Moraine’s Manifest Density out on Moon June Records

From Moon June Records:

You could describe the output of this towering electric string quartet-plus-drums as “heavy chamber music.” With its several writers and full complement of ace instrumentalists, arrayed in striking combination, Moraine achieves a coherent sound while drawing on forms ranging from math-rock to fractured bebop to Chinese folk music to unleashed, plugged-in power jazz, and more. You have to love a band that lists its influences as Mahavishnu Orchestra, King Crimson, Terje Rypdal, John Abercrombie, Oregon, Art Zoyd, Univers Zero, Dr. Nerve, traditional East Asian music, and hurdy-gurdy music. Particularly one that adds plenty of its own to that diverting mix. At the center of the sound are Dennis Rea’s stellar guitar inventions. The much-praised veteran has deployed fierce, elusive imagination to build on decades of engagement with countless musical styles of multiple regions of the globe. He creates a dynamic, lyrical, enigmatic blend of modern jazz, boundary-pushing rock, experimental music, and world musical traditions. In other contexts – stay tuned for his next MoonJune Records’ release, Views from Chicheng Precipice – his output reflects the three years he spent in the two Chinas, where he was among the first wave of Western creative musicians to venture behind the tattered curtain of the devastating Cultural Revolution. (He is the author, in addition, of the fascinating Live at the Forbidden City: Musical Encounters in China.) On the band’s debut CD Manifest Density, Rea enjoys ideal support from all quarters in what is truly a collaborative endeavor of composition and performance: Ruth Davidson’s cello and Alicia Allen’s violin slash and singe with uncanny unity of purpose and design. Bassist Kevin Millard and drummer Jay Jaskot boast drive and thrust ideally suited to the task. All that begins to explain why Moraine has been embraced by audiences ranging from jazz aficionados to metalheads. The band squalls, sears, soars, and lilts over a novel musical terrain.

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Upcoming Seattle Shows

From Wayward Music:

THIS WEEK:

FRI. 8/14, 8 PM – Seattle Percussion Collective – music by Keiko Abe, John Cage, Mauricio Kagel, and Stuart Saunders Smith

SAT. 8/15, 8 PM – Seattle Improvised Music presents Portland saxophonist Kelvin Pittman, in duos, quartets, and sextets with saxophonists Paul Hoskin, Tyler Wilcox, and Wilson Shook and bassists Mark Collins & John Teske

COMING UP:

FRI. 8/20 – Seattle Improvised Music presents Bonnie Jones, Vic Rawlings, Bryan Eubanks, and Chris Cogburn

SAT. 8/21 – Seattle Improvised Music presents Bonnie Jones, Vic Rawlings, Bryan Eubanks, and Chris Cogburn (night 2)

SAT. 8/22 – Rob Angus + Rich Mack, electro-acoustic – with Lesli Dalaba, Greg Powers, Dean Moore

SAT. 8/29 – AnyWhen + Wayne Horvitz, interesting chamber jazz group from Eugene, OR + solo piano by Horvitz

WED. 9/2 – Subtext Reading Series – Martin Corless-Smith + Brandon Shimoda

FRI. 9/4 – Seattle Composers’ Salon, artists TBA

SAT. 9/12 – Danse Perdue/Death Posture, butoh performance

FRI. 9/18 – David Haney Quintet, new jazz

SAT. 9/19 – Dean Moore, gongs & percussion

FRI. 9/25 – Gamelan Pacifica, music by Jessika Kenney & Lou Harrison

SAT. 9/26 – Steve Peters, 50th birthday concert w/ Gamelan Pacifica, Robin Holcomb, Stuart Dempster, & more

WED. 9/30 – ArtsLaunch, artists TBA

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Thenumber46, Third Object Orchestra, others in Washington, DC

From Sonic Circuits:

Sunday August 23
Doors 630pm Music 7pm SHARP
$7
PYRAMID ATLANTIC
8230 Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring MD 20910
301.608.9101
located three blocks south of the silver spring metro station (red line)
Free parking in gated lot out front
DIRECTIONS: www.pyramidatlanticartcenter.org
INFO: dc-soniccircuits.org

thenumber46
thenumber46 is flutist Suzanne Thorpe and electrist Philip White. The two met at Mills College when Suzanne asked Philip for help carrying an unreasonably large amplifier down the stairs. They soon discovered a mutual love for feedback. Since then they have performed extensively throughout the US exploring feedback systems acoustically, electronically, visually and metaphorically.

http://thenumber46.com

Third Object Orchestra
A new ensemble of local string players, guaranteed to fill the air with their long resonant sounds.

Insect Factory
Out of the recently-fumigated American capital come guitar textures courtesy of Jeff Barsky. Conservatory trained on his instrument, as Insect Factory he wafts colourful sound as intangible as perfume toward the listener.
myspace.com/insectfactory

Kingdom of Sharks
You are at that point where you are about to breathe your last breath and you see that light at the end of the tunnel. As you approach the light, you realize that you are about to find out the truth about everything that you’ve believed/disbelieved. This is either the happiest moment you will ever experience or the most horrific depending on what happens when you walk into this light.
myspace.com/kingdomofsharks

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All About Jazz Reviews

From All About Jazz:

11-Aug-09 John Hollenbeck Large Ensemble
Eternal Interlude (Sunnyside Records)
Reviewed by Mark F. Turner

11-Aug-09 Graham Collier
Graham Collier: Directing 14 Jackson Pollocks (Jazz Continuum)
Reviewed by Nic Jones

09-Aug-09 Spunk
Kantarell (Rune Grammofon)
Reviewed by John Kelman

08-Aug-09 Multiple Artists
Trio 3: At This Time and Berne Concert
Reviewed by Clifford Allen

08-Aug-09 Fred Anderson
Staying in the Game (Engine)
Reviewed by Jerry D’Souza

07-Aug-09 Donny McCaslin
Declaration (Sunnyside Records)
Reviewed by Troy Collins

07-Aug-09 Andrea Centazzo
Andrea Centazzo : Guitars
Reviewed by Jerry D’Souza

07-Aug-09 Max Nagl / Clemens Wenger / Herbert Pirker
Boulazac (Rude Noises)
Reviewed by Glenn Astarita

06-Aug-09 Yitzhak Yedid
Since My Soul Loved (Between the Lines)
Reviewed by Glenn Astarita

06-Aug-09 Burton Greene / Perry Robinson
Two Voices In The Desert (Tzadik)
Reviewed by Lyn Horton

06-Aug-09 Gebhard Ullmann Basement Research
Don’t Touch My Music Vol. 2 (Not Two Records)
Reviewed by Jerry D’Souza

06-Aug-09 Isotope
Golden Section (Cuneiform Records)
Reviewed by Andrey Henkin

05-Aug-09 Scott Fields Ensemble
Samuel (New World Records)
Reviewed by Troy Collins

05-Aug-09 Guy Klucevsek
Dancing on the Volcano (Tzadik)
Reviewed by Sean Patrick Fitzell

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Either / Oar

Either / Oar is a label with a few releases focused on improv.

catalog number: either/4
artist: OLIVIA BLOCK & KYLE BRUCKMANN
title: Teem

catalog number: either/3
artist: TOMOKO SAUVAGE
title: Ombrophilia

catalog number: either/2
artist: THE DROPP ENSEMBLE
title: Safety

catalog number: either/1
artist: JIM DENLEY & KIM MYHR
title: Systems Realignment