quinta-feira, 20 de junho de 2019

Double x Double

CD – Creative Sources Recordings – CS611, Lisbon 2019



















1. Dawn Burglary - 09'55''
2. Augenwechsel - 09'17''
3. Augenbblick - 04'20''
4. Cosmo - 18'39'' 




Marie Takahashi - Viola
Ernesto Rodrigues - Viola
Guilherme Rodrigues - Cello
Hui-Chun Lin - Cello




Recorded October 2018, Berlin
Cover design Carlos Santos



Reviews

[…] but there's another "variant" string quartet in Double x Double: The latter was recorded in Berlin in October 2018, and involves two pairs of viola & cello, with Marie Takahashi & Hui-Chun Lin joining Ernesto & Guilherme Rodrigues respectively. It's thus another example from Rodrigues of bunching up the middle registers and involving a lot of crossing counterpoint, rather than extremes of pitch (as in some other projects). (And note that crossing contrapuntal registers was a feature of e.g. historical Ars Subtilior style, so only later proscribed by Western theory.) As opposed to e.g. the "epic" energy music of Theia (which incorporated LST as a working trio), Double x Double has a more colorfully broad natural orientation, even involving various briefly classical & romantic figures alongside a sometimes sparser approach, so as to create a rich musical tapestry evocative of late 20th century classical string literature in general (as with so many other Rodrigues string albums for small forces, e.g. as surveyed here in an entry from December 2018). In such ensembles, of course, mimicking & exploring (contrapuntal) timbral relations across instruments becomes that much easier. Todd McComb's Jazz Thoughts

Especially for an irrepressible musician, arranger, and label owner like Rodrigues, I imagine one must expend a lot of energy just keeping things interesting. Much of that energy seems dedicated to the single-minded quest to push the boundaries of the music, creating pieces that oscillate in that sweet spot just a hair too abrasive for Wandelweiser and much too Wandelweiser for a large swath of the rest of the listening public. Some must also go into imagining and staging new configurations of musicians seasoned in this type of lowercase music. It seems a small world, but, somehow, Rodrigues and his collaborators still find new contours to explore.


A string quartet of two violas and two cellos, double x double is just one of these working ensembles. From the first deep bows of the first track, “Dawn Burglary,” the listener knows he is in for a very different experience than the much larger ensemble on Paradoxurus Hermaphroditus produced. The music here is dark and clear, rather than almost inaudible restive. The tension is unmistakable. The melodies are sinister, blending a romantic sense of harmonic development and sway with a postmodern feel for interlaced droning tones and a postmodern fascination with all things non-conventional. (By now, of course, much that had been unconventional has been incorporated into and refined by the Rodrigues/Creative Sources repertoire.) Think: contrasting dynamics of prolonged shimmering and scratchy whispers and sharp, percussive strings, barely audible clicks, wooden creaks, and slide-whistle glissandos. A fine showcase of the potentialities of a modern, unorthodox string quartet. Nick Ostrum (The Free Jazz Collective)

A string quartet of doubled cello and viola, recording in the studio in Berlin in 2018, as free improving innovators, Creative Sources cellist and violist Guilherme Rodrigues and Ernesto Rodrigues, meet contemporary compositional and improvising cellist and violist Hui-Chu Lin and Marie Takahashi, their complementary approaches bringing unique voices to a captivating encounter. Squidco

"double x double" is an album by a string quartet, including two violas and two cellos, which explains the title. It was recorded in October 2018 in tonus-arcus studio in Zepernick. It is notable for participation of Marie Takahashi, who I consider very, very high, especially after seeing and hearing her at the MountMusic Festival in 2019. Obviously, the music sounds like a music of an avantgarde classical string quartet, but has also its specific character, related to free improvisation. They play four tracks of moderate length, starting from "Down Burglary" in a chamber music mood. My favorite and the highlight is the nearly 19 minutes long "cosmo", which starts with abstract, fragmented motifs, and beautiful improvised dialogues and triologues, and quartet-improvisations. There no "fake" sounds, al the contributions can be, more or less, distinguished even by a primitive ears of mine. Maciej Lewenstein

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