segunda-feira, 17 de outubro de 2016

Tak Prosto


CD – Creative Sources Recordings – CS395, Lisbon 2016






















1. Studio - 13'30''
2. Live - 26'30''


Ilia Belorukov - Alto Saxophone, Objects
Ernesto Rodrigues - Viola, Objects
Nuno Torres - Alto Saxophone, Objects


Recorded in June 2016, St. Petersburg


Reviews

Tak Prosto is another interesting trio that pits Rodrigues’ viola against a doubled instrument: this time the alto saxophones of Creative Sources regular Nuno Torres and Russian Ilia Belorukov, who in recent years has been increasingly documented by Mikroton Recordings. Tak Prosto consists of a studio track and a longer live recording captured on the previous day.

“Studio” mines saxophone territory similar to musicians like Michel Doneda or Seymour Wright, with an intense focus on controlling very quiet—almost precarious—pitches, sounds that are nearing the edge of the players’ ability to control. These often breathy explorations meld fluidly with Rodrigues’ feathered touch, which often activates the strings just enough to shave off a few wispy harmonics. “Live,” recorded as described at Vertikal Gallery in St. Petersburg, sheds the crisp, sanitized sound of the studio. At times it feels like a fog, or like looking through a hazy film: tones are stretched thinly, slowly, and here and there the outside world seeps through, doors or footsteps, low voices, a distant phone, an inexplicable woodblock tapping that may be the musicians, but may also be someone else, an unwitting accomplice. By the end, what began as a quiet piece of “lowercase” eventually awakens into a louder repartee, with Torres and Belorukov sputtering Parkeresque lines with their strange quality of pulsing time. Dan Sorrells (The Free Jazz Collective)

Two recordings from the lowercase acoustic improvising trio of Portuguese players Ernesto Rodriduges on viola and Nuno Torres on alto saxophone and objects with Saint Petersburg alto saxophonist Ilia Belorukov, recording at Belorukov's Spina! label's studio, and again live at Vertikal' Gallery in Saint Petersburg in 2016. (Squidco)

quinta-feira, 13 de outubro de 2016

{the} nature {of things} likes to hide

CD - Creative Sources Recordings - CS393, Lisbon 2016


The world is a repository of meanings, some of which are easily gleaned from the surfaces of things—from “the eye’s plain version”--and others apparently recondite but soliciting our interpretation nevertheless.

Meaning can be self-effacing, as it is when, for example, the signification or significance of a thing conceals itself in the play of surfaces that constitute its appearance. What is plain to the eye or ear may be misleading or misdirecting; a surface can obscure as much as it can reveal.

{the} nature {of things} likes to hide, an album of two long collaborative compositions by violist Ernesto Rodrigues, cellist Guilherme Rodrigues, and myself on prepared double bass and granular synthesizer, draws an aural analogy to the way meaning discloses itself and conceals itself, sometimes at one and the same time.

The organizing trope for both pieces is the effacement of meaning—a deliberate hiding of the thing and of its nature. The thing in this case being the instrument, the double bass, the nature of which is to be a large stringed instrument producing resonant, deep-pitched tones with a rich overtone structure.

The two pieces making up {the} nature {of things} likes to hide were conceived and recorded at a time when I was scoring a dance piece with the same title. For this new, purely musical instrumental piece I wanted to dig deeper into the implications of the fragment—what it could be saying and what it could be saying specifically in the context of an instrumental composition.

The title of the piece is my own interpretive translation of a fragment from Heraclitus (B123 in the Diels Kranz system): φύσις κρύπτεσθαι φιλεῖ . The key word in the Greek text is “physis,” which can mean “nature”—the natural world—, or “a thing’s nature,” meaning that which it is. The ambiguity of the word, whose first surviving appearances in a philosophical context are in this and other of Heraclitus’s fragments--consists in its way of not holding to a logical distinction between the concrete and the abstract. My translation plays on both meanings: Ignore the bracketed words and “nature likes to hide;” bringing them in yields “the nature of things likes to hide.” For these two pieces, the second reading dominates; what’s hidden is the nature of the thing under consideration—the nature of the instrument providing the foundational layer for these two pieces. But the first reading is active as well, if in a subordinate way.

Both pieces were built up in a two-stage process. The basic tracks consist of a prepared double bass performance and a double bass performance recorded and subsequently run through a granular synthesizer. On top of this foundation Ernesto contributed a characteristically subtle and sensitive part, as did his son, Guilherme. The individual parts may have been improvised to varying degrees, but the finished pieces are compositions: Carefully constructed wholes put together with an ear toward finely-balanced plastic relationships.

For both pieces, the sound of the bass was effaced: On the first piece, through the use of preparations, extended techniques, and a porous structure deliberately left open to ambient sounds, and on the second piece, through the electronic manipulation of recorded sound. Through these various means, the nature of the instrument—its peculiar sound signature—is hidden. If we could accept for a moment the notion of a metaphysical essence, we could say that it has been effectively negated, or made to transcend itself toward its own negation.


But the first meaning comes into play as well. Consider that nature, as the sum of physical phenomena, conceals itself by revealing itself indirectly through clues and implications. For example, a sudden upsurge of wind may indirectly signal a downpour; a peculiar black-green tinge to the sky may imply the coming of a tornado. By the same token the physical phenomena of the music itself--the pitches and phrases played on the double bass--conceal themselves behind the screen of preparations, extended techniques and electronic manipulation. On this reading, these means of concealment function as clues implicating the source of the sound. The effaced sound is a hint pointing toward something—toward itself, if we can decode it.


In the end, {the} nature {of things} likes to hide embodies the two faces of effacement: As concealment, and as clue.

Daniel Barbiero



1. {the} nature {of things} likes to hide I  - 37'44''
2. {the} nature {of things} likes to hide II - 13'54'


Ernesto Rodrigues – Viola
Guilherme Rodrigues - Cello
Daniel Barbiero - Double Bass & Synthesizer


Recorded between 2014 & 2016

Cover design Carlos Santos



Reviews

Daniel Barbiero's latest collaboration (with Ernesto Rodrigues and his son Guilherme) is a pair of meditiative ruminations on identity and essence for prepared (and manipulated) double bass, viola, and cello... this music is elusive but stunning in its natural beauty and slow development... Sam Byrd (World of Abstract Dreams)

Recorded over a 3 year period, the trio of Portuguese string improvisers Ernesto Rodrigues on viola and Guilherme Rodrigues on cello met with New Haven, Connecticut double bassist & synth player Daniel Barbiero, developing this detailed, two part lowercase acoustic improvisation with a spacious, patient feeling that interacts with its ambient environment. (Squidco)

New from Creative Sources Records, {the} nature {of things} likes to hide [CS393]. A layered composition by Ernesto Rodrigues (viola) and Guilherme Rodrigues (cello), responding to two foundation tracks by me on prepared bass and granular synthesizer, respectively. As always, Ernesto and Guilherme play sensitively and appositely. (What is it that hides its nature? The double bass, first through preparations and extended technique, and then through granulation.) Daniel Barbiero (danielbarbiero.wordpress)

quinta-feira, 6 de outubro de 2016

Basalto



CD – Creative Sources Recordings – CS388, Lisbon 2016







1I - 42'51''
2. II - 30'35''




Ernesto Rodrigues - Octave Viola & Baritone Violin
Abdul Moimême - Electric Guitar
Antez - Percussion


Recorded in February 2016, Lisbon


Reviews

Pouco importa saber se houve antecipadamente o propósito de criar uma música “mineral” para a gravação de “Basalto”, ou se tal aconteceu acidentalmente, como de resto é próprio da improvisação. O certo é que, com a junção de Ernesto Rodrigues, para mais recorrendo a um violino barítono, de Abdul Moimême, com as esculturas de chapa com que prepara a guitarra eléctrica, e da percussão ribombante do francês Antez, estavam reunidas as condições para que a música resultante do encontro fosse cavernosa e tivesse ressonâncias de pedra. As novas correntes da música improvisada mais ou menos alinhadas com os conceitos reducionistas não têm por hábito (é até considerado proibitivo por alguns) sugerir estados de espírito ou emoções particulares, mas está aqui uma notável excepção: este é um disco escuro, inquietante, por vezes, inclusive, sinistro. Chega a lembrar as actuações que Lustmord fazia há uns anos em grutas profundas, ainda que descontando o factor do estilo industrial e tendo presente que este CD é predominantemente acústico, enquanto Lustmord é um nome da electrónica “dark”.
Os dois longos temas compilados fazem-nos viajar por um pesadelo sem sobressaltos, suave e inebriante. Mas é uma curiosa viagem: não seguimos em diante, descemos. Para cada vez mais perto do coração da Terra, até perdermos a consciência de onde estamos. A esse processo dificilmente poderemos chamar “iluminação”, tal como os místicos de várias religiões fariam, devido às conotações negras muito próximas, mas também não se trata de escapismo ou de alienação. Fiquemo-nos pela explicação de que é uma forma – especialmente brilhante – de entender por dentro o que é uma rocha ígnea eruptiva e de composição máfica. Rui Eduardo Paes (Jazz.pt)

Aptly called "Basalto", the black rocks resulting from lava, the music is hard, organic, ungiving, harsh and structured around a tonal center without much variation except for the timbral shifts grinding like tectonic plates under severe pressure, yet without any hope to get release from the relentless tension. Ernesto Rodrigues plays octave viola and baritone viola, Abdul Moimême is on electric guitar and Antez plays percussion, although it is hard to identify what sounds come from which instrument on the two long tracks. The music creates a sonic universe that is broad and deep, giving something fundamental and strange, like the status of our planet even before life came to be, when only rocks and water and air and fire were fighting slowly and majestically and unavoidably for their own space.

Rodrigues has become a real advocate for his kind of music, creating exceptional listening experiences to open-eared audiences, working to give other musicians the chance to release like-minded electroacoustic and avant-garde music on his Creative Sources label. Stef (Free Jazz Collective)

As the album cover displays, basalto are the black rocks resulting from lava, here represented in the slowly flowing, hard toned electro-acoustic improv of the Portuguese trio of Ernesto Rodrigues onoctave viola & baritone violin, Abdul Moimeme on electric guitar, and Antez on percussion. (Squidco)

sábado, 1 de outubro de 2016

Ululo

CD – Creative Sources Recordings – CS383, Lisbon 2016

















1. Ululo - 29'00''




Andrey Popovskiy – Violin
Ernesto Rodrigues – Viola
Nuno Torres – Alto Saxophone


Recorded in June 2016, St. Petersburg
Cover design Carlos Santos



Reviews