Three New Releases on Planam

Charlemagne Palestine
Image via Wikipedia

Planam offers some new recordings:

DENDOSHI: Dendoshi 2 LP
“Dendoshi is Keith Connolly (No Neck Blues Band), Raymond Dijkstra (Asra), Dave Nuss (No Neck Blues Band) and Timo Van Luyk (Af Ursin, In Camera). Dendoshi: ‘he who comes to propagate the ceremony’ or ‘missionary’ (Japanese). There had actually been a previous incarnation of Dendoshi (hence Dendoshi 2), which was a large group performance in New York which concentrated on elucidating the memories of a dead tree which had been re-contextualized as a sculptural exhibit. Some thematic reference: The name ‘Dendoshi’ originates from the work of Japanese filmmaker Kiyoshi Kurosawa, whose films also inspired the content of the first performance. When the opportunity presented itself for Connolly, Dijkstra, Nuss and Van Luyk to come together to make a session, it was the perfect opportunity to realize Dendoshi not as a one-off performance on a theme, but as a recurring ritual in development. The resulting music widened the conceptual reflection of the band, bringing to mind the history and ideas of Franz Mesmer. Mesmer, the 18th century Austrian spiritualist healer, was among the first to put forth the theory of what he termed ‘animal magnetism,’ regarding a universal fluid which permeates all matter and can be influenced by the will, not dissimilar to some of Eliphas Levi’s concepts. What seemed to set Mesmer apart was an attention to mood and atmosphere, an aesthetic component to what were scientifically quite dubious theories, which lent his work an aura of portent — thus the parallel with the music captured as Dendoshi 2. Reflecting the qualities that all four musical sensibilities had in common, the album is a statement upon the ephemeral nature of atmosphere and will, and the relation of reverie to oblivion as opposed to ecstasy. The symbol, or mark on the front cover created by Connolly came intuitively and without revision. Its applied function is that of distinction rather than that of protection or as a seal. It was first applied to the photograph by Clarence H. White form 1904, where the first resonant depiction or personification of reverie and oblivion as applied to Dendoshi was found. By applying the mark, Connolly is ceremonializing the image, thus rendering it distinct from its original form, not as an appropriation, but as a recognition. The other images followed, and each of them were recognized instantly without having to search. The last was Vermeer’s image from Van Luyk’s basement, and upon receiving this, the series of 4 inserts was complete. There is a trace of fear and a sensation of suspended time in these images which suits the music very well. Edition limited to 300 copies with a gold cover.”

GOL/ANA-MARIA AVRAM/IANCU DUMITRESCU: Musique Directe LP
“Entering their 20th year of existence, the GOL orchestra, together with the label Planam, celebrates and starts a new program of collaborations: the Gollaboration series. Musique Directe shows the band facing the leaders of Rumanian spectralism, Ana-Maria Avram and Iancu Dumitrescu. Electric and intense spontaneous experiments, on the edge of electroacoustic music and primitive avant-garde. Live recordings in Marseille and Paris with the participation of Ansamblul Hyperion members Petru and Matei Teodorescu on one track. GOL was formed in 1988 in Paris by Jean-Marcel Busson, Frédéric Rebotier, Ravi Sharda and Samon Takahashi. The quartet embodies, within a post-Dada spirit, a lost rural tradition. GOL plays flute, horns, guitar, violin, toys, self-manufactured instruments, tapes, turntables, voices, various percussion instruments and electronics, an appropriateness of both traditional string instrument and handmade low fi equipment. GOL’s first LP, issued in 1993, compiles their first items (’88-’92) based on vinyl-record scratching, tape cut-ups and acoustic instruments. The issuing of this LP was followed by a 9-year hibernation. Since 2002, the band is back together to pursue its common research and play together with instinct and invention. Their music, electroacoustic-oriented, is partially improvised and partly tense. At the time of a collaboration with Rumanian composer Iancu Dumitrescu, GOL developed a score system renowned as ‘layer’s leaf .’ Through this system, they could elaborate a hybrid music between orchestral conduct and free interpretation of movements. Edition limited to 300 copies, also including the improvisation sketch for ‘Musique Directe V’ (not on the record).”

GOL & CHARLEMAGNE PALESTINE: Pandamoniahbleeummm!!!! LP
“Entering their 20th year of existence, the GOL orchestra, together with the label Planam, celebrates and starts a new program of collaborations: the Gollaboration series. Volume 2, Pandamoniahbleeummm!!!! marks the encounter with Charlemagne Palestine, pioneer of strumming music and piano maximalism, in the St. Eustache Church in Paris, known for its world famous church organ. The following battle, in the form of a long incantatory improvisation, Charlemagne Palestine playing the church organ and GOL doing the electronics, bass, guitar, and the flutes part, combines many attributes of a pagan ritual. Edition limited to 300 copies, also including a large insert with liner notes and great graphics by Jean-Marcel Busson who also designed the front and back cover.”

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Chicago Sound Map Release

Chicago Sound Map has a release out on Kuro Neko Music.

Conducted by
Don Malone

The Ensemble
Dudley Bayne – piano
Todd Carter – electronics
Kevin Davis – cello
Michael Hartman – percussion
Boris Hauf – saxophone
Keefe Jackson – saxophone
Brian Labycz – electronics
Jen Clare Paulson – viola
Jason Roebke – bass
Jason Stein – bass clarinet

Recorded on April 8, 2008 in the Claudia Cassidy Theater at the Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago, Illinois.

Stop the Sound of the Big Bell mixes traditional and graphic notational techniques leaving open spaces for structured improvisation for each player at different times. It is designed so the improvised segments fit within the larger framework of the piece, instead of driving the form of the composition.

Saco Yasuma’s YOIN at RUCMA

From New York’s RUCMA:

Start: 01/19/2009 – 7:00pm
End: 01/19/2009 – 9:30pm
Timezone: Etc/GMT-4

Saco Yasuma’s YOIN
Monday, January 19 @ 7:00 pm
Yippie Café: 9 Bleecker Street, near Bowery
General Admission: $10
Students and Seniors: $7
Jam Session @ 8:30 pm: $5

Saco Yasuma, saxophone
Jason Kao Hwang, violin
Ken Filiano, bass
Michael Wimberly, percussion

The New York-based saxophonist and composer Saco Yasuma was born in Furukawa City,
Japan. She was an active keyboard player in rock, funk and reggae bands and worked
with lyricists in Tokyo until she came to New York in 1989. There she picked up the
saxophone and within a few years started performing in Jazz, Brazilian, Salsa and
Afro-pop bands while she continued cultivating her composition skills. In recent
years, she has been playing with innovative musicians in the New York City downtown
scene, and it motivated her to expand her music beyond boundaries and limitations to
new directions. Her playing and compositional work which mingles her musical
experiences including lyrical Japanese melodies are receiving the worthy and excited
attention of her peers and listeners.

In 2007, Saco received a commission to compose and perform a world premier concert
at Brecht Forum, and Manhattan Community Arts Fund from Lower Manhattan Cultural
Council. In the same year she also released her critically acclaimed album, “Another
Rain.” Saco has performed and/or recorded with Ras Moshe, Matt Lavelle, Billy Bang,
Roy Campbell Jr., Sabir Mateen, Steve Swell, Jackson Krall, Albey Balgochian, Jason
Kao Hwang, Ken Filiano, Michael T.A, Thompson, Eri Yamamoto, Christopher Dean
Sullivan, Lou Grassi, Dave Ross and Jazz Poet Golda Solomon among others. Currently,
she leads various groups, including Saco Yasuma’s YOIN’, Saco Yasuma Quartet, and
Collaboration work with the visual artist Amir Bey, SYNERGY: Sight and Sound.

“Saco Yasuma’s music is a well homogenized blend of Asian and Jazz music. Her
compositions possess peacefulness, beauty, passion and emotion, that elevates and
moves the human spirit.”
-Roy Campbell Jr., Trumpeter

www.sacoyasuma.com

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

This Week’s Wayward Music Shows

From Seattle’s Wayward Music:

Saturday, January 17, 2009
Seattle Improv Fest Benefit: 1-Minute Solos
8:00 PM; suggested donation $10 or more.

Seattle Improvised Music presents its annual benefit concert to raise funds for the 24th annual Seattle Improvised Music Festival. This year’s festival (February 13, 14, 15 and 20, 21, 22) will feature performers from France, Berlin, Beirut, the east and west coasts of the US, and Seattle. And this year’s fundraiser will again feature many, many Seattle area musicians, poets, and dancers performing one-minute solos. It’s a chance to hear a diverse spattering of local performers and contribute generously to the support the longest-running festival of free improvisation in the country.

Friday, January 16, 2009
Transport: MAD Trio
8:00 PM; $5 – $15 siding scale odnation at the door (WCF members attend one concert in the Transport Series free)

Washington Composers’ Forum’s ongoing Transport Series features MAD Trio, an ensemble that stretches the line between composed and improvised music. Alan Lechusza (multi-woodwinds), Christopher Adler (piano), and Colin McCallister (electric guitar), present high energy performances. The trio offers compositions from Alan Lechusza and selections from his multi-media work TRAPA and the symphonic tone poem The Birth of a Butterfly.

Thursday, January 15, 2009
Is That Jazz?: Krispen Hartung + RadioSondeg
8:00 PM; $15 suggested donation.

The Seattle Composers’ Salon announces the first annual IS THAT JAZZ? festival, taking place on three Thursday nights, January 8, 15, and 22. Local and national acts come together for six inspired and compelling sets. The festival also invites artists and audience members to explore the underlying question: Is that jazz? Meet the artists and discuss the music at informal receptions after each concert, and participate in an on-line discussion blog to begin a conversation about music and art in the twenty-first century.

Krispen Hartung (Boise)
Krispen Hartung focuses on the tonal character of the guitar as a basis for random electro-acoustic manipulation via Reaktor, a wide variety of VST effects, and Cycling 74′s MAX/msp. For this performance, he will play a new custom instrument built by San Juan Island luthier Bobby Warren. It’s a one-of-a-kind miniature jazz archtop guitar, only 29″ long but full of amazing tone and punch.

RadioSonde (Seattle)
This company of five dancers and four improvising musicians premiered their first work INVERT to rave reviews last January at the Chapel. Dancer Beth Graczyk and composer Tom Baker have constructed a new score for this event, a structured dance/music improvisation to enliven the visual, sonic and physical space of the Chapel.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

KFJC Reviews

KFJC just posted a ridiculous number of avant music reviews. I’ll try to summarize some of what is now available:

Wagner, Rob Trio – “Rob Wagner Hamid Drake Nobu Ozaki ” – [Valid Records]
El Zabar’s, Kahil Infinity Orchestra – “Transmigration ” – [Delmark]
Dixon, Bill / Shepp, Archie [coll] – [Savoy Jazz]
Bang, Billy Quintet – “Above & Beyond: Live In Grand Rapids ” – [Justin Time Records]
Slow Six – “Nor’easter ” – [New Albion]
Abrams, Muhal Richard – “Vision Towards Essence ” – [Pi Recordings]
Frenette, Kevin 4 – “Connections ” – [Fuller Street Music]
Eisenbeil, Bruce Sextet – “Inner Constellation ” – [Nemu]
Dolphy, Eric – “Great Concert of Eric Dolphy, The ” – [Fantasy Records]
Coleman, Ornette – “Friends and Neighbors: Ornette Live At Prince Street ” – [Flying Dutchman Prod.]
Perrey, Jean-Jacques & Vibert, Luke – “Moog Acid ” – [Lo Recordings]
Sun Ra – “Night of The Purple Moon, The ” – [Atavistic (Unheard Music)]
His Name Is Alive – “Sweet Earth Flower : a Tribute to Marion Brown ” – [High Two]

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

DMG Newsletter January 9th, 2009

*description: Ken Vandermark *photographer: Se...
Image via Wikipedia

From DMG:

Anthony Braxton & The Italian Instabile Orchestra, Ken Vandermark‘s Resonance Ensemble LP only Disc, The Revolutionary Ensemble Final Live CD, Amiri Baraka Dinamitri Jazz Folklore, Guitto Gargle and even more treasures…

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]