Century A.D. Thus, pitch is at the discretion of the performer, the seven degrees of the Octave are Sa, Ri, Ga, Ma, Pa, Dha and Ni, whereby Sa and Pa always stand for the tonic and the perfect fifth, and the remaining pitches are determined by taught systems of reference. Tala, time measure, is another principal element shared.
...
The main performing tradition in South Indian music centres round forms of discontinuous religious song called Kirtanā or Krti. The talent of the performer is shown by the extent to which he or she can improvise on the melodic lines of these, while adhering strictly to the time-measure in which they are set and the taught characteristics of their raga. In concert, rendering of a song is frequently preceded by Ālāpanā, 'Discussion, preamble', an extempore essay on the raga's features, sung to meaningless syllables - or played as the case may be - without rhythm. Examples of Ālāpanā precede all 5 items on this record and, before item 4, the violin adds a short Ālāpanā too.
The other principal improvisation extraneous to the song is Svaram, solfeggio-passages appropriate to the raga and again strictly adhering to the tala, inserted at some point in the song or at the end thereof.
In view of the large number of Kirtanā-songs handed down, and of the fact that much instrumental playing - as on this disc - is of the melodies of these compositions, it is clear that the principal vector of music performance in South India was the human voice. However, in recent years instrumental music has assumed a far more prominent position, perhaps in part due to the growth of Sabhās, Music societies, and consequent concert performances. This is true not only of accompanying instruments such as the violin, but also the long-necked lute Vīnā, on which the player used to accompany herself while singing. Moreover the loud shawm of South India, the Nāgasvara, used on auspicious occasions such as weddings, has of recent years become a concert-hall instrument.
Traditionally contrasted with the Nāgasvara, by reason of its smaller size and sweeter tone, is the Flute (Skt, Venu, Tamil Pullānkulal). In the South it is always fashioned from a straight piece of bamboo and is side-blown; the holes are bored either for a scale equivalent to the diatonic Major Scale, or one similar save in having a flat 7th.
The violin in its present form was introduced to Karnatic music from European sources in the early 19th century by a brother of one of the great South Indian composers, Muttusvāmi Dīksitar (1775-1835).
The Mrdanga, despite its name, is a drum whose body is of wood. It has two faces, and is struck with the left and right hands and fingers. The right face is tuned to tonic or base-note Sa of the raga, in accordance with the pitch selected by the principal singer or instrumentalist.
The Ghatam is a large, round-bottomed clay pot, selected for its high quality and consequent ringing tone. It is held in the lap and played with the fingers of both hands. Solo passages by both percussion instruments are heard on this disc.


Tracklisting:

1. Ninnade: Kannada Raga {6:31}

2. Nadaloludai: Kalyanavasanta Raga {10:09}

3. Manasu visaya: Natakurañji Raga {13:40}

4. Ragam Tanam: Rañjani Raga {10:09}

5. Pallavi Ragamalika {18:13}

6. Jayajaya: Des Raga {10:05}

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Sunday, August 24, 2008

Bird Songs from the Tropics



Paul Schwartz - Bird Songs from the Tropics

This LP has the voices of 40 tropical American birds recorded in the fields, forests, lowlands and highlands of Venezuela.

From the liner notes:
A program intended to introduce the listener to some of the interesting bird voices of the Neotropics (the tropical regions of the New World) where there is a greater variety of bird life in proportion to size than any other region in the world and where the diversity of the sounds these birds produce is as great as the imagination itself.
...
The recordings used in this program are taken from the extensive sound collection of the Instituto Neotropical. To obtain them Paul Schwartz, Technical Director of the Instituto Neotropical and Research Associate of the Laboratory of Ornithology of Cornell University, has travelled from one end of Venezuela to the other. Combining an ample knowledge and love of living birds and long experience in the field together with infinite patience, extreme care and the best recording equipment available, he has obtained recordings of the highest possible calibre. Equally painstaking efforts have gone into the reproduction of the recordings and the preparation of this disc so that the listener may enjoy sounds of a fidelity equal to that of nature itself.



I did my best to clean out the clicks and pops from my LP copy with Audacity. Many of the noticeable clicks and pops were removed, but there were some that Audacity could not remove. The LP starts out rough with surface noise prominent (on the 1st track) then surface noise is barely noticable throughout the rest of the LP.

Tracklisting:

Side A

1. Little Tinamou -- Blue-backed Conebill -- House Wren -- Bare-eyed Thrush -- Blue-gray Tanager -- Troupial {6:16}

2. Great Kiskadee -- Crested Spinetail -- Rufous-browed Pepper-Shrike -- Barred Antshrike -- Copper-rumped Hummingbird -- Great Antshrike {5:18}

3. Grayish Saltador -- Rufous-breasted Wren -- Lance-tailed Manakin {3:42}

4. Gilt-tailed Sapphire -- Rufous-tailed Antthrush {2:26}

5. Green Jay -- Black-winged Bellbird -- Masked Yellowthroat {3:57}

Side B

1. Scaled Dove -- White-tipped Dove -- Crested Oropendola -- Yellow-rumped Cacique -- Rufous-tailed Chachalaca {4:17}

2. Oriole Blackbird -- Chestnut-bellied Seed-Finch -- Laughing Falcon {4:09}

3. Green-backed Sparrow -- Rufous-collared Sparrow -- Short-billed Marsh-Wren -- Rufous-and-white Wren -- Musician Wren {5:55}

4. Tropical Screech-Owl -- Pauraque -- White-tailed Nightjar -- Rufous Nightjar {4:04}

5. Spectacled Owl -- Little Nightjar -- Common Potoo {3:57}

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Wednesday, August 20, 2008

"WELTMUSIK 82b"

Hi there! H.C. Earwicker is back again (again). Real-world dealings have kept me from posting anything in the last weeks, but today I can offer a very special item. It's a cassette tape from 1982, which I recently rediscovered in my "archive" of boxes and crates.




The tape features recordings from the 2nd Weltmusik-Kongress in Vlotho/Germany from 1982. Labels like Ocora and Bärenreiter/Musicaphon (with the brilliant and pioneering UNESCO Collection of ethnic music recordings) were already releasing music from all over the world, but records were hard to get, and the whole field of "New" world music by contemporary composers was just starting to come into full swing. Only few recordings of such works were available at that time, and festivals like the WELTMUSIK-Kongress in Vlotho/Germany (1979, 1982, 1984 and 1986) were essential in the development of musical styles fusing traditional ethnic elements with contemporary composition techniques.

1 Johannes Fritsch: Kyomu for shakuhachi and tapeHitomi Endo - shakuhachi (premiere performance)
2 Michael Ranta: Mu 3
Michael Ranta - percussion (premiere performance)

In Fritsch's composition, Hitomi Endo's impressive and beautiful shakuhachi play is blended with a wide variety of sounds and music from the most different sources, at times reminding of Jean-Claude Eloy's intensive electronic works. Ranta's piece features additional electronics and/or tape (not mentioned on the cover), giving the composer/performer lots of room to display his unique art in its 30-minute duration, and never over-doing it with quasi-exotic virtuoso stunts. A masterpiece.
***
Johannes Fritsch - born 1941, studied Musicology, Sociology, Philosophy, Viola and Composition (B.A. Zimmermann) in Cologne. He played in various orchestras, participated at the "Internationale Ferienkurse" in Darmstadt and worked as a teacher for music theory (1965-70). As a member of the Stockhausen-Ensemble (1964-70) he toured the world and is featured on numerous recordings. Fritsch won many national and international prizes and is co-founder of the Feedback Studio Cologne (1970) and the Feedback Studio Verlag, the first German composer-run publishing house, in 1971 ("Feedback Papers"). Organizer of many concerts and events (WELTMUSIK-Kongress, Vlotho). From 1971-84 he headed a composition class and the "Seminar für Neue Musik" at the Akademie für Tonkunst in Darmstadt. Since 1984 he is professor for composition at the State University in Cologne.

Michael Ranta - born 1942 in Duluth (Minnesota, USA), studied percussion and composition at the University of Illinois (1960-67) and worked with Harry Partch from 1960-68. Since 1963 concerts and recordings with American orchestras, 1967-70 in the Federal Republic of Germany. Collaborations with M. Kagel, H. Lachenmann, J.A. Riedl and K. Stockhausen. 1970: Expo in Osaka, 1971-73: Electronic Studio of the NHK in Tokyo, 1972: Multi-Media Environment Room at the Olympic Games in Munich. 1973-79: in Taiwan; concerts, recordings and teaching all over the Far East. In 1979, Ranta moved to Cologne. Founder of the percussion group TRANSIT; performances at the Ferienkurse in Darmstadt and the Percussion Festival in Cologne (1981). Solo performances with works by Jean-Claude Eloy ("Yo-In") at festivals in Europe and Japan, and "Air" by H. Lachenmann. Ranta's own works were performed in Brussels, Witten and at the LA MAMA THEATER. Collaborations with the TANZFORUM and the URANIA THEATER in Cologne. 1989: commission for the ballett "Die Mauer" (Opera of Ulm), music for the documentary film "Tibet - Tor zum Himmel" by Jaroslav Poncar. 1998: solo performances at the Cologne Cathedral with "Die Steine der Singenden" by G. Oellers. In 2005, he completed his composition "Yuen Shan" for four percussionists and tape. In addition to his musical career, Ranta started his own company, "Asian Sound Köln", supplying musicians with percussion instruments from all over the world.

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Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Pandit Jasraj

Pandit Jasraj - Pandit Jasraj

Another great find at one of the local thrift stores. Jasraj's performance on this tape has left me in awe. Thank you Salvation Army.

From the liner notes:

SWARASHREE ENTERPRISES is privileged to present to its patrons this first-ever cassette of Pandit Jasraj, one of the few vocalists to have acquired an audience ever ready and willing to jostle its way into the concert hall any time he chooses to sing.

Endowed with a voice that is his fortune, Pandit Jasraj has harnessed his talent and genius in evolving a style that is at once his own. His singing is marked by depth of feeling and sensitivity of temper - the kind of music that grips the ear and the soul alike. The charm of his expression, marks him out as an artiste par excellence. His "alaps" are communicative, his "bol-taans" imaginative, his "sargams" playful and his "taans" sprightly.

Born at Hissar (Haryana) in 1930, Pandit Jasraj is the youngest son of Pandit Motiram, acclaimed as a pioneer of the Mewati tradition of vocal music. But he blossomed into a true artiste under the guidance of Pandit Maniram, the eldest brother.

A regular broadcaster and telecaster, Pandit Jasraj has earned enviable acclaim by his recitals all over the country. He has also toured abroad on his musical mission and won unstinted appreciation from overseas audiences as well.

Tracklisting:

Side 1

1. Raga: Miyan ki todi {19:35}

2. Raga: Gujari todi {7:55}

Side 2

1. Raga: Jayawanti todi {15:38}

2. Raga: Abiri todi {12:19}

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Rebab and Female Singing of Central Javanese Gamelan



Sarasehan Karawitan Surakarta - Rebab and Female Singing of Central Javanese Gamelan

You gotta love it when the cover even mentions that Java music is superbly performed on the disc. Of course, there has to be some selling point or a justification for even putting this out in the first place. What is even better is that the proclamation is true. The music on the disc is a style of gamelan chamber music called Gadhon, where it is only performed by master musicians.

Performers:

Members of the Sarasehan Karawitan Surakarta, the leader of which is Saptono and the supervisor is K. Widadanegoro:

Saptono - rebab (two-string bowed lute)
Walidi - kendhang (double-headed barrel drums)
Dalimin - slenthem (7-slab bronze xylophone)
Mulyono - gender (14-slab bronze xylophone)
Soeyadi - gambang (wooden xylophone)
Tarnopangrawit - suling (vertical bamboo flute) and gong gedhe (pair of large hanging gongs)
Tukinem - sindhen (female singing)


From the liner notes:

Some music is so beautiful to listen to that a person nearly loses one's sanity. On the other hand, there are certain kinds of music which make one completely relaxed with the eternity conceived at their core. Only a few musicians are able to move people to have those two different feelings simultaneously. In this recording, Saptono, who plays rebab and Tukinem, with her beautiful and rare voice, both from the city of Solo in Central Java, seem to do just that.

Gamelans of the Central Javanese style, consisting mainly of bronze percussion instruments, are very large in scale, usually played by 20 to 30 musicians and singers. For every special occasion such as a ritual, festival, or a memorial day - occasions when many people gather - the playing of gamelan is an indispensable part of the gathering....

Gamelans are also enjoyed more privately. On birthdays or memorial days of a certain event, which may occur every 35 days, 210 days or in another cycle depending on the Javanese calendar, intimate community members gather to enjoy all-night gamelan playing. While listening or playing gamelan, each of the participants meditates in his own way, spiritually communicating with each other and praying for the eternal peace of the universe. When the participants are musicians of a high level, it is possible for musicians and audience, together with the omnipresent spirits, to have a very enjoyable time. On these occasions, they may prefer to use the ensembles of gamelan of a smaller scale which consist of the most important instruments which require a high level of technique and musicality. This type of instrumentation is called gadhon, literally "eating side dishes." [The instruments in the gadhon are all mentioned in the list of performers above.]....

The Rebab, gender, gambang and suling play the melodic and rhythmic variations while the slenthem plays the "nuclear" melody. The Gong gedhe construct the basic "colotomic" frame and the kendhang determine repetitions and signal changes in operation and tempo. The Sindhen (female singing) is also added in the second piece of this recording.




Tracklisting:

1. Gendhing SEMBURADAS minggah TOMBOHONENG {20:48}

2. Gendhing LALERMENGENG minggah Ladrang TLUTUR {20:29}

3. Gendhing BANDHELORI minggah Ladrang ELING-ELING {16:52}

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Monday, August 18, 2008

China: Shantung Folk Music & Traditional Instrumental Pieces



Lu-sheng Ensemble - China: Shantung Folk Music & Traditional Instrumental Pieces

If I had planned better in advance, I would have arranged to get more Chinese music posted here during the olympics. I just thought of that idea now, but it's probably too late. I have a little more interesting Chinese music buried deep somewhere in my archives. All I have for now is the outstanding recordings China: Folk Instrumental Traditions, Eleven Centuries of Traditional Music of China and this one.

From the liner notes:

The appeal and vitality of Chinese music is enriched by numerous regional styles or "dialects". One of the most ebullient styles is that of Shantung (classical name Lu), a province in Northeast China. This music, undoubtedly of ancient heritage, was performed by itinerant professional musicians hired whenever music was called for - festivals, funerals, weddings, or spirited parties. Since most were outdoor occasions, the ensemble featured instruments with suitably strong volume and carrying power: gongs, drums, and reeds. And since the performance context was a large public gathering, rather than a small, private elite audience as for classical music, there is an infectiously earthy quality in its melodies and rhythms (Side One, Bands 1, 2, 6; Side Two, Bands 4,5, 6). Contrasting with and complementing the Shantung Folk Music are more restrained compositions from the classical repertory (Side One, Bands 3, 4, 5; Side Two, Bands 1, 2, 3).

Tracklisting:

Side One

1. Tien Chang {4:36}

2. T'ao Li Ch'un Feng {2:18}

3. Tao Yi Ch'u {3:44}

4. Ku Su Hsing {5:10}

5. Liang Hsiao {2:15}

6. Pai Niao Yin {6:27}

Side Two

1. Yu Chou Ch'ang Wan {5:18}

2. Yueh Yeh {3:58}

3. Hsiao Fang Niu {3:32}

4. Yeh Shen Ch'en {3:00}

5. Lao Seng Sao Tien {2:33}

6. Pai Yun Ku Hsiang {4:56}

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Sunday, August 17, 2008

Ocean



Jondi Productions - Ocean

On this edition of the "usually every Sunday nature/environmental sounds post", the Closet presents the sounds of ocean waves from the not-too original title Ocean. The above pic gives a desciption of the two cassette sides. Ocean wave sounds are probably the most recorded of environmental sounds meaning that there are more recordings available of these sounds on the market than of other natural sounds. What makes this one stand out from almost all the rest is the length of both tracks which I haven't seen before at 45 minutes though I'm sure there more out there with a similar length. This tape was recorded in Carmel, California on a private lagoon. This accounts for 90 minutes of only ocean waves which is nice to hear as I wish I was there instead of here in Oklahoma where the temperatures have been averaging about 102 degrees the past month.

No information about Jondi Productions has turned up on the fantastic resource known as Google. Everything I know about Jondi Productions is on this tape as I found it for cheap at a library sale earlier in the year.

Side One

1. Sunny Afternoon {45:26}

Side Two

1. Sea Wall {45:03}

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Triadic Memories


Morton Feldman - Triadic Memories

Excerpted remarks on Triadic Memories by Morton Feldman during a speech made for the American premiere of the piece on March 12, 1982 at Baird Hall, the State University of New York at Buffalo:

...Takahashi appears to be absolutely still. Undisturbed, unperturbed, as if in a concentrated prayer. Kafka writes about approaching his work as if in a state of prayer.
And the painter Philip Gaston also talked about the state similar to this, and marvelled how Piero della Francesca or Montagna could bring it to all their work, as Aki Takahashi does. The effect of her playing to me is that I feel privileged to be invited to a very religious ritual.

And then there is the music itself. Without getting overly technical, the music is made of essentially just two different kinds of intervals: a minor second, a major second which of course is also a minor seventh and a major seventh. And it is by superimposing other like intervals that the chord formations are made. I was always very interested in writing music, where you thought one way and yet it sounded another. And this piece is really no exception
....I just want to make one very important point, actually, because Miss Takahashi keeps the pedal half-down throughout the piece, and I don't want you to feel in a sense that she's one of these pianists that never take the pedal off. And the half-pedal down changes something, it's like a thin jig saw in which the music works very very well with, also it does produce, in a sense, and actually added various problems to the piece; because anyone who knows, or composes or who even plays the piano knows that things tend to get a little muddy or they start to buzz at certain places. And so it was very interesting for me to actually find a new palette that worked very, very well with just this half-pedal down. And now Aki Takahashi.

Tracklisting:

1. Triadic Memories {60:16}

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Monday, August 11, 2008

Eleven Centuries of Traditional Music of China


various artists compilation - Eleven Centuries of Traditional Music of China

The exquisite music on this album has been written during the T'ang, Sung, Yuan and Ming Dynasties (600-1600). Stringed instruments are mainly used. These include P'ip'a (a short lute), Ch'in (a long zither with 7 strings, commonly referred to as qin) and Cheng (a long zither with 16 strings). There is also a piece, "High Moon", for Nan Hsiao (southern notched vertical flute) accompanied by P'ip'a and an orchestral piece with an oboe solo, "The Metamorphosis of the Solitary Female Phoenix".

Tracklisting:

1. Lu Pei-yuan - The Ambush {6:34}
P'ip'a

2. Tsar Teh-yun - Some Ways of Touching the Ch'in {3:57}
Ch'in (demonstration)

3. Tsar Teh-yun - Water and Clouds Over the Rivers Hsiao and Hsiang {10:16}
Ch'in

4. Chan Hon-kwong - Wild Geese Descend on Level Sands {7:31}
Cheng

5. C. K. Wong and Lu Pei-yuan - High Moon {10:00}
Nan Hsiao and P'ip'a

6. Wu Chao-han - Thunderstorm {3:03}
Ch'in

7. Yang Sze-chak - Water Lily {10:15}
Ch'in

8. Wen Ch'un-hsiu and orchestra - The Metamorphosis of the Solitary Female Phoenix {6:21}
Includes small oboe solo

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Solitudes Volume Six



Dan Gibson - Solitudes Volume Six

You may have seen these CDs with the Solitudes name on them at shops such as Bed, Bath, and Beyond and Super Target. They have blends of new age or classical music with nature sounds or music designed to relieve people from stress which I don't think really do so. These CDs and similar ones stocked next to them tend to usually suck. I paid little attention to these Solitudes CDs until I came across this LP at a thrift store. This LP is among the first 11 volumes released in the Solitudes series before a change of emphasis to what has been described in the above sentences. The first 11 volumes have only nature sounds. They are "acoustical environmental sound experiences composed of authentic natural sounds" created by filmmaker and producer Dan Gibson from sounds that Gibson himself recorded. The first 11 volumes are worth getting.




STORM ON A WILDERNESS LAKE

Since emotional responses to the wilderness vary widely, your reactions to 'Storm On A Wilderness Lake' might by totally at odds with the reactions of others. If it's your first time alone in the wilderness you could be exhilarated by nature in one of her moderately violent moods. Or you could be downright scared out of your wits.

If that's the case, then you aren't ready for the call of the loon. A call that easily transmits as a ghostly sound to some of us. Or beautifully haunting to others.

If you regularly 'cut out' to find refuge in the wilderness, eager to give yourself up to nature, you might never feel closer to the wilds, and to your inner being, than when thunder rumbles across the forest. You hear and watch the birds react, and the rain moves in, walling off the rest of the world. Now you are truly alone with your wilderness, and with yourself.

This side will act as a flashback, recreating a wilderness storm in intimate detail. The loons haunt the storm tossed lake, the raven practically talks to you about the storm in a surprising variety of vocal pyrotechnics. You'll recognize other voices from the lake and the trees, and you'll hear the familiar musical drip of the rain on the leaves and calm water.

Just when you remember that you thought the rain would never again let up, and the sun would never again come out, the rain stops. But not for long. Nature has you in her hand, and she's not through with you yet.

Until she's ready, you won't move from this wilderness lake.

WILDLIFE SPECIES FEATURED: Northern Waterthrush - Red-breasted Nuthatch - chestnut-sided Warbler - Common Raven - Common Loons - Spring Peeper Frogs - American Toads

NIGHT ON A WILDERNESS LAKE

The dying embers of the campfire glow dimly now. The aroma of fish fried in butter, fish you caught only hours ago, lingers over the campsite. The moon hangs above the trees, and casts a silvery-orange path across the lake. The breeze has died. Stillness is everywhere. You're alone at last.

Ah, but are you?

Of course, you are not. Just how many pairs of eyes have been peering curiously at your campsite, and at your activities around the campfire, you'll never know. But tally up a few of them, just from their voices.

The crickets we won't even try to estimate, but a loon, not far from shore, cries out, and further down the lake, other loons call across the water.

And what was that? A call that seems to come from slightly overhead. Startling, when you hear it for the first time - the barred owl lets you know you are right smack in the middle of its territory.

And, what was that? Just a few yards away, or so it seems. Not wolves! Not that close!

Yes, timber wolves. That close. After all, everybody enjoys a campfire.

There's no experience anywhere quite like night on a wilderness lake. Some find it's like trying to get through a night in a haunted house. But some of us think it's the epitome of the great escape.

WILDLIFE SPECIES FEATURED: Common Loons - Timber Wolves (adult and young) - Barred Owls - Crickets


Tracklisting:

Side A

1. Storm on a Wilderness Lake {29:54}

Side B

1. Night on a Wilderness Lake {29:50}

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Friday, August 8, 2008

Images


Georganne Cassat - Images

This is a tape that I found on one of my digs earlier in the year. It's all lovely harp music that are equivalent to impressionist paintings as the liner notes mention. Harpist Georganne Cassat performs "Images", composed by Marcel Tournier, which this composition's suites comprise most of the album. There are three other pieces performed: "Girl with the Flaxen Hair" by Claude Debussy, "Choral" by Marcelle Soulage and "Etude" by Schmidt. I was unable to find out the full name of Schmidt who composed the piece, so if anyone knows, please let me know.

Liner notes about "Images":

MARCEL TOURNIER, one of the most important harpists and composers for harp in the 19th and 20th centuries wrote these brilliant masterpieces during the early part of this century terminating the Fourth Suite in 1932. This is the first recording in their entirety. The titles are exotic and reflect the nature of the music which is in itself extraordinary. Should one close one's eyes one can but imagine the impressionistic paintings the composer so eloquently pens and the harpist so brilliantly displays in a quilted patchwork of exotic symbolism and "panache" designed to tease and seduce and transport the listener to hitherto uncharted musical domains and cultivated elegance.

Tracklisting:

Side A

1. Images 1er Suite: Clair de Lune sur l'Etang du fare {5:01}

2. Images 1er Suite: Au seuil du Temple {1:21}

3. Images 1er Suite: Lolita, la danseuse {2:33}

4. Images 2e Suite: Les enfants a la creche de Noel {2:58}

5. Images 2e Suite: L'etrange Cavalier {3:03}

6. Images 2e Suite: La Marchande de Frivolites {3:30}

7. Images 3e Suite: Les Anesses grises sur la route d' El-Azib {3:58}

8. Images 3e Suite: Danseuse a la fontaine d'Ain-Draham {4:03}

9. Images 3e Suite: Soir de Fete a Sedjenane {3:17}

Side B

10. Images 4e Suite: La voliere magique {4:48}

11. Images 4e Suite: Cloches sous la neige {1:49}

12. Images 4e Suite: La danse du moujik {5:32}

13. Girl with the Flaxen Hair {3:22}

14. Choral {5:59}

15. Etude {2:44}

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Ascent Into Now


Bill Reddie - Ascent Into Now

This is one of those 1970s private issue/bedroom electronic music/new age records that you've probably read about or heard. Bill Reddie was a musician who formed Electronic Music Research, Inc. to study the effects of sound frequencies on the human body. There are sound frequencies that possibly could have a positive effect on people. These frequencies serve well for meditation or for altered states of consciousness. The first track "Ascent Into Now" is bound to send listeners into those altered states of consciousness. The first ten minutes is synthesizer bliss, but afterwards, unnecessary electronic clicky percussion sounds interupt the trance. The percussion disappears after a minute and a half and it's a return to the altered states. I thought I should point that out. The other track "The Grove Suite" is another gateway to those altered states and has a few whimsical moments.



Bill Reddie says: For best results, one should choose a time when either Side 1 or Side 2 may be played in its entirety without outside interruption. While listening, do not attempt to analyze the music as this type of mental activity tends to negate any centering action.

Tracklisting:

Side 1

1. Ascent Into Now {20:38}

Side 2

1. Grove Suite {15:16}

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Thursday, August 7, 2008

Cosmic Equation


Sun Ra - Cosmic Equation

*DISCLAIMER: This is a bootleg release of the album The Heliocentric Worlds of Sun Ra Volume 1.

I spotted a used copy of this at one of the local indie record shops and bought it on the spot. I didn't know this was a bootleg until I did a little research a few days later. Anyway, I was just thrilled to add another Sun Ra album to my collection.


performers:

Sun Ra - piano, bass marimba, celeste, timpani
Ronnie Boykins - bass
Robert Cummings - bass clarinet, wood blocks
Danny Davis - alto saxophone, flute
Jimmy Johnson - timpani, percussion
Marshall Allen - alto saxophone, bells
Pat Patrick - baritone saxophone, percussion
John Gilmore - tenor saxophone, timpani
Teddy Nance - trombone
Bernard Pettaway - bass trombone
Chris Capers - trumpet

Tracklisting:

1. Heliocentric {4:09}

2. Outer Nothingness {7:15}

3. Other Worlds {4:18}

4. The Cosmos {7:08}

5. Of Heavenly Things {5:29}

6. Nebulae {3:12}

7. Dancing in the Sun {1:50}

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Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Satan's Sermon and Other Electronic Fantasies


various artists compilation - Satan's Sermon and Other Electronic Fantasies

Yes, it's another great compilation of vintage electronic music.

GEORGE TODD - SATAN'S SERMON

SATAN'S SERMON and VARIATIONS ON A BAGATELLE were composed in the Bregman Electronic Studio at Dartmouth College. The sounds were produced on a Synclavier, a real-time music system driven by an Able 40 computer. This extraordinary instrument was developed by Jon Appleton, Director of the Bregman Studio, and Sydney Alonso and Cameron Jones, directors of New England Digital of Norwich, Vermont, which now manufactures the system. Strictly speaking, then, the music is computer (digital) music - though a great deal of the compositional process involved analog devices; mixers, tape machines - and, of course, razor blades.
Though the surface of SATAN'S SERMON is often dense, the materials used to create the textures were very simple. Basically the piece consists of short gestures (very few of which have more than twenty notes) which have been elaborately reprocessed through the Synclavier. (George Todd)

GEORGE TODD - VARIATIONS

VARIATIONS on the other hand was composed in ten days. The machine was still in its proto-type stage and the variations which I composed one-a-day were sort of my compositional calisthenics on the Synclavier. The theme is a set of sine tones with undifferentiated envelopes. The variations which follow are loosely based on the contours of the phrases in the theme. (George Todd)

DARIA SEMEGEN - SPECTRA (ELECTRONIC COMPOSITION NO. 2)

In SPECTRA, the fast-flowing thematic groups are combined in various successions to generate new structures which are different from the characteristics of their original components. The work's rapidly changing sound colors are also the result of the superimposition of many sound layers, each with its own individual timbre. SPECTRA uses electronic sounds from a Buchla Series 200 synthesizer combined with precise mixing, editing, and recording techniques. (Daria Semegen)

THOMAS WELLS - 11.2.72, ELECTRONIC MUSIC

11.2.72, ELECTRONIC MUSIC is divided into three sections: the outer sections employ FM and resonant-filter-produced sounds, while the middle section consists of discrete pitch material. The work is characterized by emphasis on compositional transformations of a limited amount of material. (Thomas Wells)

JAN GREENWALD - DURATION 2

DURATION 2 was computed on the Nova 1200 Data General computer and transferred via an interface program to the Buchla 500 digital-to-analog synthesizer. The computer program was written so that it generated pitch, rhythmic and timbre group material. More subtle timbral qualities were composed by ear. This particular program was earlier used to generate Durations (Perseverance Furthers) for Orchestra, and then applied with slightly altered input data to this version. The piece describes a linear transformation of durations from 10 to .05 seconds within a timespan of 12' 50". (Jan Greenwald)

Tracklisting:

Side 1

1. George Todd - Satan's Sermon {14:45}

2. George Todd - Variations on a Bagatelle {8:04}

Side 2

1. Daria Semegen - Spectra (Electronic Composition No. 2) {10:31}

2. Thomas Wells - 11.2.72, Electronic Music {5:27}

3. Jan Greenwald - Duration 2 {12:40}

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Indian Classical Music


Rajeev Taranath and Sandip Burman - Indian Classical Music

Rajeev Taranath - sarod
Sandip Burman - tabla


I had to get this posted quickly before the scheduled outage takes place.

Rajeev Taranath bio

Sandip Burman bio

Tracklisting:

1. Basant Mukhari in Rupak and Tintal {9:02}

2. Maand Ragamaala in Addha Tala {7:33}

3. Misra Kafi in Rupak Tala {7:11}

4. Jaunpuri in Addha and Tintal {8:44}

5. Sindhu Bhairavi in Addha and Tintal {10:52}

6. Misra Keerawani in Addha and Tintal {12:36}

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Monday, August 4, 2008

The Pillory



Jasun Martz - The Pillory

This was found somewhere on the interweb tubes about a couple of years ago and thought I would bring this to your attention. The title track is Jasun Martz's signature piece and notably Martz is not prolific having only very few pieces of music to his credit. He focuses more on painting and scuplture. "The Pillory" is epic in every sense of the word and you can see below the number of musicians and instruments involved. This track was originally released on vinyl in 1978 and split for both LP sides due to length obviously. Despite the number of instruments, this piece doesn't come off as overindulgent. "In Light, In Dark, In Between" is another pleasant piece, but with a tighter ensemble of only three musicians and three instruments. It was added as a bonus track to this release.

Performers:

The Pillory

The Neoteric Orchestra:

Jasun Martz - synthesizers, Mellotrons, organ, vocals, grand piano, zil, saxophones, flute, recorders, wind hoses, gongs, electronics, implemental percussion
Eddie Jobson - solo violin, synthesizer
William Botrell - cello
John Luttrelle - clarinet, recorders, electric piano, synthesizers
Ruth Underwood - marimba, concert bells, implemental percussion
Paul Whitehead - bowed cymbal, percussion
plus another 35 musicians (including strings, winds, brass, percussion, and vocals)

In Light, In Dark, In Between

Jasun Martz - grand piano
Eddie Jobson - electric violin
John Luttrelle - clarinet

Tracklisting:

1. The Pillory {44:15}

2. In Light, In Dark, In Between {20:29}

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Sunday, August 3, 2008

Music and Bird Songs


James Fassett - Music and Bird Songs

Sorry, it's been awhile since any nature sounds have been posted. Hopefully, I can get back to posting these every Sunday.

From the liner notes:

On May 25, 1952, as an intermission feature of the regular Sunday afternoon broadcast of the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, this recording was presented by James H. Fassett. It proved to be so popular with radio listeners that portions of it were again presented as an intermission program on November 30, 1952. Because of public response to this unusual presentation, it was decided to make this record from the original tape, as it had been prepared by Mr. Fassett and Peter Paul Kellogg.

The voices of ten birds and six frogs are heard on this record at their natural speed; then some are slowed down, as much as eight times. Some of the melodies that result have an unearthly beauty; others are weird and strange. But their fascination is unique; everyone agrees that here are the sounds of nature as they have never been heard before.

This, by the way, is a 10" record.

Tracklisting:

Side 1

1. Music and Bird Songs side 1 {10:43}

Mockingbird; Winter Wren; Common Loon; Pied-billed Grebe; Eastern Meadowlark; Red-winged blackbird; Western Meadowlark

Side 2

1. Music and Bird Songs side 2 {10:44}

Song Sparrow; Swamp Cricket Frog or Southern Chorus Frog; Spring Peeper; Cricket Frog or Southern Cricket Frog; Bullfrog; Southern Toad; Barking Frog or Barking Treefrog; Wood Thrush; Hermit Thrush

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