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Showing posts with label Bassoon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bassoon. Show all posts

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Sara Schoenbeck and Wayne Horvitz - Cell Walk (Songlines, 2020) ****


By Eyal Hareuveni

Seattle-based pianist-composer Wayne Horvitz and Brooklyn-based bassoonist Sara Schoenbeck, known for her work with Anthony Braxton’s Tri-Centric Orchestra and Wet Ink new music ensemble, met for the first time twenty years ago at the Time Flies Festival in Vancouver, Canada, and since then kept up the collaboration. Schoenbeck became part of Horvitz chamber jazz Gravitas Quartet (with trumpeter Ron Miles and cellist Peggy Lee) and later of the ensemble Some Places Are Forever Afternoon (based on the poems of Richard Hugo), joined performance of Horvitz’ fusion quartet Sweeter Than The Day, and other new music, orchestral works of Horvitz, including for a piece for orchestra and a string quartet These Hills of Glory.

Almost twenty years later, in July 2019, Schoenbeck and Horvitz finally recorded a duo album at the Pyatt Hal l in Vancouver, enjoying the hall’s great acoustics and its Steinway D piano. A few tracks were recorded six months later in Brooklyn, with amplified piano and electronics added to the mix. Cell Walk references Cecil Taylor’s album Cell Walk for Celeste (Candid, 1988), and Horvitz's piece by this name was written in memory of Taylor just after he passed away. The 17 original pieces of this album highlight the duo’s great affinity for experimenting with unorthodox extended techniques and textures, compositional strategies, and improvisational ideas, always in the service of beautiful melodies and songs.

The profound, common language of Horvitz and Schoenbeck captures the listener immediately. There is a rare kind of relaxed intimacy and a natural fluidity in their interplay. There is also an expressive synergy that is focused most of the time on reserved, lyrical tones, and an organic and transparent basis that keeps enriching the melodic, chamber conversations. Schoenbeck demonstrates the full sonic palette of the modern bassoon as a classical instrument that feels at home in many musical arenas, especially on Horvitz’ playful homage “For Lou Harrison”, her own composition “Deep Well Well”, and the open improvisations where she and Horvitz added subtle electronics. And Horvitz and Schoenbeck sound as simply enjoying crisscrossing the worlds of free improvisation (only four pieces here) and carefully notated chamber, new music, and jazz, but without falling into distinct patterns. Some of Horvitz’ canonical favorite compositions are interpreted here as “No Blood Relation” (from The Snowghost Sessions, Songlines, 2018), “Ironbound” (originally performed by Sweeter Than The Day, Songlines, 2001), and the earliest “American Bandstand” (from the self-titled album, Songlines, 2000), all performed with grace and elegance, beauty and imagination.

Friday, October 5, 2012

Katherine Young - After Party (Vol.2): Releasing Bound Water From Green Material (Prom Night, 2012) ***½

By Paolo Casertano

Katherine Young, by name and by nature, plays bassoon. The bassoon, or fagot, is scarcely known beyond the boundaries of classical music and orchestral repertoire. Many people, if asked, would probably not even distinguish its shape and know it has such a significant sound and it has had a weighty role for example in many Mozart’s compositions. You can say as well it is infrequently used as a jazz instrument (admitting - not me - that instruments have a preferential application to a music genre). What about the contrabassoon then? That’s the real blast!

In any case this artist may already boast about a substantial discography, important collaborations (Peter Evans, Fred Lonberg-Holm) and a broad live activity as solo performer and as a member of the various large ensembles under the tutelage of Anthony Braxton, extensively touring all over the world. She has been already reviewed on this blog, both as regards her solo work and in relation to the interesting duo “Architeuthis Walks On Land”.

The three-part present work started as a composition for a fixed percussion trio enhanced by an improvising and unorthodox ensemble - mainly brass, the bassoonist included - and it’s strictly connected to the video projections that visual artist Michael Kenney specifically developed for it. This results in a short (just 21 minutes) but highly pleasurable listen.

According to the liner notes from the label, the second episode “Capacity” is the only unaltered document of the premiere performance. In it, especially in the central part, the insisting wooden objects “carpet” perfectly melt with gongs, sticks, drums and for some passages (if I am correct) with a musical saw, building a coherent imaginary landscape made of tone-colors and almost tribal atmospheres.

Katherine Young has instead reassembled the opening and closing acts, respectively “Binding-Releasing” I and II, to encapsulate the main and dominant composition.  The first one moves among whispers, whistles, clacks and ventriloquisms provided by the many brass, softened by emerging gentle piano chords. There’s obviously a constant use of extended techniques by all the musicians. The second and final one starts and grows instead from a deep timbre surrounded by buzzes, obscure synth chords and breaths.

I’m sure that the live execution accompanied by the simultaneous video installment is the best embodiment to take advantage of such a composition.

The release is available for preview or as a digital download from the label and here you have the first part of the related video.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Katherine Young - Further Secret Origins (Porter Records, 2009) ****


A while ago I heard bassoonist Katherine Young's "Things Suspended Converge And Fall", a composition for 19 musicians that she released last year, of which, I must admit, much went straight over my head, and that is available for free download.

Now she just released her first solo bassoon album on Porter, and it is one that goes straight to my heart. On the first track, the aptly called "Terra Incognita" (unknown territory), the spacious sound of a fog horn invites you into a sonic world that you haven't heard before, with several overdubs but also with a kind of irregular heartbeat to accompany the playing. On the second track, called "Patricia Highsmith", ambient sounds such as screeching car tyres and police sirens illustrate the suspense of the author's novels. And over these, the howling, wailing, rhythmic pulse of the bassoon weaves great sounds, often exploring timbral possibilities, resulting in the kind of drone effect that saxophonists get with the circular breathing technique. On "Elevation", the subtle multiphonics create a very sensitive, vulnerable, almost yearning tone, over the continuing heartbeat produced by releasing the tongue from the reeds, an interesting technique which she uses almost throughout, including on "For Astronauts, For Travelers", the longest piece which is also the highlight of the album, a slow, calm, restraint but very intense piece, with an incredible sense of pace.

She does not feel the need to fill space, it almost comes organically, determined by the sounds and the instrument itself. After the long drones around fixed tonal centers, "Some People Say That She Doesn't Exist" adds some melody to it, overdubbing several recordings, acting as a small ensemble, almost classical in sound. The album closes with the raw deep sounds it started with, on a track called "Orbis Tertius", possibly a reference the "unknown country" or "a to-be-created world" in the story by Jose Luis Borges.The circle is closed.

Despite its unfamiliar approach, and relative inaccessibility, it is equally appealing and welcoming, and very hypnotic. Strong solo performance!

Listen and download from eMusic.

© stef