Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts
Monday, May 14, 2012
Michael Mantler - No Answer (1974)
Today is Jack Bruce's birthday. He is 69 years old. Also, the 11th of May was Carla Bley's 76th birthday.
They are featured artists in this album,which is by far the darkest and most unrelentingly disturbing of Michael Mantler's albums of which I am aware.
I'm not even sure why I like it, but I do-
with Carla Bley's turgid ostinati like whirlpools less and less
Jack Bruce's angry declamatory style trapped like a prisoner die screams I may die or a foetus alone with my murmur when the panting stops
or monotones of hopelessness no tinged with uncertainty yes
Cherry's agitated squalls like a man trying to shake off a swarm of hornets in the mud
The overall effect is one of existential horror.
Entirely humorless and ultimately hopeless-
I imagine that Samuel Beckett was well pleased with this setting of his words.
-DrI
Side One:
No Answer Number Six
a1-Part One (4:55)
a2-Part Two (4:50)
a3-Part Three (5:45)
a4-Part Four (2:05)
Side Two:
No Answer Number Twelve
b1-Part One (7:35)
b2-Part Two (4:05)
b3-Part Three (2:00)
b4-Part Four (2:55)
Music by Michael Mantler
Words by Samuel Beckett from "How It Is", translated from the French by the author.
Jack Bruce- Voices, Bass Guitar
Carla Bley- Piano, Clavinet, Organs
Don Cherry- Trumpet
(1) or (1)
Labels:
experimental,
jazz,
Michael Mantler,
poetry,
Samuel Beckett,
vinyl records
Saturday, January 14, 2012
Architect's Office-CASWALLON THE HEADHUNTER (1986)

Architect's Office - Caswallon The Headhunter (1986) Silent Records
(Cover illustration is a frame from "Fireloop" by Stan Brakhage)

Today is Stan Brakhage's birthday.
He would have been 79.
It's hard to believe he passed away almost 9 years ago at the age of 70 years,2 months.
It seems like a year ago, maybe two.
I was fortunate to have met him when he
came to my city a couple of years before
his passing, for two days of screenings of his work.
I didn't want to take up too much of his time, as he
was in precarious health, and his appearance itself had truly been more than enough. Anyone who ever heard him talk or has seen video of his lectures knows what I am talking about.
For those who don't:
Stan Brakhage was a film-maker of the most personal mind and universal scope.
He was also one of the last great pedagogical links with the classic American Avant Garde- Having known virtually everybody who created art since 1930.(He went to school with James Tenney, Morton Subotnick, and Larry Jordan, for starters).
Listen to his radio broadcasts titled "The Test Of Time" (a title referring to an episode where Carl Ruggles was playing the same chord over and over again, incessantly, studiously, aggresively on the piano, When asked what he was doing, Ruggles replied "I'm giving this chord the test of time.")
In those broadcasts one can hear first-hand stories of some of the great artists of the last century, many of whom he knew personally.
Brakhage's interests encompassed the entire history of art and life, and he managed to put as much of it into his films as he was given time to do: His opus numbers some 400 films.
Well, to continue my story-
I did, however, mention to him when I met him that I owned a couple of films which I offered to put on vhs tape (to transfer from 16mm prints: Two about Jack Chambers (a Canadian artist-filmmaker whom he admired) plus his first film - "Mosaic", and also the Jackson Pollack film where Pollock is shown at work) and promised to send these to him. He said he'd send me a print in return.
Unfortunately, my package surely arrived too late, and he never got to see them. I've always felt bad about that.
I am posting this a little bit hastily (I was only reminded this morning about his birthday) : I would like to present the cover of MY copy of this record, ehich he signed for me,(instead I post the signature alone) and I would like to say something a bit more profound about this artist who was truly one of the greatest of the 20th century, and whose reputation will surely only grow to match his (mostly unaknowledged) influence as time passes.
But Time ties my tongue.So:
To borrow a sign-off from a postcard he sent me, simply:
Blessings, Stan.
Dr I

Side One:
A1- Prelude 326.0
A2- Prewar 329.1-2
A3- War 327.3
Side Two:
B1- Exhausted 329.4
B2- Party/Party 327.5
B3- Poslude 327.6
(This post is a birthday gift for someone who shares Stan's birthday. I hope he enjoys it.)
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Friday, December 16, 2011
Ilhan Mimaroglu / Freddie Hubbard Quintet- SING ME A SONG OF SONGMY (A FANTASY FOR ELECTROMAGNETIC TAPE) 1971

Ilhan Mimaroglu / Freddie Hubbard Quintet
SING ME A SONG OF SONGMY (A FANTASY FOR ELECTROMAGNETIC TAPE) 1971
The Personel is: FREDDIE HUBBARD,trumpet & flugelhorn; JUNIOR COOK,tenor saxophone; KENNY BARRON,piano; ART BOOTH,bass; LOUIS HAYES,drums.
THE BARNARD-COLUMBIA CHORUS;DANIEL PAGET, conductor.
String orchestra under the direction ofGene Orloff and Selwart Clarke; ARIF MARDIN, conductor & Hammond organ
RECITERS listed in Track listings.
Synthesized and processed sounds,Mix components and final mixes realized by Ilhan Mimaroglu.
Some quotes from the gatefold (enclosed):
"The eclectic approach provides the essential condition for creative freedom".
"You can't write music right unless you know how the man that'll play it plays poker" -Duke Ellington
"I'm one of the world's greatest trumpet players".-Frederick DeWayne Hubbard, introducing himself in a television interview.
"Criminology doesn't pay".
"Before asking what you can do for your country, ask what your country has done for you".
SING ME A SONG OF SONGMY (A FANTASY FOR ELECRTOMAGNETIC TAPE)
Side One:
SING ME A SONG OF SONGMY, Part 1 (time: 19:43)
(a) THRENODY FOR SHARON TATE
(Prelude & Comment)
The Quintet, string orchestra, synthessized & processed sounds,Mary Ann Hoxworth, reciter
(b) THIS IS COMBAT,I KNOW
Trumpet,tenor saxophone, piano, string orchestra, synthesized & processed sounds
Fazil Husnu Daglarca's poem 'Poverty', recited by NHA-KHE.
(c) THE CROWD
TheQuintet, string orchestra, chorus, Hammond organ, synthesized & processed sounds.
Quotations from Soren Kierkegaard's essay,'That Individual' recited by Mary Ann Hoxworth, Additional textrecited by Charles Grau, Fazil HusnuDaglarca's quatrain,'Bloodless' recited by Gungor Bozkurt, Musical quotation from Scriabin's 'Etude in B flat minor, Op.8.
(d) WHAT A GOOD TIME FOR A KENT STATE
The Quintet, chorus & string orchestra, Musical quotation from Brahms' 'Ein Deutsches Requiem'.
Side Two:
SING ME A SONG OF SONGMY, Pt.2 (Time: 21:15)
(a) MONODRAMA
Trumpet solo, processed trumpet sounds.
(b) BLACK SOLDIER
String orchestra, processed string and percussion sounds, Fazil Husnu Daglarca's poem, 'Colored Soldier' recited by Freddie Hubbard
(c) INTERLUDE I
The Quintet
(d) INTERLUDE II
Synthesized and processed sounds, chorus, string orchestra, Hammond organ, NHA-KHE's poem,'Lullabye for a Child in War'
recited in Vietnamese by the poet.
(e) AND YET, THERE COULD BE LOVE
Trumpet solo, chorus, string orchestra, synthesized sounds,
Fazil Husnu Daglarca's poem 'Before The Bombs Struck The Dark Breasts' recited by NHA-KHE.
(f) POSTLUDE
Trumpet solo, processed trumpet sounds & synthesized sounds. Final words quoted from a poem by Che Guevara and recited by Gungor Bozkurt.

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Labels:
electronic music,
experimental,
Freddie Hubbard,
Ilhan Mimaroglu,
jazz,
poetry,
third stream
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Music for Electronic & Older Instruments

various artists compilation - Music for Electronic & Older Instruments
LP released during the 1960s
*Thanks to Caitlyn for letting me use her photo of her cover. Go check out her blog for more music including her own compilations and mixes of the latest music and an awesome post of a rare 10" of early experimental electronic music by Herbert Brun.
Speaking of early experimental electronic music, it's been overdue for an appearance in this blog. There should be more coming soon.
Tape sounds on all tracks on side 1 produced at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center, New York
Performers:
CONCERTED PIECE FOR TAPE RECORDER AND ORCHESTRA
Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra, Jose Serebrier - conductor
EVENTS for tape recorder
Voices: Mildred Dunnock, Martha Scott, Lee Bowman
IMPROVISATION
Ward Davenny - piano; Keith Wilson - clarinet; David Schwartz - viola
TWO PRAYER SETTINGS
New York Chamber Soloists; Charles Bressler - tenor; Melvin Kaplan - conductor
Tracklisting:
Side 1
1. Otto Luening and Vladimir Ussachevsky - Concerted Piece for Tape Recorder and Orchestra {8:20}
2. Vladimir Ussachevsky - Of Wood and Brass {4:15}
3. Vladimir Ussachevsky - Wireless Fantasy {4:23}
Side 2
1. Mel Powell - Events for Tape Recorder {6:34}
2. Mel Powell - Improvisation {5:54}
3. Mel Powell - Second Electronic Setting {4:33}
4. Mel Powell - Two Prayer Settings {4:43}
(1) or (1)
Thursday, December 10, 2009
American Society of University Composers (Record No. 4)
various artists compilation - American Society of University Composers (Record No. 4)
LP released in 1980
Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra
composer: Leslie Bassett
performers:
Fernando Laires and Nelita True - piano
Midland Symphony Orchestra, Don Jaeger - conductor
This recording is from a live performance.
The three movement CONCERTO FOR TWO PIANOS AND ORCHESTRA (1976) was created for a commission sponsored by the Midland Center for the Performing Arts. The composer provides the following notes: "The Concerto begins with agitated, highly assertive overlays of six two-note sonorities, followed by forceful ascending 'arpeggiations' that prepare the entrance of the soloists. Much of the musical language and material for the entire work is based upon brief sonorities and lines heard early in the first movement. The slow and gentle second movement progresses from sseveral lyrical phrases toward more quiet and introspective music until interrupted by a forceful and climactic passage. An unmetered aria follows, proceeding to a gentle cadence. The third movement opens with quiet but animated rustlings and overlays of numerous hushed runs and scurryings. Pianos gradually take over this texture, bringing it to a rapid and energetic climax juxtaposing the pianos with various sections of the orchestra. A quiet section leads to a third unmetered quasicadenza and a final crescendo passage ends in a forceful reassertion of the initial sound of the piece."
November Voices, A Ceremony for Voice, Narrator and Ensemble (1975)
composer: Sidney Hodkinson
performers:
Eastman Musica Nova Ensemble, Sidney Hodkinson - conductor and Rayburn Wright - assisting conductor
Stanley Cornett - tenor
Dana McKay Kriehbiel - soprano
Steven Kujara - narrator
recording engineer: Patrick Pasco
The static reluctance of November Voices, with its separated antiphonal small ensembles, attempts to convey the persistence, euphony and yearning expressed by the poems of Minnesotan, Alvin Greenberg. The texts, chosen from a collection entitled "The Preservation of the Self in Everyday Life," are divided between a spoken narrator and a soprano. All of the material in the composition is derived from a Gregorian chant fragment first heard in an off-stage trombone, and later intoned by the tenor soloist. (Richard Brooks)Omaggio II for four-hand piano and tape
composer: Lawrence Moss
performers:
Sheryl Seltzer and Joel Sachs - piano
recording engineer: Curt Wittig
OMAGGIO II, for four-hand piano and tape is the second of a series which pay tribute to favorite composers. The first one (without tape) incorporates material from Mozart's Sonata in B-flat for four-hand piano, a work often played together with friends by Professor Moss. Omaggio II makes rather free use of the first page or so of Schoenberg's Third Quartet as a kind of "presence," more and more clearly preceived as the tape plays on. All the tape sounds are synthesized and the "prepared" piano pitches are those of the Quartet's first two measures. (Richard Brooks)
Tracklisting:
Side 1
1. Leslie Bassett - Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra {19:11}
Side 2
1. Sidney Hodkinson - November Voices {12:42}
2. Lawrence Moss - Omaggio II {9:10}
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Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Bird Songs in Literature
Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology - Bird Songs in Literature
Usually nature sounds/environmental sounds are posted on Sundays. Instead, I am posting today what would have been posted next Sunday. I am going to be out of town for the next few days to spend the Thanksgiving holiday with the family to eat, be merry, and probably watch football and go shopping. I'll likely be mostly offline as well during the next few days. I'll be back with more posts next week. Enjoy the holiday or the next few days even if you're not celebrating anything.
LP released in 1967
Prepared by Joseph Wood Krutch
Narrated by Frederick G. Marcham
The songs of birds have been an inspiration to poets since before the days of Chaucer. Shelley's skylark, Keats's nightingale, scores of other birds - some familiar, some little known - are celebrated throughout English and American literature. Now, for the first time, thanks to modern techniques, we can hear on one record both the words of the poem itself and the song of the bird that inspired it.
How many of us who have read about the skylark and nightingale since our schooldays have ever heard their famous song? And vice versa, how many of us realize the extent to which birds have appeared in the work of leading English and American poets? This latest addition to the Sounds of Nature series has been prepared with running commentary by the distinguished author and naturalist Joseph Wood Krutch. Songs and calls of almost 50 of the more common birds of England and North America are heard. They are identified by the narrator, Frederick G. Marcham, Professor of English History at Cornell University and ornithologist and naturalist as well. The editing and composition of the recording was under the expert direction of Peter Paul Kellogg, Professor Emeritus of Ornithology and Bio-Acoustics. Dr. Kellogg and the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology spared no effort in obtaining the best recorded songs of the birds available to supplement those taken from the Library of Natural Sounds at the Laboratory.
A significant achievement of this recording is the presentation of the songs in the light of their influence on the imagination and creativity of poets such as Shakespeare, Pope, Milton, and Wordsworth, Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman, Robert Frost, and T. S. Eliot - to name only a few. This has resulted in some of the most beautiful tributes to nature in English literature. A third dimension is added to the appreciation and enjoyment of each listener, as one who knows these birds immediately will discover: this richer background gives the songs fresh meaning and interest. The listener who is not as familiar with the songs will perhaps find them easier to learn and recognize in the future.
As is illustrated throughout this record, the singing bird has not only been an inspiration to man but a companion, protector, and friend as well. It can chastise and comfort, induce sorrow and pain, love and joy. Thus, each song achieves here its own immortality within the immortal lines of these poems. The final effect on the listener is an intensified awareness of the essential harmony between man and nature. (from the liner notes)
The bird songs and poems are listed below in the sequence heard.
Side 1
INTRODUCTION: HERMIT and SWAINSON'S THRUSHES
TAWNY OWL: Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Christabel
COCK: Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Christabel
John Gay, The Beggar's Opera
Chaucer, The Nun's Priest's Tale
SKYLARK: Percy Bysshe Shelley, To a Skylark
Alexander Pope, An Essay on Man
CUCKOO: Anonymous, Sumer is icumen in
Edmund Spenser, Amoretti
Matthew Arnold, Thyrsis
Shakespeare, Love's Labour's Lost
ROADRUNNER
YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO
WHIP-POOR-WILL: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Evangeline
EUROPEAN SONG THRUSH ("THROSTLE"): Alfred, Lord Tennyson, The Throstle
Robert Browning, Home-Thoughts, from Abroad
HERMIT THRUSH: Walt Whitman, "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd"
SWAINSON'S and WOOD THRUSHES: T. S. Eliot, Marina
AMERICAN ROBIN: Emily Dickinson, The Robin
EUROPEAN ROBIN: William Wordsworth, The Redbreast Chasing the Butterfly
Sir Walter Scott, Proud Maisie from The Heart of Mid-Lothian
William Blake, Auguries of Innocence
Anonymous, The Robin and the Wren
EUROPEAN WREN: Shakespeare, Macbeth
William Blake, Auguries of Innocence
Cornish Folk Rhyme, Hunt a Robin or a Wren
HOUSE WREN: Edward Howe Forbush, Birds of Massachusetts and Other New England States
WINTER WREN
CAROLINA WREN
CANON WREN
CACTUS WREN
Side 2
EASTERN MEADOWLARK: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, The Poet's Tale: The Birds of Killingworth from Tales of a Wayside Inn
EASTERN BLUEBIRD: Henry David Thoreau, The Bluebirds
Louisa May Alcott, Thoreau's Flute
BALTIMORE ORIOLE: Emily Dickinson, The Oriole's Secret
RED-EYED VIREO: Henry David Thoreau, "Upon the lofty elm-tree sprays"
VEERY: Henry David Thoreau, The Cliffs and Springs
OVENBIRD: Robert Frost, The Oven Bird
EASTERN WOOD PEWEE: John Townsend Trowbridge, The Pewee
BLACK-CAPPED CHICKADEE: Ralph Waldo Emerson, The Titmouse
Mark Van Doren, The Chickadee
CEDAR WAXWING: William Matchett, Cedar Waxwing
YELLOWTHROAT: Henry van Dyke, The Maryland Yellow-Throat
BOBOLINK: William Cullen Bryant, Robert of Lincoln
BOBWHITE, RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRD, WHISTLING SWAN, and LAUGHING GULL: Walt Whitman, Song of Myself
MOCKINGBIRD: Walt Whitman, Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking
COMMON CROW
COMMON RAVEN: Edgar Allan Poe, The Raven
ENGLISH ROOK
JACKDAW: William Cowper, The Jackdaw
WOOD PIGEON and MOURNING DOVE: Alfred, Lord Tennyson, The Princess
TURTLE DOVE: Old Testament, The Song of Songs
CANADA GOOSE: Henry David Thoreau, Conclusion to Walden
VARIOUS SEABIRDS: Anonymous, The Seafarer
WHIMBREL (HUDSONIAN CURLEW): Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Locksley Hall
COMMON LOON: Edward Howe Forbush, Birds of Massachusetts and Other New England States
John Greenleaf Whittier, Snow-Bound
Paul Brooks, Roadless Area
NIGHTINGALE: John Keats, Ode to a Nightingale
T. S. Eliot, The Waste Land
William Wordsworth, "O Nightingale! Thou Surely Art"
Algernon Charles Swinburne, Atalanta in Calydon
Matthew Arnold, Philomela
John Keats, Ode to a Nightingale
Tracklisting:
Side 1
1. Bird Songs in Literature {20:29}
Side 2
1. Bird Songs in Literature continued {21:42}
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Labels:
literature,
nature sounds,
poetry,
vinyl records
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Son of Word Jazz

Ken Nordine - Son of Word Jazz
LP released in 1958
This one is the follow-up to Word Jazz.
featuring the Fred Katz Group
Harold Gaylor - bass
Fred Katz - cello
Red Holt - drums
John Pisano - guitar
Richard Marx - piano
Paul Horn - woodwind
Tom Mack - producer
Tracklisting:
Side 1
1. The Smith Family {1:59}
2. Miss Cone {2:41}
3. Outer Space {3:32}
4. Down the Drain {3:06}
5. Secretary {3:00}
6. Bubble Gum {2:34}
Side 2
1. Looking At Numbers {2:21}
2. Anytime, Anytime {2:20}
3. I Used to Think My Right Hand Was Uglier Than My Left {2:16}
4. Lemming {2:21}
5. The Bullfighter {2:47}
6. Junk Man {4:26}
(1)
Labels:
experimental,
jazz,
Ken Nordine,
poetry,
vinyl records
Word Jazz Vol. II

Ken Nordine - Word Jazz Vol. II
LP released in 1960
fourth LP in the Word Jazz series
Credits:
Richard Campbell & The Northern Jazz Quartet
Richard Campbell - vibraphone
Emmett Frazier - bass
Ken Soderbloom - woodwind
Tracklisting:
Side 1
1. There's a She and a He {3:23}
2. Reaching Into In {2:00}
3. Adult Kindergarten {1:56}
4. Spectrum {2:44}
5. Fireflies {2:09}
6. So and So {1:55}
Side 2
1. Lesson Number 1 {1:30}
2. Confessions of 349-18-5171 {7:09}
3. You're Getting Better {2:04}
4. Original Sin {2:51}
(1)
Labels:
experimental,
jazz,
Ken Nordine,
poetry,
vinyl records
Monday, September 14, 2009
Next!

Ken Nordine - Next!
LP released in 1959
Credits:
performed by Dick Campbell & His Orchestra (7 + 1); Richard Marx and His Orchestra (all other tracks)
Emmett Frazier - bass (7 + 1)
John Frigo - bass (all of side 1, Hafta Have You, The Climber)
Bob Frazier - drums (7 + 1)
Jerome Slosberg - drums (all of side 1, Hafta Have You, The Climber)
John Gray - guitar (all of side 1, Hafta Have You, The Climber)
Richard Campbell - piano, leader (7 + 1)
Richard Marx - piano, leader (all of side 1, Hafta Have You, The Climber)
Victor Vallenari - saxophone, flute (all of side 1, Hafta Have You, The Climber)
Ken Soderbloom - woodwind (7 + 1)
I believe that this is the third one in Nordine's Word Jazz series. For more information about the Word Jazz concept go here where I posted the first Word Jazz LP.
Tracklisting:
Side 1
1. Mr Big {1:53}
2. Smerd {4:16}
3. Bury-It-Yourself Time Capsules {3:01}
4. Face In the Jazzmatazz {4:32}
5. Manned Satellite {2:13}
6. A Whistler {2:55}
Side 2
1. 7 + 1 {12:41}
2. Hafta Have You {2:02}
3. The Climber {3:17}
(1)
Labels:
experimental,
jazz,
Ken Nordine,
poetry,
vinyl records
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
The World of Harry Partch

Harry Partch - The World of Harry Partch
Harry Partch is an American visionary and stubborn individualist. . . . He has built his own musical world out of microtones, hobo speech, elastic octaves and percussion instruments made from hubcaps and nuclear cloud chambers. Recently. . . . an army of young music lovers stormed New York's Whitney Musuem to hear Harry Partch and his thirteen disciples produce a music that was totally personal and eclectic in the best sense. African polyrhythms, and ancient Greek modes, bits of Babylonia and the pulse of the American diesel engine all gathered into a richly erotic, primitive, fresh and stirring drama of sound. (Newsweek)
DAPHNE OF THE DUNES
Harry Partch - adapted viola
Other performers: Frank Berberich, Gary Coleman, Dean Drummond, Richard Lapore, John McAllister, Robert McCormick, Todd Miller, Emil Richards, Michael Ranta, Linda Schell
Instruments heard on this recording: Adapted Viola, Kithara II, Surrogate Kithara, Harmonic Canons II and III, Chromelodeon I, Cloud-Chamber Bowls, Spoils of War, Gourd Tree, Diamond Marimba, Boo (Bamboo Marimba), Bass Marimba, Pre-recorded Tape (Note: No more than four instruments are used simultaneously.)
DAPHNE OF THE DUNES is here recorded for the first time live. Originally the sound track for Madeline Tourtelot's film WINDSONG, Partch recorded it alone, by the process of overdubbing. The film, a modern rendering of the ancient myth of Daphne and Apollo, is a classic of the integration between visuals and sound. Partch explains his approach to the score:
"The music, in effect, is a collage of sounds. The film technique of fairly fast cuts is here translated into musical terms. The sudden shifts represent nature symbols of the film, as used for a dramatic purpose: dead tree, driftwood, falling sand, blowing tumbleweed, flying gulls, wriggling snakes, waving grasses."
BARSTOW
Eight Hitchhiker Inscriptions from a Highway Railing at Barstow, California
Harry Partch and John Stannard - voices
Other performers: John McAllister, Danlee Mitchell, Michael Ranta, Linda Schell Instruments heard on this recording: Surrogate Kithara, Chromelodeon I, Diamond Marimba, Boo (Bamboo Marimba)
BARSTOW, begun in 1941, is a setting of eight hitchhiker inscriptions copied from a highway railing on the outskirts of Barstow, California. This work shows Partch's style with language, as well as his approach to harmony and structure. Each inscription is stated, then humorously expanded, sometimes sung, other times intoned. Tonality is strong but ever-shifting. The over-all harmonic effect is quite smooth, as it would be in just intonation, with tones resolving to others by a subtle few vibrations as well as larger leaps. A masterpiece of Americana in song, it is more than that; it is musical dramatic narrative. Partch calls it his Hobo Concerto. As the word hobo itself is an American word, so is the music of Harry Partch an American music - probably the first truly American music since the American Indian.
CASTOR & POLLUX
A Dance for the Twin Rhythms of Gemini from Plectra & Percussion Dances
Performers: Gary Coleman, Dean Drummond, John McAllister, Danlee Mitchell, Emil Richards, Michael Ranta, Linda Schell
Instruments heard on this recording:
CASTOR
1. Leda and the Swan (Kithara II, Surrogate Kithara, and Cloud-Chamber Bowls)
2. Conception (Harmonic Canon II and High Bass Marimba)
3. Incubation (Diamond Marimba and Low Bass Marimba)
4. Chorus of Delivery From the Egg (All the foregoing instruments)
POLLUX
1. Leda and the Swan (Kithara II, Surrogate Kithara, and Low Bass Marimba)
2. Conception (Harmonic Canon II and Cloud-Chamber Bowls)
3. Incubation (Diamond Marimba and High Bass Marimba)
4. Chorus of Delivery From the Egg (All the foregoing instruments)
CASTOR & POLLUX is a dance-theater work with a beguiling program. It is structured in two large sections, each section comprised of three duets and a tutti. The first section is entitled CASTOR, the second, POLLUX. The first duet of each section is titled Leda and the Swan (insemination); the second, Conception; the third, Incubation; and the tutti, Chorus of Delivery From the Egg. By its contrapuntal texture, CASTOR & POLLUX shows well the melodic capabilities of the instruments, and the two tutti section grand finales to the glory of birth. In the liner notes to PLECTRA & PERCUSSION DANCES, first issued by Partch on his own GATE 5 record label, he relates the story:
"It begins with the encounter of Zeus, the male swan, with the beautiful Leda, and ends with the hatching of the fertilzied eggs - first Castor, then Pollux. From the moment of insemination, each egg uses exactly 234 beats in cracking. All of the right heavenly houses are in conjunction, and misfortune is impossible. Pairs of instruments tell the story in characteristic ways."(Notes by Danlee Mitchell)
Tracklisting:
Side 1
1. Daphne of the Dunes {16:53}
Side 2
1. Barstow {9:06}
2. Castor & Pollux {15:50}
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Monday, July 6, 2009
Word Jazz

Ken Nordine - Word Jazz
This is the original Word Jazz LP.
Liner notes by Ken Nordine:
Some years ago, when I first started fooling around with free association, with letting my mind wander with wonder, I had no idea that my joyful experiments would wind up on this unwinding album. But now, happily, that they have, I'd like to explain what I'm up to. Of course, what's on the record inside should explain itself and I hope you find that it does, but curiosity requires explanations of explanations, so here goes.
Imagine the imagination as a jazz instrument wailing words, verbal riffs that swing from images to ideas to images, a kind of oscillating curiosity creating far-in far-out fantasies on some fact, a going in any direction that seems to make some sense: up or down, in or out, here or there, now or then, for or against, etc. It can be sad or glad or an ambivalent blend of both. Oxymoronic. When it's glad-sad, it has something of the wry tension of humorous blues. It's also out-loud day dreaming that may be of interest to psychiatrists, amateur or otherwise. Let's say that it's something my unfree free will has to do, a necessary something that helps me belong to something larger than myself. Maybe it's a rebellion with cause, and maybe there are a lot of other maybes I don't know anything about and never will. Motivations are like an impulsive child, like the unselfconscious conscious skipping across a pretty muddy puddle. So what do you say we get our four feet back on the ground.
About the recording itself: I'd like to thank a special few. First, there's the genius of Fred Katz, the swinging beginning with his score. Freddie (who works from a very high shelf as cellist, pianist, conductor and composer) has four of his and jazzdom's best friends working with him to make up a group that deserves all the stars it can get and then some. The flute, piccolo, clarinet and sax have the pleasure of Paul Horn's sensitive company; the guitar is likewise pleased by John Asano; the bass has a ball with Jimmy Bond; the drums, bongos, timpani, gongs, and bells are treated the way they like to be by a great drummer named Forest Horn. The sound patterns are the creation of Jim Cunningham (of Robert Oakes Jordan and Associates). Utilizing engineering techniques and five Ampex Tape Recorders, Jim superimposes sound on sound to achieve an abstraction that you have to stare at with your ears. Magnified raindrops, IBM machines, 17-year locusts, reverberant delay, loop tapes, and a little bit of and so forth. Really, there's no way to describe it, it just kind of is.
Maybe, after all, that's the best description of "Word Jazz," too. Anyway, I do hope you enjoy hearing it.

Side 1
1. What Time is It? {3:46}
2. My Baby {2:33}
3. The Sound Museum {7:07}
4. The Vidiot {5:29}
Side 2
1. Roger {5:03}
2. Hunger is From {3:48}
3. Looks Like It's Going to Rain {3:29}
4. Flibberty Jib {4:45}
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Labels:
electro-acoustic,
experimental,
jazz,
Ken Nordine,
poetry,
vinyl records
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
The Louisville Orchestra 103rd Release

The Louisville Orchestra - 103rd Release
ECHOES OF TIME AND THE RIVER (ECHOES II)
Composed by George Crumb.
Performance recorded on December 15, 1970.
This composition is another Pulitzer Prize winner. It won Crumb the award in 1968.
It is a follow up to Crumb's earlier piece, "Eleven Echoes of Autumn" composed in 1965.
There are four movements in this order: "Frozen Time", "Remembrance of Time", "Collapse of Time", and "Last Echoes of Time".
From the liner notes: The preoccupation with time dates from the earlier "Autumn" Echoes but in the new work, this central unifying theme includes a treatment of psychological and philosophical time as well. The spatial projection of the time continuum takes the form of various "processionals"; the four movements of the suite may be realized with the players actually marching about the stage in steps of various length synchronized with the music they are performing. Many of the players are given extra instruments in addition; the strings, for example, are outfitted with antique cymbals and glockenspiel plates.
"KALEIDOSCOPE," FOR ORCHESTRA, SYNTHESIZER, AND SOPRANO
Composed by Merrill Ellis
Featured Mezzo-soprano: Joan Wall
An E-II Electronic Synthesizer built by Robert Moog is used in the performance of this piece. It is capable of handling numerous programmed inputs and a fast control section among other features.
From the liner notes: With the addition of the electronic dimensions of sound synthesizing devices and tape echo and reverberation, the modern concert hall ensemble comes into the electronic age. At the same time that the sound resources of the orchestra are enriching themselves beyond the dreams of even such an illustrious predecessor as Ravel, the forms of modern music are freeing themselves from the monumental rigidity of the classic tradition. All sorts of techniques have been developed to facilitate the process - the extended improvisations of jazz, the abstract scoring in boxes and timelines or other geometrical graphics that serve to delineate large-scale structures while allowing at the same time the player a limited freedom of action, even the incorporation of random events and sequences that allow for no predictability of continuity whatsoever. In Merrill Ellis' Kaleidoscope - a composition for orchestra, Moog electronic sound synthesizer, and soprano - a slightly different method is used to create much the same general effect. A series of strong instrumental colorings is presented in a long introductory section. The listener becomes familiar with the close array of trills in the strings and winds, the wide leaps of the melodic line in the brass, the glissandos and intermodulation effects of the Moog keyboard, the humorous and slightly sinister rhythmic patternings in the strings and percussion, and the expressive writing for the solo violin.
...
Acting as a unifying agent, the soprano voice sings, intones, and otherwise assaults a bit of pyramidal (the syllables double in each successive line) poetry by Robert Lockwood quite in keeping with the loosely formed aggregates that surround it. Titled Wonderdome, the text describes a city in the future where everything is perfect.
Tracklisting:
Side 1
1. Echoes of Time and the River (Echoes II): Frozen Time [composed by George Crumb] {4:39}
2. Echoes of Time and the River (Echoes II): Remembrance of Time [composed by George Crumb] {5:53}
3. Echoes of Time and the River (Echoes II): Collapse of Time/Last Echoes of Time [composed by Geroge Crumb] {9:15}
Side 2
1. "Kaleidoscope" for Orchestra, Synthesizer, and Soprano [composed by Merrill Ellis] {14:48}
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
The New Trumpet

various artists compilation - The New Trumpet
Sonata for Trumpet & Piano (1955) by Peter Maxwell Davies
Performers: Gerard Schwarz - trumpet; Ursula Oppens - piano
Space is a Diamond (1970) by Lucia Dlugoszewski
for solo trumpet
Performer: Gerard Schwarz
Passages 13-The Fire (1970-71) by William Hellermann
for trumpet & tape
Performers: Gerard Schwarz - trumpet; Jacqueline Hellermann, Marsha Immanuel, Michael O'Brien, John P. Thomas - voices
tape realized at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center
text, "The Fire, Passages 13" is from Bending the Bow by Robert Duncan; This poem was first published in Poetry, April-May 1965.
Most of our modern instruments have antecedents reaching far back into antiquity, and the trumpet is no exception. Space does not allow discussion of whether or not the ancient Roman lituus or the much more recent cornetto or Zink are true ancestors of the modern trumpet, and it is better to limit our concentration to the simple narrow cylindrical tube of metal with a bell and a cup-shaped mouthpiece that the instrument essentially still is. This natural trumpet, without side-holes or valves, is capable of a simple overtone series; in this form, it is only in the upper partials that it becomes possible to produce the full scale. In the Baroque period a school of trumpet-playing developed using this portion of the instrument, but players equipped with sufficient lip and lung power to master this style were naturally somewhat rare. In Bach's time trumpet players were the prized athletes of the instrumental ensemble; highly-paid itinerants for the most part, they were called upon to add brilliance to ceremonial musical events. By 1750, however, with the rise of larger ensembles and the cult of the musical amateur, players capable of high, florid passage-work grew scarce, and the most common brass-writing of the Classical period was rather primitive tonic-and-dominant orchestral accentuation.
In the mid-19th century, the recently-invented valve-trumpet (actually at first a cornet) began to come into general use. This was, in practically every sense, a "new trumpet: whereas the earlier methods of varying the fundamental of the overtone series, thus the key, of the old trumpet - either to insert lengths of tubing ("crooks") into it, or to employ a slide-mechanism, like the trombone - were relatively cumbersome, the new trumpet was able, through valves, to open and close various lengths of tubing very quickly. Thus it became a totally chromatic and agile instrument throughout its practical range. The trumpet we possess today, like so many of our current orchestral instruments, is merely a refined and standardized version of the result of that incredibly active period of technological advance in instrument-building, the first half of the 19th century. To this new instrument has been added, much more recently an assortment of mutes: besides the common, centuries-old "straight" mute, the player now has as resource the Harmon mute, the plunger mute, the cup mute, the Solotone mute, the whisper mute, and other devices inserted into (or held against) the bell of the instrument for timbral variation. Many of the above were used principally in American popular music and jazz, and it is only recently, with the renascence of the trumpet virtuoso and the serious composer's growing interest in timbre as a compositional element, that the vast resources of the modern trumpet are beginning to be explored exhaustively in new music.
While not employing the various trumpet mutes, Peter Maxwell Davies' early Sonata forcefully demonstrates the advances in sheer playing technique in the last decades. With Lucia Dlugoszewski's Space is a Diamond, we enter a new sound-world. The trumpet suddenly has become a four-and-a-half-octave instrument: in its new incarnation, with the use of several mutes, unusual tonguing techniques, high, swooping glissandos, and simultaneous playing and singing through the mouthpiece, an instrument emerges capable, in the composer's words, of "gusts of delicate rain" and "violent plateaus," of "pure transparency, tenderness, nakedness, and radiance." Passages 13-The Fire, by William Hellermann, adds electronic sounds and spoken sound-modified text to the "new trumpet"; here, half-valving is prominent in the panoply of effects, but, most remarkably, the work exudes an air of great pathos, aided in this by the trumpet's quotation of a plainsong sequence (by Hermannus Contractus), Alma redemptoris Mater, near its end. Both the Dlugoszewski and Hellermann works were written especially for Gerard Schwarz. (William Bolcom from the liner notes)
Tracklisting:
Side One
1. Peter Maxwell Davies - Sonata for Trumpet & Piano: Allegro moderato {1:46}
2. Peter Maxwell Davies - Sonata for Trumpet & Piano: Lento {2:54}
3. Peter Maxwell Davies - Sonata for Trumpet & Piano: Allegro vivo {2:13}
4. Lucia Dlugoszewski - Space is a Diamond {10:28}
Side Two
1. William Hellermann - Passages 13-The Fire {25:09}
Friday, December 12, 2008
Music of Harry Partch and John Cage

Harry Partch and John Cage - Music of Harry Partch and John Cage
I received this in the form of a CD-R some time ago. There is not much information about this that came with the CD-R. What I know is that this is ripped from an LP copy that has Partch's music on one side and Cage's music on the other side. David Tudor performed on the piano on Cage's pieces. Partch's pieces are songs with Harry himself on vocals accompanied by instruments that Partch built. The LP was originally released in 1978.
Tracklisting:
Side One
All tracks on side one by Harry Partch.
1. The Rose {1:33}
2. The Wind {1:34}
3. The Waterfall {1:02}
4. The Intruder {1:09}
5. I am a Peach Tree {1:23}
6. A Midnight Farewell {1:16}
7. Before the Cask of Wine {2:10}
8. The Street {2:39}
9. The Dreamer That Remains {10:16}
Side Two
All tracks on side two by John Cage.
1. Music of Changes Part III {10:16}
2. Music of Changes Part IV {11:42}
Friday, November 28, 2008
Extended Voices

various artists compilation - Extended Voices
New pieces for chorus and voices altered electronically by sound synthesizers and vocoder.
Performed by The Brandeis University Chamber Chorus; Alvin Lucier, director
EXTENDED VOICES is an apt title for this album, for the simple reason that all of the works here either extend the human voice physically or enlarge the performance situation of choral music.
Tracklisting:
Side 1
1. Pauline Oliveros - Sound Patterns {3:57}
2. Alvin Lucier - North American Time Capsule 1967 {10:11}
(for voices and Sylvania Electronic Systems vocoder)
3. John Cage - Solos for Voice 2 {12:36}
(electronic realization by Gordon Mumma and David Tudor)
Side 2
1. Robert Ashley - She Was a Visitor {5:46}
2. Toshi Ichyanagi - Extended Voices {10:57}
(for voices with Moog synthesizer and Buchla Associates Electronic Modular System)
3. Morton Feldman - Chorus and Instruments (II) {5:02}
(Harvey Phillips - tuba; John Bergamo - chimes)
4. Morton Feldman - Christian Wolff in Cambridge {3:46}
Thursday, October 16, 2008
Transformations

Hildegard Westerkamp - Transformations
Background of Hildegard Westerkamp from the liner notes:
The majority of her compositions deal with aspects of the acoustic environment: with urban, rural or wilderness soundscapes, with the voices of children, men and women, with noise or silence, music and media sounds, or with the sounds of different cultures, and so on. She has composed film soundtracks, sound documents for radio and has produced and hosted radio programs such as Soundwalking and Musica Nova on Vancouver Co-operative Radio.
In a number of compositions she has combined her treatment of environmental sounds extensively with the poetry of Canadian writer Norbert Ruebsaat. More recently she has written her own texts for a series of performance pieces for spoken text and tape.
A testimonial from Pauline Oliveros:
Sound surrounds us. We are sound inside and we resonate with the soundscape even if we are not listening. Hildegard Westerkamp is sensitive to soundscape. She ably shapes fanciful, imaginative music from her recordings, mixing and transformations of the soundscape. Westerkamp creates new possibilities for listening. One can journey with her sound to inner landscapes and find unexplored openings in our sound souls. The experience of her music vibrates the potential for change. Her compositions invite interaction - a chance to awaken to one's own creativity. One can transform through listening as she has. In the music and soundscapes of Westerkamp we feel memory and imagination as we hear through to the future.
Notes and anecdotes from Hildegard Westerkamp:
I feel that sounds have their own integrity and need to be treated with a great deal of care and respect. Why would I process a cricket's voice but not my daughter's? If the cricket had come from my own garden, had a name and would talk to me every day, would I still be able to transform it in the studio? Would I need to?
The moment of recording the cricket in the Zone of Silence (a desert region in North Eastern Mexico) had been a magical moment. So, studio 'manipulation' of the sound seemed somehow inappropriate. Its transformation into a composition had to become a new sonic journey of discovery to retain the level of magic first experienced. I remember when I had to say 'Stop' to electroacoustic experimentation: the cricket was in danger of being obliterated.
...
I hear the soundscape as a language with which places and societies express themselves. In the face of rampant noise pollution, I want to be understanding and caring of this 'language' and how it is 'spoken.'
I compose with any sound that the environment offers to the microphone, just as a writer works with all the words that a language provides. It is in the specific ways in which the language is selected, organized and processed that composition occurs.
I like to use the microphone the way photographers often use the camera, searching for images, using the zoom to discover what the human eye alone cannot see. I like to position the microphone very close to the tiny, quiet and complex sounds of nature, then amplify and highlight them for radio or any other electroacoustic medium : to make them audible to the numbed urban ear. Perhaps in that way these natural sounds can be understood as occupying an important place in the soundscape and warrant respect and protection.
...
These compositions are now on this disc, an altogether abstract place, far away from the places in which the sounds originated. They now may have to put up with bad playback equipment and noisy living rooms, with car radios or distracted ears. A forest piece in an apartment by a freeway...can it draw the listener back into the forest? An urban piece in quiet country living...is it necessary?
Other credits:
Norbert Ruebsaat - poetry and reading (track 1)
Brian G'Froerer - French horn (track 2)
Tracklisting:
1. A Walk Through the City {16:05}
2. Fantasie for Horns II {13:07}
3. Kits Beach Soundwalk {9:48}
4. Cricket Voice {11:02}
5. Beneath the Forest Floor {17:23}
Monday, October 1, 2007
John Cage: Empty Words Part IV (1973-78)
Due to circumstances of obnoximost and climactic nature, this post comes a little later than planned, but it's truly a marvellous one ...
Imagine a dimly lit, vault-like ancient cellar, obscured paintings on the masonry. At a small table, illuminated by a single lamp, sits a lone man, calmly intoning vocal sounds, and silences. The changing and sometimes longish pauses between sounds seem to alter the pace of time itself. It goes on and on, and after 2 1/2 hours, a listener might notice that he/her's hearing the world with new ears.
"Empty Words" (1974/75), Cage's four-part poem of epic proportions (a complete performance of all four parts would take about 10 hours), is a beautiful exercise in de-militarizing and atomizing language.
Using H.D. Thoreau's "Journals" as source material, Cage derived his text through computer-aided chance procedures. The process of de-militarization progresses from part to part. While Part I features phrases, words, syllables, and letters (but no complete sentences), all that remain in Part IV are letters and silences. The published text features a great number of illustrations from Thoreau's "Journal", selected and inserted by using the "I Ching".
"A transition from Language to music (a language already without sentences, and not confined to any subject) ... Language becoming musics, musics becoming theatres; performances; metamorphoses (stills from what are actually movies). At first face to face; finally sitting with one's back to the audience (sitting with the audience), everyone facing the same vision. Sideways, sideways." - John Cage, introductory text to "Empty Words, Part IV"

Edition Michael Frauenlob Bauer MFB 003-004 (double LP released in 1987). This remarkable recording of highest artistic and technical qualities won the "Award of the Deutsche Schallplatten-Kritik".
Thanks to Gebrueder Hartmann for digital transfer and cover pics.
(1) (2)
Imagine a dimly lit, vault-like ancient cellar, obscured paintings on the masonry. At a small table, illuminated by a single lamp, sits a lone man, calmly intoning vocal sounds, and silences. The changing and sometimes longish pauses between sounds seem to alter the pace of time itself. It goes on and on, and after 2 1/2 hours, a listener might notice that he/her's hearing the world with new ears.

"Empty Words" (1974/75), Cage's four-part poem of epic proportions (a complete performance of all four parts would take about 10 hours), is a beautiful exercise in de-militarizing and atomizing language.
Using H.D. Thoreau's "Journals" as source material, Cage derived his text through computer-aided chance procedures. The process of de-militarization progresses from part to part. While Part I features phrases, words, syllables, and letters (but no complete sentences), all that remain in Part IV are letters and silences. The published text features a great number of illustrations from Thoreau's "Journal", selected and inserted by using the "I Ching".

"A transition from Language to music (a language already without sentences, and not confined to any subject) ... Language becoming musics, musics becoming theatres; performances; metamorphoses (stills from what are actually movies). At first face to face; finally sitting with one's back to the audience (sitting with the audience), everyone facing the same vision. Sideways, sideways." - John Cage, introductory text to "Empty Words, Part IV"

Edition Michael Frauenlob Bauer MFB 003-004 (double LP released in 1987). This remarkable recording of highest artistic and technical qualities won the "Award of the Deutsche Schallplatten-Kritik".
Thanks to Gebrueder Hartmann for digital transfer and cover pics.
(1) (2)
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