sexta-feira, 27 de janeiro de 2017

Golden Towers and Electric Frictions


CD – Creative Sources Recordings – CS386, Lisbon 2017







1. a rusty forest of sonic dissolutions (soundcheck) - 06'52''
2. ivory frequencies across a drained landscape - 14'37''
3. the unfathomable yearning of carving the void - 20'11''
4. golden towers and electric frictions - 10'42''
5. silken disruptions in the ocean of fluctuations - 08'04''


Miguel A. García - Electronics
Sebastien Branche - Tenor Saxophone
Abdul Moimême - Electric Guitar
Ernesto Rodrigues - Viola
Guilherme Rodrigues - Cello

Recorded in March 2016, Lisbon


Reviews

The biggest group of players is on the last CD, which has Garcia on electronics, Branche on  saxophone and Abdul Moimeme on electric guitar, Ernesto Rodrigues on viola and Guilherme  Rodrigues on cello. They recorded the five pieces on March 27, 2016 in Scratch Built Studio in  Lisbon. While it lists Garcia's name first and it is among these three new releases, that doesn't  mean that Garcia is the main operator or conductor here; I'd rather think of him as one of the five  people playing this improvised music. While the previous Garcia/Branche CD seemed also improvised  to me, this five-person work is of the two the more improvised one. The quintet of players also like  their sounds to be sustaining, placing bows on strings, but also motorized objects, buzzing  electronics and such like, in order to create a vast mass of sounds that seem to closely tied  together. It sounds really good, but sometimes also a bit too long, such as in the longest piece, 'The Unfathomable Yearning Of Carving The Void'. Sometimes, so it seems to me, things could have used a bit more editing, which would have brought just that extra bit of tension to the music. 
The way it sounds now, it seems that Garcia, who did the mix, wanted to use all of the sounds that  were captured on tape. These sixty-one minutes could have been a stronger forty-five or less  minutes, I think. But in terms of improvised music that sounds a bit different, a bit moodier and  atmospheric, then this is absolutely the right place to be. Frans de Waard (Vital Weekly)

On Golden Towers and Electric Frictions (CS 386 CD), Miguel teams up with the French sax player Sébastien Branche, the guitarist Abdul Moimême, and the string players Ernesto Rodrigues (viola) and Guilherme Rodrigues (cello). Not counting Abdul’s amplified axe, Miguel is the only electronics guy in the room, and he reins himself in for this subdued, low-key set of lengthy exploratory tones played in the electro-acoustic manner. The title ‘Ivory Frequencies Across A Drained Landscape’ is the most evocative description on offer here; all of these pieces feel like emptied-out, desolate descriptions of one empty vista after another. What life stirs in these post-devastation lands? Very little, it seems. I like the way this ad-hoc quintet move as one, and the collective noise they make is very palatable, but I’m not feeling much tension or indeed any of the promised “frictions” of the title. The set was done in a single day, and John Klima did the recordings in a Lisbon studio. Ed Pinsent (The Sound Projector)


domingo, 1 de janeiro de 2017

Humanoise Tutti

CD – Creative Sources Recordings – CS402, Lisbon 2016




A gathering of international improvising musicians over three days in Wiesbaden, playing in every possible combination from early afternoon into the evening, makes for an intensely alive hothouse for spontaneous music. Through the challenges and triumphs of each musician's journey during the festival, the music took it's own surprising, sometimes bewildering, and often bewitching course, with each musician making and taking space, listening and calling to each other, creating shifting and volatile landscapes, or entering rooms to be explored in great detail.
These tuttis from HumaNoise Festival #28 expose a captivating process of human collective musicianship, where the individual musicians lose and find themselves in service to something far greater than the sum of their parts.








1. Path 1. Saturday afternoon - 16'19''
2. Path 2. Sunday afternoon - 21'12''
3. Path 3. Sunday evening - 16'09''




Korhan Erel - Electronics
Elena Margarita Kakaliagou - French Horn
Jonas Kocher - Accordion 
Hannah Marshall - Cello

Dirk Marwedel - Extended Saxophone
Theo Nabicht - Contrabass Clarinet
 
Ulrich Philipp - Double Bass

Ernesto Rodrigues - Viola
Wolfgang Schliemann - Percussion
Nicolas Souchal - Trumpet


Recorded in July 2016, Wiesbaden
Cover design Carlos Santos



Reviews

HumaNoise Tutti is an opportunity to hear Rodrigues in a large group that’s not of his own devising—though there is often such complex and varied activity here, it would be misleading to evaluate it in the context of any one individual. The HumaNoise Congress is an annual gathering of international musicians in Wiesbaden, Germany, who over the course of several days play in every combination and as a group à la Derek Bailey’s Company weeks. 


HumaNoise Tutti features three long performances of the full decet, which morph from clamorous counterpoint to restive drones to faint whispers and flits of sound. A rundown of the instrumentation gives an idea of the aural diversity: electronics, French horn, accordion, cello, extended saxophone, contrabass clarinet, double bass, viola, percussion, trumpet. There’s a broad range of musical experience and temperament here, though as with much modern free improvisation, close listening and the suppression of individual virtuosity in the service of atmosphere is the rule (although Souchal opens “Sunday Evening” with a lyrical and rather direct turn on trumpet). In the 21st century, we’re starting to see how lessons from the many “factions” of free improvisation that have arisen over the last 50 years might be pooled into a larger musical practice, one that transcends—or at the very least bridges—idiosyncratic philosophies, scenes, and techniques. Dan Sorrells (The Free Jazz Collective)