Showing posts with label Lee Konitz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lee Konitz. Show all posts

Thursday, August 15, 2013

HurdAudio Rotation: Variations on Alone Together

Iannis Xenakis: Orchestral Works - Volume IV. 2004/2007. Timpani: 1C1136.

Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg
Arturo Tamayo: conductor
Hiroaki Ooi: piano

Erikhton (1974)
Ata (1987)
Akrata (1965)
Kirnoidi (1991)

The first three volumes of this cycle leave the impression that Xenakis could wield a large orchestra like a massively dissonant, loud enterprise as he brings architecture to bear upon the musicianship of a mass of players.  On this set we find Akrata.  An early work for a relatively small chamber ensemble composed mostly of winds.  And that same forceful dissonance is there without the overwhelming means of producing it.  It is a completely riveting work, allowing the ears to hear deeper into Xenakis's language as it was still forming.  The remaining pieces are suitably large and beautifully bombastic.  A reminder of the force lurking within sound for a medium that is more often effete.  Also, the piano introduction of Erikhton is a fantastic explosion of activity that gives way to an ocean of glissando from the orchestra.  This is an important contribution toward documenting what Xenakis wrought for orchestra.

Elliott Sharp: Doing the Don't. (film) 2007. Pheasant's Eye.  Directed by Bert Shapiro.

This collection of three short documentaries about the music and persona of Elliott Sharp is a perfect example of New Yorkers taking it upon themselves to document their own cultural enterprise.  Few people have been as consistently given short shift by the music press as Elliott Sharp.  Interviews are often distorted by disinterested "journalists" and reviewers are often dismissing the sonic output of this wildly eclectic figure as being overly cerebral.  Almost clownishly downplaying the significance of the music that has poured out of Elliott Sharp over the years and decades.  While some of the verbal descriptions from Sharp himself in these documentaries reveal much of the reason behind the confusion and dismissal that the mainstream has afforded him, what comes out in spades is the level of respect his music deserves.  I had forgotten how many allies his music has built up on the New York scene and loved hearing the late Butch Morris speak so enthusiastically about this body of music.  The stubborn momentum that Sharp brings to his own projects was equally inspiring.  The inclusion of performances of Syndakit, Quarks Swim Free and the archival footage of Orchestra Carbon's 1987 performance of Larynx at BAM make this particular collection a treasured glimpse into a major figure in the HurdAudio constellation.

Lee Konitz: The Lee Konitz Duets. 1967.  Milestone: MS 9013.

Lee Konitz: alto saxophone, tenor saxophone
Joe Henderson: tenor saxophone
Richie Kamuca: tenor saxophone
Marshall Brown: trombone
Dick Katz: piano
Karl Berger: vibes
Jim Hall: guitar
Eddie Gomez: bass
Elvin Jones: drums
Ray Nance: violin

The duet format for improvising musicians has become a more common expression since the appearance of this recorded.  So the timidity found here along with the retreat to the relative safety of a rhythm section by the end of this set is understandable.  But even with the longing to hear more excursion beyond the relative safety of improvising over phantom rhythm changes and standards this remains a collection of improvisations by outstanding musicians.  Lee Konitz's mind and ear for melodic development remains nearly unequaled (Joe Henderson is clearly a peer working along side Konitz in this regard).  "ERB," the duet with Jim Hall is the most rewarding listen on this set.  The one track that plays to the strengths of  the stripped down instrumentation that gives way to sonic exploration of the keypads on the saxophone and the sound of skin along strings of the guitar.  This was an important record both for what has followed in its wake as well as the expression of masters from its era.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

HurdAudio Rotation: Storms and Conversations

Richard Strauss: Tone Poems. 1957, 1963, 1988. Deutsche Grammophon: 463 190-2.

Eine Alpensinfonie op. 64
Staatskapelle Dresden
Karl Böhm: conductor

Don Juan op. 20
Staatskapell Dresden
Karl Böhm: conductor

Der Rosenkavalier: Waltzes from Act III
Berliner Philharmoniker
Karl Böhm: conductor

Also sprach Zarathustra op. 30
Berlin Philharmoniker
Michel Schwalbe: violin solo
Karl Böhm: conductor

Festliches Praludium op. 61
Berliner Philharmoniker
Wolfgang Meyer: organ
Karl Böhm: conductor

Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche op. 28
Berliner Philharmoniker
Karl Böhm: conductor

Salome: Dance of the Seven Veils
Berliner Philharmoniker
Karl Böhm: conductor

Ein Heldenleben op. 40
Staatskapelle Dresden
Erich Muhlbach: violin solo
Karl Böhm: conductor

Tod und Verklarung op. 24
Staatskapelle Dresden
Karl Böhm: conductor

You have to give Richard Strauss credit. When he wrote a storm the orchestra booms with the thunder and lightning as the winds of an angry weather front rip through the ensemble. When he wrote pastoral settings or about transfigurement from death he tapped into a calm tranquility that barely ripples with each lyrical passage. Joys, defeats, battles and passions each get their due in watercolors painted with orchestral coloration. Poetry in tones. As one who rarely has much appetite for the late Romantic composers and their excesses this is one referential point that requires some familiarity from time to time. And you can hardly improve upon the interpretive details found under Karl Böhm's baton. Even when these details were often only recorded in glorious mono.

Elliott Sharp: Doing the Don't. Directed by Bert Shapiro. 2008. A Pheasants Eye Production. DVD.

As the music of Elliott Sharp began to catch my imagination and grow increasingly important to me I used to scour and devour what scraps of interviews and information I could about this unique and highly individual composer/musician. A full length documentary about him felt improbable. Just finding an interview or write up that was sympathetic was difficult enough. So many writers were (and are) quick to dismiss him as "too heady" or "too cerebral" and often imply or state outright that the reader would be put off by his music. Here we are allowed to hear Elliott Sharp in his own words and view him in action. The heady, cerebral qualities of his music and personality are an asset. For curious minds willing to take on challenging sounds and ideas rather than interpreting them as hostile this is a body of music that deserves its due even as it continues to evolve. The extras on this disc alone make it worth the time to take it all in. Archival video of Sharp's legendary staging of Larynx at the Brooklyn Academy of Music "Next Wave" festival in 1987! (Is there a revival of that composition in the works?) A full recording of Orchestra Carbon performing Quarks Swim Free. Plus an examination of Sharp's homemade instrument designs. Excellent and completely overdue.

Lee Konitz: The Lee Konitz Duets. 1967 (re-released in 1990). Milestone Records: OJCCD-466-2.

Lee Konitz: alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone, Varitone saxophone
in duets (and ensemble) with:
Marshall Brown: trombone
Joe Henderson: tenor saxophone
Richie Kamuca: tenor saxophone
Ray Nance: violin
Jim Hall: guitar
Dick Katz: piano
Karl Berger: vibraharp
Eddie Gomez: bass
Elvin Jones: drums

One of the great jazz records from an artist responsible for so many unassuming gems over his thankfully long career. The focused, conversational interaction between improvisers unfolds sequentially as each track adds a new instrumental voice along side Konitz's confident lyricism. The quality of these players is difficult to overstate. These "conversations" - often draped along a predetermined chart - are generous in their inventive give and take. Bringing in the full ensemble (minus the incredible Ray Nance) at the end takes on the feel of a final curtain call after being afforded glimpses into each individual component.

Sunday, February 03, 2008

HurdAudio Rotation: Quarters, Poems and Duets

Charles Ives, Ivan Wyschnegradsky: Quarter-tone Pieces. 2006. Hat Hut: hat[now]ART 143.

Josef Christof: piano
Steffen Schleiermacher: piano

24 Preludes in Quarter-Tone System (excerpts) (1934/70) Wyschnegradsky

Three Quarter-Tone Pieces For Two Pianos (1903-23) Ives

Three Page Sonata (1905) Ives

Etude sur le "Carre Magique Sonore" op. 40 (1957) Wyschnegradsky

The language of microtonal discourse is caught within a peculiar deference to the displacement of writing a music that so thoroughly exposes the conventions and weaknesses of both notation and instrument design. The quasi-spiritual assertions of just intonation advocates Lou Harrison and Ben Johnston as "prophets in the desert" as found in the liner notes of this 2006 release serves to reinforce the cult-like mystique of deliberately throwing the 12-tone-to-the-octave order into disarray.

Furthering this sense of spiritual isolation we have the deeply mystical pronouncements and compositions of Ivan Wyschnegradsky. The fact that recordings of his music are frustratingly rare and hard to obtain only enhances the image of a wise seer perched at the highest mountain top. When the music is rendered audible in recordings such as this, I am struck by how transcendent it truly is. The microtonal qualities gives Wyschnegradsky's music an added profound chromaticism that is striking and irresistible. Here, 12 of the 24 quarter-tone preludes are presented. When will a full set be available on record? The hunger to feed these ears a more complete representation of Wyschnegradsky's musical universe grows with this sampling.

With the Charles Ives quarter-tone pieces we find a different attitude toward expanded harmonic materials, something less steeped in mystical overtones. In Ives' universe the quarter-tone serves as expansion, period. The sound is changed by the additional harmonic possibilities. But that sound is still rooted in a world of familiar melodies and idiomatic styles. The allusion to rag-time piano music or unorthodox harmonizations of "My Country 'Tis of Thee" keeps an earthiness in the sound that suggests a healthy alternative to the mystical detachment or righteous assertions of breaking with prevailing harmonic conventions.

Richard Strauss: Tone Poems. 1988 (Collector's Edition of recordings from 1957, 1958). Deutsche Grammophon: 463 190-2.

Karl Bohm: conductor
Staatskapelle Dresden
Berliner Philharmoniker

Eine Alpensinfonie op.64
Don Juan op.20
Waltzes from Act III
Also sprach Zarathustra op.30
Festiches Praludium op.61
Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche op.28
Dance of the Seven Veils
from Salome op.54
Ein Heldenleben op.40
Tod und Verklarung op.24

There was a time when I'd be lost in these sweeping, long narrative symphonic works. A younger version of myself had written off the romantic syntax and rejected the notion that an abstract sequence of sounds could convey image and story. As I revisit that impression with more wisdom in the ears I find the scope of these epic tales to be human and surprisingly easy to understand and follow. Three discs of Strauss tone poems is a heavy dose of Germanic music to take in one sitting (which is exactly how I've approached them as an avoidance of the spectacle playing out on American television this Sunday). I am struck by the orchestrations Strauss applies to these works. Particularly the use and incorporation of organ in Eine Alpensinfonie (heralding the storm) and Festival Prelude (presumably calling the masses to celebrate).

Lee Konitz: The Lee Konitz Duets. 1967 (Re-released in 1990). Milestone: OJCCD-466-2.

Lee Konitz: alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone, varitone saxophone
in duets with:
Marshall Brown: trombone
Joe Henderson: tenor saxophone
Elvin Jones: drums
Karl Berger: vibraharp
Eddie Gomez: bass
Richie Kamuca: tenor saxophone
Ray Nance: violin
Jim Hall: guitar
Dick Katz: piano

In the middle of this collection is "ERB," possibly the most exquisite free improvisation between alto saxophone (Konitz) and guitar (Jim Hall) ever recorded. The presence of this three-minute, atonal gem would be startling in midst of any collection of duets - especially one with as many bop oriented tunes as this one - except that the same quiet, shimmering inventiveness of Hall and Konitz is found on every track no matter how "free" each piece may or may not be. "Tickle Toe" presents a focused, sparkling two tenor take on the Lester Young classic (performed by Konitz and Richie Kamuca) while "Struttin' with Some Barbecue" offers up a spirited slice of soulful sax and valve trombone (Marshall Brown) complete with some light overdubbing on the final chorus. "Alphanumeric" closes out this set with a full ensemble of players unloading all the restraint that makes the duets so taut, lean and brimming with verve. These players are so good, even Konitz's typically understated excellence nearly boils over. This is a great album and one well worth dusting off and rediscovering.