Thursday, July 31, 2008
Scale of the Day: D Chromatic no 1
The D Chromatic no 1 Scale as one would find it on any conventionally tuned, equal tempered instrument.
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Scale of the Day: E Flat Lydian perfect 5 & augmented 5
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Scale of the Day: A Lydian
The A Lydian Scale as one would find it on any conventionally tuned, equal tempered instrument.
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This completes another cycle of scales for the "Scale of the Day" sequence. The next cycle begins with an additive Lydian. It will also feature the first audio sample of the Chromatic Scale and a 5-limit tuning of the Mixolydian Scale.
Monday, July 28, 2008
Black Earth in Velvet
July 26, 2008
Nicole Mitchell: flute, voice
David Boykin: tenor saxophone, percussion
Renee Baker: violin, viola, percussion
Mankwe Ndosi: voice, dance
Marcus Evans: drums
Avreeayl Ra: percussion
(unknown, I missed the name): bass
A hush gently fell upon the Velvet Lounge as Nicole Mitchell and the members of her Black Earth Ensemble joined hands for a pre-performance meditation circle. The deliberate, silent gesture signaled the elevated plane that this group draws upon.
With his first solo of the evening, David Boykin established himself as a centered, creative force to be reckoned with. Beginning with long, sustained tones as he crafted a well formed, intense improvisation with a tone ranging from a soft attack that nearly matches Nicole Mitchell's flute sound to a growling, raspy tenor. Over the course of the evening Boykin tapped into a reservoir of inspired playing that calmly asserted a compelling and exciting presence in the jazz tradition that is new to these ears.
David Boykin was hardly an exception in the Black Earth Ensemble. Renee Baker offered soul drenched prayers on the violin and viola as she built upward with powerful verve. And as band leader and composer, Nicole Mitchell was not outdone by her band mates in the creative expression department. Her unusual vocalization technique combined with the blur of notes from her flute was polished and well adapted for the different moods of her music. Solos from the members of the rhythm section were also operating from the same plane of soul-filled humanity.
Added to this sound was the rich, earthy vocals of Mankwe Ndosi. With "Afrika Rising," a tune that serves as the Black Earth Ensemble anthem, one could feel the gravity of deep jazz tradition and African heritage pulsating in the drums, percussion and chant. This connection was ever present even as the compositions ranged from meditative calm to frenetic exaltation.
Before and between sets Nicole Mitchell was constantly in motion. Dashing off set lists, scribbling out a transposed part, going over arrangement details with individual members of the band or even cheerfully selling her own CDs with a down to earth approachability and a calm smile. Even within this music, she is generous and persistently determined toward each vibration offered up as a prayer of elevated creativity. This dedication to craft and substance hits he soul as surely as any Mingus experience. Nicole Mitchell has developed an ensemble and a sound that is well worth checking out and savoring as an exciting evolution of the jazz tradition.
Fear of a Flat Planet
July 25, 2008
Fareed Haque: guitars
Willerm Delisfort: keyboards
Alex Austin: bass
Subrata Bhattacharya: tabla
Ernie Adams: drums
Scale of the Day: E Octave Subdivided: 2 equal [2 equal/2 equal] 1% wide
Sunday, July 27, 2008
Scale of the Day: E Triative subdivided: 2 equal [2 equal/2 equal]
Saturday, July 26, 2008
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 9
Scale of the Day: E Square-root-of-2 subdivided: 2 equal [2 equal/2 equal] inversion
Friday, July 25, 2008
Scale of the Day: E Octave Subdivided: 2 just [2 just/2 just]
The E Octave Subdivided: 2 just [2 just/2 just] Scale. Take the octave, divide it into two just parts (that gives you the 3/2 just perfect fifth). Then divide the intervals on either side into two just parts. This gives you the 5/4 major third (to divide the 3/2 between the root and fifth) and the 7/4 minor seventh (the 7/6 of the 4/3 interval size found between the fifth and the octave). This scale happens to line up with the 4:5:6:7:8 of the overtone series - a supremely consonant seven chord.
Thursday, July 24, 2008
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 8
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 8
Part of a series of recorded improvisations featuring the tuning system used for the first movement of Salt Tea.
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Get Your Hybrid Groove On
Sunday, July 20, 2008
Brian Sacawa: saxophones
DJ Dubble8: turntables, electronics
Exotic Hypnotic 2008: After Now
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Part of the Exotic Hypnotic series - in conjunction with Artscape.
Five by Andrew Cole
Jamie Schneider: oboe
Matthew Taylor: saxophone
Cameron Raecke: viola
Nathan Bontrager: cello
Seven Sketches of Beginning by Mark A. Lackey
Jennifer Holbrook: soprano
Mark Edwards: guitar
Manifestation by Samuel Burt
Ariana Lamon-Anderson: clarinet
Justin Nurin: trumpet
Neil Feather: guitaint
Paul Neidhardt: percussion, friction
Domenica Romagni: cello
Exotic Hypnotic 2008: Audrey Chen and Takuro Mizuta Lippit
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Part of the Exotic Hypnotic series - in conjunction with Artscape.
Audrey Chen: cello, voice, devices
Takuro Mizuta Lippit: turntables, electronics
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Exotic Hypnotic 2008: The Peabody Consort
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Part of the Exotic Hypnotic series - in conjunction with Artscape.
Exotic Hypnotic 2008: The Bow Legged Gorilla
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Part of the Exotic Hypnotic series - in conjunction with Artscape.
Exotic Hypnotic 2008: Michael Formanek Ensemble
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Part of the Exotic Hypnotic series - in conjunction with Artscape.
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 7
Scale of the Day: E Flat Ionian diminished 5 mapped to the Square-root-of-2 1% wide
Monday, July 21, 2008
Exotic Hypnotic 2008: Ric Royer
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Part of the Exotic Hypnotic series - in conjunction with Artscape.
Ric Royer: story teller, medium
Bonnie Jones: devices
+ others
With an impressive sense of theatre and one of the more humorous pretenses for a freak-out - one that lulls the unsuspecting audience into an acceptance of deliberate craziness - Ric Royer took on the role of a medium as he led a performance/seance that twisted together the odd forces of the supernatural with primal, experimental expression. Wearing a mask, and not saying a word, Bonnie Jones' array of dissembled guitar pedals became a machine for collecting and communicating with souls from beyond the veil. Ric Royer began with a reading of a ghost story to set the tone for the performance. He then sought to channel a writer from the beyond so that he might transmit what they have to say. Royer claimed to be tapping into the spirit of Cormac McCarthy. The fact that McCarthy is still alive adding to the absurdity. With the help of two "volunteers" from the audience Royer wailed and screamed as he scribbled along a long roll of paper. The "volunteers" offered their own interpretation of the scribbles in the form of various theatrics. The streaming roll of paper was eventually streamed through the audience so that they might glimpse this amazing story being seanced into existence.
Exotic Hypnotic 2008: Thank You
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Part of the Exotic Hypnotic series - in conjunction with Artscape.
Jeffrey McGrath
Michael Bouyaucas
Elke Wardlaw
The power noise trio of Thank You offered a groove-driven burst of kinetic release with odd touches and an ear for milking textural juice from the loud part of the sonic spectrum. The result was rarely assaultive as the bed of anchoring drum beats holding together the multi-layered world of guitars, keyboards and voice was strangely pleasant in its details. With a sound that was refreshingly unhinged from even a passing nod to song form this trio paints surrealist landscapes built outward from the raw sonic energy of post-punk detritus.
Exotic Hypnotic 2008: Susan Alcorn
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Part of the Exotic Hypnotic series - in conjunction with Artscape.
Susan Alcorn: pedal steel guitar
(photo credit: Alice Faye Love)
Susan Alcorn's extended technique and expanded vocabulary for the pedal steel guitar makes for an engaging listen as she roams through a territory of linear, melodic spaces punctuated by detours into joyful bursts of micro-noises through a wealth of timbres unique to this instrument. The fretless intonation combined with a surprising volume of sound resulting from minimal physical movements led to a sound somewhere between Nashville and the sunken city of Atlantis. The extended techniques were often extreme in their subtlety and surprising when gently coaxed into the foreground of the soundscape. With a refined sense of pacing and formal development, this set-long improvisation made for an outstanding invocation to a day rich with experimental expression.
Scale of the Day: E Flat Ionian 3% narrow
Sunday, July 20, 2008
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 6
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 6
Continuing with another installment of improvisations on the tuning system used in the first movement of Salt Tea.
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This has been a music rich weekend. Stay tuned while I get my thoughts together about the rich influx of live music around Baltimore this past weekend...
E Flat Ionian diminished 5 2% narrow
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Friday, July 18, 2008
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 5
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 5
The fifth installment in a series of improvisations featuring the scale used in the first movement of Salt Tea. This particular improvisation is short, with the idea of focusing the ear on a small element of this harmonic pallet.
Scale of the Day: E Flat Ionian 4% wide
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Scale of the Day: E Flat Ionian diminished 5 3% wide
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 4
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 4
Continuing with a series of improvisations using the tuning system used in the first movement of Salt Tea. The scored first movement from that work sounds completely unlike these piano samples plus effects chain performances offered here. There's a lot of potential in this octave-less harmonic system.
Scale of the Day: E Flat Pythagorean Ionian 2% wide
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Scale of the Day: E Flat Ionian augmented 5 1% wide
Monday, July 14, 2008
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 3
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 3
The third installment on a continuing series of improvisations using the intonation scheme from the first movement of my Salt Tea project.
Scale of the Day: E Flat Ionian mapped to the Cube-root-of-2-squared
Sunday, July 13, 2008
Bringing the Bisbee Deportation to the Red Room
Saturday, July 12, 2008
Shelly Blake-Plock: guitars, voice, radical
John Dierker: bass clarinet
Amanda Vickers: clarinet
Dick Seabrook: guitar, autoharp
In 1917, more than 1,300 striking miners were rounded up, kidnapped from Bisbee, Arizona by vigilantes representing the mine owners and deported out of state to Hermanas, New Mexico. The United States v. Wheeler decision of the Supreme Court that followed in 1920 determined that the freedom of movement of U.S. citizens was not constitutionally protected. This became the precedent applied toward the internment of Japanese-Americans during the second world war.
With blindfolds on, Shelly Blake-Plock, John Dierker and Amanda Vickers explored restricted freedom of movement with a sensory deprived approach toward free improvisation. As an experiment, I experienced this music with the willful decision to close my own eyes to occupy the same head-space as the performers.
This was followed by some arrangements of Union songs from the era, and a peculiarly effective "audience participation" piece set as accompaniment to an archival home movie documenting one Japanese-American family's internment in Topaz, Utah.
The intermingling of free improvisation with folk tunes and audience participation continued into the second set, culminating in a free improvisation take on a game of musical chairs that added a new performer from the audience each time someone was left without a chair. The tension of getting a group of free improvisers to "stop" playing growing more tenuous as the number of players grew.
The mix of labor history and its associated politics, free improvisation, folk song and social participation achieved a remarkable balance of reverent whimsy. Proving that deep ideas and serious intent can also be fun and unpretentious. Shelly Blake-Plock flashed an unassuming, comfortable stage presence not often found at the Red Room. And as he astutely observed, he also brought the most complete set of "songs" ever performed in that space. It was his sense of temporal proportions (keeping things short) and responsive improvisational flair that ultimately led to a compelling collection of disparate impulses.
HurdAudio Rotation: Songs of Liberty and Bohemians
Terry Riley: music
Michael McClure: poetry
The colorful rantings and mix of verbal words and noises of Michael McClure's poetry reading strike the ears like a lunatic banging on the walls of the asylum. Terry Riley's improvised responsiveness to this poetry transforms the experience from insanity to a charming lunacy. Rich with so many of the qualities that make Terry Riley's music compelling, this one takes on the twin demons of words and collaboration with mixed results. The ears are both drawn in and put off at the same time. The poetry is good. The music is inviting. In the end it feels more like a curiosity than anything else.
Charlie Haden: The Ballad of the Fallen. 1982. ECM: 1248 811 546-2.
Charlie Haden: bass
Carla Bley: arrangements, piano, glockenspiel
Don Cherry: pocket trumpet
Sharon Freeman: french horn
Mick Goodrick: guitar
Jack Jeffers: tuba
Michael Mantler: trumpet
Paul Motion: drums, percussion
Jim Pepper: tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute
Dewey Redman: tenor saxophone
Steve Slagle: alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, clarinet, flute
Gary Valente: trombone
Carla Bley arrangements. An inspiring humanitarian message. Music of defiance and hope. These Liberation Music Orchestra recordings bring the ears to a deeper understanding of love and hope through a veil of tears. One of the great jazz recordings of all time. But what Haden/Bley collaboration isn't? The short arrangement of "The People United Will Never Be Defeated" is incredible and the contributions of each one of these players adds up to a rare level of inspired.
Art Blakey/The Jazz Messengers: The Jazz Messengers at the Cafe Bohemia Volume 1 & 2. 1955 (Rudy Van Gelder edition released in 2001). Blue Note Records: 7243 5 32148 2 1 & 7243 5 3249 2 0.
Art Blakey: drums
Kenny Dorham: trumpet
Hank Mobley: tenor saxophone
Horace Silver: piano
Doug Watkins: bass
Ideal for those who need a little bop with their Sunday morning coffee. For monophonic source tapes these disc sound amazing. From a era when covering show tunes was neither an ironic gesture or an obligation to the standards repertoire, these wonderful Kenny Dorham arrangements are drenched within the deep, soul-filled wells that show off the vibrancy and life these tunes had before they were embalmed by generations long since removed from the days when Cole Porter was a contemporary pop icon. It's still possible to play great performances of the standards, but the conservative practice of treating them as museum relics rarely attains the gritty panache achieved at Cafe Bohemia in 1955 by these cats. The irresistible gravity of the feeling these players bring makes Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers an enduring fascination with these ears. Then there's that phenomenal presence of Horace Silver at the keys turning in great solo after great solo on the same stage with the great Hank Mobley.
Scale of the Day: E Flat Ionian diminished 5 mapped to the Cube-root-of-2
The E Flat Ionian diminished 5 mapped to the Cube-root-of-2 Scale. I find it interesting how the "augmented second" that opens up between the diminished fifth and major sixth translates into the adjacent equal tempered "major second" and "minor third" intervals when the scale is compacted down into an equal tempered major third.
Saturday, July 12, 2008
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 2
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 2
Here is the second installment of a set of improvisations using the Salt Tea scale from the first movement. These are tuned piano samples that are then fed through an effects chain.
E Flat Pythagorean Ionian mapped to the 3/2
Friday, July 11, 2008
Scale of the Day: E Flat Ionian augmented 5 mapped to the Triative
Thursday, July 10, 2008
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 1
Salt Tea Scale 1 - Improvisation 1
This a taste of something I've been working on lately. I have a composition called Salt Tea that uses a different tuning for each movement. While working on an alternate arrangement of the first movement, "Hot Snow," I tuned a set of Bösendorfer piano samples and started playing around with some effects. Have a listen.
Scale of the Day: E Flat Pythagorean Ionian diminished 5 mapped to the Square-root-of-2
Wednesday, July 09, 2008
Scale of the Day: E Flat 5, 3 Ionian
The E Flat 5, 3 Ionian Scale. With its pristine 5/4 just major third, the profoundly consonant 4/5/6 just major triad at root position, and the 4/3 just perfect fourth as its only utonal member this 5-limit Ionian scale is possibly the ideal tuning of the classical "major" scale. A substantially significant scale and a good place to start exploring the sound of just intonation.
Tuesday, July 08, 2008
Scale of the Day: G Cube-root-of-2-axis, Construct #1 - in Square-root-of-2-space - Lydian Mode
Monday, July 07, 2008
Scale of the Day: E Square-root-of-2-axis, Construct #1, Lydian Mode
Sunday, July 06, 2008
HurdAudio Rotation: Commingling Creative Forces
The Orford String Quartet:
Andrew Dawes: violin
Kenneth Perkins: violin
Terence Helmer: viola
Denis Brott: cello
String Quartet in C Minor, Op 18, No. 4
String Quartet in A Minor, Op. 132
Juxtaposing the early Beethoven against the late Beethoven like this is like a game of Hadyn seek. The Opus 18 offering a masterful take on the late Classical aesthetic as learned and absorbed from Beethoven's teacher Joseph Hadyn. The Opus 132 then offers a five-movement lesson in the early Romantic aesthetic of searching for expressive results from Beethoven's mature sensibilities as he allows his ideas and variations plenty of room to stretch out. Not only a glimpse of the Romantic Era just being ushered in by the great master, but in the long "Molto Adagio" movement one can catch an aural glimpse of the musical textures that would form in Beethoven's wake.
Albert Ayler: Holy Ghost (box set) [disc 6]. 2004. Revenant Records: RVN 213.
Albert Ayler Quintet - June 30/July 1, 1967 @ Freebody Park, Newport, Rhode Island
Albert Ayler: tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, alto saxophone, vocals
Don Ayler: trumpet
Michel Samson: violin
Bill Folwell: bass
Milford Graves: drums
Albert Ayler Quartet - July 21, 1967 @ John Coltrane's funeral, St. Peter's Lutheran Church, New York City
Albert Ayler: tenor saxophone, vocals
Don Ayler: trumpet
Richard Davis: bass
Milford Graves: drums
Pharoah Sanders Ensemble - January 21, 1968 @ Renaissance Ballroom, New York City
Pharoah Sanders: tenor saxophone
Chris Capers: trumpet
unknown: alto saxophone
Alber Ayler: tenor saxophone
unknown: tenor saxophone
Dave Burrell: piano
Sirone: bass
Roger Blank: drums
Albert Ayler studio sessions - late August, 1968, New York City
Albert Ayler: tenor saxophone, vocals, solo recitation
Call Cobbs: piano, rocksichord
Bill Folwell: electric bass
Bernard Purdie: drums
Mary Parks: vocals, tambourine
Vivian Bostic: vocals
Disc 6 from the Holy Ghost collection is a juxtaposition of odds and ends from Ayler's all too brief career. The quintet from the summer of 1967 in Freebody Park is burning with every vitality that makes Ayler's music and performances so intoxicating. The layer of Michel Samson on violin is particularly engaging and the production values for this incredible set is a gift to Ayler fans. The cavernous sounds of the quartet performance at John Coltrane's funeral does little to obscure the genuine sense of love and loss expressed for the sad, solemn occasion. The Pharoah Sanders material is a pleasant odyssey through many familiar Sander's compositions captured in a rough recording of a live performance. Then there are the demo takes from the Mary Parks collaborations from Ayler's New Grass era. The exuberant honesty that marks all of Ayler's music is no less in these blues and rock forays, it's just hard to love them as much as his fire breathing avant jazz material.
Cristian Amigo: Kingdom of Jones. 2007. Innova: 671.
Cristian Amigo: acoustic guitars, electric guitars, lap steel, prepared tiple, pianos, synthesizers, beats, loops, processes, programming, soda cans and miscellaneous percussion, soundscapes, voice, lyrics
Guillermo Cardenas: percussion
Alain Berge: drums
Randy Woolf: turntable
Guy Kaye: synthesizer, filters
Wojciech Kosma: samples
Philip Blackburn: samples
Jeff Schwartz: bass
David Martinelli: drums
Andy Connell: clarinet
Robert Reigle: alto saxophone
Jonathan Grasse: electric guitar
Manoocher Sadeghi: santur
Nikos Brisco: guitar, Tibetan prayer bowl
Michael John Garces: lyrics
Like Beethoven and Ayler, Amigo is another composer displaying contrasting impulses on a single disc. This time it's by design. In the 21st century it's less of a sin to pull from eclectic influences and arrive at multiple destinations. Amigo even goes so far as to advocate listening to this disc as three discreet parts as opposed to a single sitting. Having just taken this music in via the discouraged "single sitting" method I hear these three parts as an arc of commingling forces. The middle "war" material provides a much appreciated release when contrasted against the taut, beautiful playing of the first and third sections.
Scale of the Day: G Square-root-of-2-axis, Construct #1 - Lydian Inversion
Saturday, July 05, 2008
Friday, July 04, 2008
HurdAudio Rotation: Real Frisell, Real McCoy, Real Li Po
Bill Frisell: electric guitar, acoustic guitar, loops, vocals
Matt Chamberlain: drums, percussion, loops
Tucker Martine: recording, post-processing, production
Lee Townsend: recording, post-processing, production
Viktor Krauss: acoustic bass, electric bass
Ron Miles: cornet
Eyvind Kang: viola
There hasn't been a Lee Townsend produced Bill Frisell recording that hasn't glazed these ears over with a fine mist of pure joy. And this one is even better than most. With Matt Chamberlain and Bill Frisell improvising some initial tracks/layers as raw materials for Tucker Martine and Lee Townsend to play with (working with Frisell improvisations is a bit like cooking with obscenely fresh ingredients) along with additional material recorded once the initial layers were assembled, Floratone brings a sophisticated re-mix/studio mentality without obscuring the sublime flavors or spontenaity of the initial source material. This is an unmistakable Frisell sound, complete with all the twists and turns this master guitarist is known for, presented with a slightly altered perspective. The result may be one of his best recordings yet.
McCoy Tyner: The Real McCoy. 1967 (Rudy Van Gelder edition from 1999). Blue Note Records: 7243 4 97807 2 9.
McCoy Tyner: piano
Joe Henderson: tenor saxophone
Ron Carter: bass
Elvin Jones: drums
One of the classic piano quartet recordings of all time. Each of the five Tyner compositions has its own hook that sinks deep into the ear drums with the most infectious syncopation and melodic turns imaginable. Even the ballad, "Search for Peace" has that great bass part at the onset as Ron Carter bends the notes, leaving a deep impression on the soul in the process. Then there is the playing. McCoy Tyner, Joe Henderson, Ron Carter, Elvin Jones... if each of these figures doesn't individually tug at your jazz loving heart then you haven't been paying attention.
Harry Partch: 17 Lyrics of Li Po. 1995. Tzadik: TZ 7012.
Stephen Kalm: intoning voice
Ted Mook: tenor violin
With an attentive ear tuned to the harmonies of spoken voice and its natural rhythms, Harry Partch found a troubadour voice that allows the poetry to emerge unscathed by musical treatment. These pieces form a substantial touchstone in the HurdAudio psyche as spinning this eerily perfect performances (Stephen Kalm practically channels an exact vocal match of Partch's own intoning sound) adds more layers of appreciation to these early works.