ALBUM REVIEW: “gathering blue” by RighteousGIRLS

by Maggie Molloy 

a4c991_c913dd5409b14917bab1efcae62f8915Blue is a color rich in symbolism. For many it represents peace, tranquility, mystery, and truth. But it may also be a symbol for trust, wisdom, faith, and, above all, harmony.

Lois Lowry’s science fiction novel “Gathering Blue” tells the story of a young orphan with a deformed leg living in a dystopian society that leaves disabled people to die in the fields. But her life is spared due to her talent in threadwork—and her greatest triumph occurs when she discovers the art of dyeing the color blue, the one color no one else in her cruel society knows how to make.

Contemporary classical duo RighteousGIRLS takes this notion of blue as a symbol for social (and musical) harmony and explores its full spectrum of dazzling and luminous shades in their debut album, “gathering blue.” Titled after Lowry’s novel, the album blends elements of classical, avant-garde, jazz, improvisation, and post-production techniques.

RighteousGIRLS, comprised of New York-based flutist Gina Izzo and pianist Erika Dohi, creates a colorful musical palette through their collaboration with a variety of dynamic New York artists. Featured composers include Andy Akiho, Ambrose Akinmusire, Pascal Le Boeuf, Christian Carey, Vijay Iyer, Dave Molk, Mike Perdue, Jonathan Ragonese, and Randy Woolf.

The album opens with a bang—literally. The duo introduces themselves with “GIRLS,” composed by album’s producer, Pascal Le Boeuf, and scored for two flutes, piano, and prepared piano. The theatrical showpiece utilizes a variety of extended techniques and unconventional acoustic sounds, creating a dynamic, idiosyncratic, and completely otherworldly musical experience. Izzo’s rhythmic flute playing hovers above an array of distinctive piano timbres. For Izzo and Dohi, nothing is off limits: Dohi uses palms, elbows, and forearms on the prepared piano keys while Izzo strums inside the piano itself.

The next piece moves beyond the musical score: Izzo and Dohi experiment with improvisation in “Accumulated Gestures” by Vijay Iyer. Featuring drummer Justin Brown, the piece explores the ever-evolving theme of rhythmic contrast, keeping the listener (and the musicians) constantly on their toes.

Improvisation is a key theme in “Anzu” by jazz trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire as well. Titled after the Japanese word for “apricot,” the piece captures both the velvety sweetness and also the faint tartness of this vibrant fruit. Featuring Akinmusire himself on trumpet, the piece paints a gorgeous sonic landscape with slow and soulful trumpet and flute melodies dancing over a twinkling piano backdrop.

RighteousGIRLS picks up the pace again in their adaptation of “…nobody move…” by Randy Woolf. The intentionally chaotic piece employs an energetic groove that showcases Dohi’s avant-garde jazz piano chops.

The work is followed by a RighteousGIRLS rendition of Jonathan Ragonese’s solemn and contemplative “non-poem 1.” In direct contrast to the preceding piece, “non-poem 1” explores soft, meditative melodies surrounded by silence.

Andy Akiho’s “KARakurENAI” offers another dramatic change in musical texture. The piece, which features Akiho on prepared steel pan, crafts an entire orchestra of colorful percussive sounds accented by flute and piano embellishments. But this is not just any average old prepared steel pan—Akiho performs the left-hand ostinato with the cardboard tube of a dry cleaner coat hanger while poking out the right-hand melody with a wooden chopstick. Yes, a wooden chopstick.

The duo also performs Mike Perdue’s “Entr’acte,” written for two flutes and two prepared (and intentionally overdubbed) pianos. Quizzical and unconventional, the piece is titled after the French term for music that accompanies a theater set change.

Perhaps the duo is setting the stage for a tribute to one of the biggest names in contemporary classical: Milton Babbitt. The next piece on the album, titled “For Milton,” is a flute and piano duo written by Christian Carey in fond memory of the late composer. The piece showcases both Babbitt’s famous serialism as well as his affection for the soulful swing of early jazz.

The piece is followed by Dave Molk’s “Edge,” a RighteousGIRLS-commissioned piece that packs some serious punch. The flute and piano spew glitchy and jarring staccato melodies blurred by brief legato interludes.

And true to the blue color symbology, “gathering blue” also packs a little bit of mystery: a series of ethereal hidden interludes written by Le Boeuf weave together this fearlessly bold and vibrant album.

And somewhere between the serialism, the prepared steel pan ostinati, the elbow piano playing, and the brink of silence, RighteousGIRLS crafts a palette of blue hues richer and more diverse than you ever dreamed possible.

Staff & Community Picks: July 9

A weekly rundown of the music our staff and listeners are loving lately! Are you interested in contributing some thoughts on your favorite new music albums? Drop us a line!

91u2pnqrBxL._SX355_Beautiful poetry set to song and accompanied by sensitive piano playing.  A sparkling collection of delicate and dazzling art songs – it’s worth buying for “The Vineyard Songs” alone. – by Rachele Hales

 

 
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Despite living principally in the familiar chamber ensemble world of piano, strings, and winds, “The South Shore” feels like a different place and time. Through extensive use of simple, pure modal scales and harmonies, composer Michael Vincent Waller is able to effortlessly conjure impressions of otherness, without pointing directly to any particular era or locale. While these miniatures are beautiful in their simplicity, they are by no means unsophisticated – Waller is clearly familiar with the chamber music language, and each instrument speaks strongly in its individuality, while remaining blissfully uncomplicated as a whole. Evocative, unfettered, and at times even bucolic, Waller’s music transports, and all this music asks of us is to come along for the ride. – by Sarah Anthony



avatars-000126671152-h37dad-t500x500DJing was Henrik’s his first love, having built a reputation at major events in the early nineties and working as a remixer for artists like Mary J. Blige and Coldplay.  With genuine curiosity, Henrik simply wanted to see what his music would sound like for a body of classical instruments.  It goes a bit deeper, literally, with the use of low woodwinds (bass flute, bass clarinet, and bassoon) to help replace the low electronic bass sounds and kick drums.  Pulsing strings and percussion provide a rhythmic aura not unreminiscent of night club culture, like trance music for classical instruments.  This music is coming to a dance club near you, I hope! – by Maggie Stapleton

ALBUM REVIEW: “Reorchestrations” by Hidden Orchestra

by Maggie Molloy

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In this day and age, artists are constantly repurposing existing materials in new and creative ways. Reuse, rework, recycle, rethink, reconstruct, rebuild, or—if you’re a musician—remix. But multi-instrumentalist and composer Joe Acheson is interested in a lot more than just remixing—he’s interested in reorchestrating.

Acheson is the mastermind behind Hidden Orchestra, a solo studio project which synthesizes classical, electronic, and experimental music into multifaceted electroacoustic soundscapes. Hidden Orchestra utilizes all aspects of Acheson’s eclectic musical background: composing and performing classical music, DJing, producing, improvising, and playing in stylistically diverse bands and ensembles.

Though Acheson writes and produces all the music for Hidden Orchestra (in addition to playing bass), the live band also features Poppy Ackroyd on keyboard and violin, Tim Lane and Jamie Graham on drums, and numerous other live guests and recording artists.

Hidden Orchestra’s latest album, titled “Reorchestrations,” combines the delicate textures of classical with the beat-driven bass of electronica and the fearless musical exploration of avant-garde. Released on Denovali Records, the album uses works by classical, experimental, and folk musicians as source material which Acheson then intricately reworks with his signature composition and production techniques.

But unlike many remixes, Acheson’s “Reorchestrations” leaves each original track almost entirely intact. Instead of chopping up the originals and turning them into synth-heavy, bass-driven dance numbers, Acheson takes a more compositionally meticulous approach. He adds layers of rhythms and pitches which expand the musical textures and alter the harmonies of the original pieces, thus reinterpreting each work as a unique arrangement for his Hidden Orchestra.

The album begins with his reinterpretation of fellow labelmates Piano Interrupted’s delicate and dreamlike “Cross Hands.” He takes the duo’s electro-minimalist creation and infuses it with dynamic drum grooves, bouncy basslines, and bigger, broader sonic textures.

Next on the album is an imaginative reinvention of the Clarinet Factory’s snazzy, jazzy “5 Steps.” Acheson takes the circling minimalism of the original piece and propels it forward with double drumlines and denser musical textures, often disguising the original melodic motives in unexpected musical voices.

The third track on the album is a double-remix of another Denovali artist and fellow bandmate: Poppy Ackroyd. “Lyre Ground” features two of Ackroyd’s melodic, multi-tracked pieces transformed into a single soundscape, with added metallic drums and ambient field recordings giving her delicate, lyrical melodies an industrial tinge.

Folk harp and percussion duo Macmaster/Hay’s “Thograinn Thograinn” is next to be reorchestrated. Acheson gives a modern twist to the traditional Gaelic folk song, gradually transforming the warm vocals and rich rhythmic layers into an increasingly hypnotic and percussive sound world.

Hidden Orchestra collaborator and occasional live guest clarinetist Tomáš Dvořák (more commonly known by his stage name Floex) also appears on the album. Acheson reimagines his atmospheric “Saturnin Fire and the Restless Ocean” as an electro-orchestral dreamland.

Speaking of electroacoustic, Acheson’s reorchestration of Russian producer Long Arm’s vintage jazz-infused mashup “Sleep Key” is utterly dazzling. The mesmerizing musical texture samples everything from smooth vocals to sax solos and jazzy piano riffs over a sparkling drumline.

The album concludes with a Hidden Orchestra remix of the Liverpool band Kinetic Fallacy. The energetic, drum-driven electroacoustic track is aptly titled “The Revival,” possibly because Kinetic Fallacy disbanded before the remix was released.

But the title also serves another important purpose: it reminds us that as we continue pushing the boundaries of the classical music tradition, there is always room to revive, recreate, and reorchestrate the music that most inspires us.

Staff & Community Picks: July 1, 2015

A weekly rundown of the music our staff and listeners are loving lately!  Are you interested in contributing some thoughts on your favorite new music albums? Drop us a line!


OnOnalbumcover“On and On and”- and what? Well that’s the whole point, there is no “what.” This piece is based on the writings of John Muir, in particular his description of the cycle of nature going “on and on.” The rising and falling patterns of this piece, at times reaching great heights of range and dynamics and suddenly falling, only to build back up again, is indicative of a simple concept seen everywhere in nature, and indeed in all realms of the arts – the buildup and release of energy, and energy can never be created or destroyed, only transformed. – by David Wall



915_coverLisa Bielawa’s album “The Lay of the Love” speaks to the amazing ways humans find hope and comfort in dark times. She was inspired to learn that thousands of World War I soldiers carried Rilke’s work, The Lay of the Love and Death, with them in their coat pockets. She wrote a moving piece for baritone, piano, and violin set to its text. The next piece, “Wait,” was inspired by just one passage in Eugene Onegin that holds out hope for an escape from exile. In the album’s closing piece, “Hurry,” a soprano narrator digs deep to find a creative muse during a bleak period in her life, and a chamber ensemble cries out alongside her. There’s an inspirational message here for anyone who needs a pick-me-up. – by Jill Kimball



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The John Adams Chamber Symphony is one of my favorite works of music and is a mind-bending, exhilarating, fiendishly difficult piece to perform – every time I hear of a new recording I have a fangirl-level freakout. But the insanity of the Chamber Symphony is just the beginning of this musical thrill-ride from the Aurora Orchestra; we also get a touch of Charles Ives, Copland’s original chamber version of Appalachian Spring, and a Nico Muhly arrangement of Paul Simon, all presented in story-board fashion prefaced by a spoken-word and mandolin piece by Max Baillie. This tour-de-force of Americana doesn’t just show the range of different styles between the different composers, it exposes surprising similarities. – by Geoffrey Larson

 

ALBUM REVIEW: “The Bach/Gould Project”

by Maggie Molloy

Catalyst-QuartetJohann Sebastian Bach was a master of musical variations—so much so that even now, nearly 300 years later, his works continue to inspire new interpretations, adaptations, and arrangements by musicians from around the globe.

Among Bach’s most famous and most frequently reimagined works is his “Goldberg Variations.” Originally composed in 1741 for harpsichord, the piece consists of an aria and 30 variations. Over the years, the “Goldberg Variations” have inspired countless diverse arrangements, ranging from saxophones and double bass to marimba, prepared piano, jazz trio, synthesizer, and even double-necked electric guitar.

But despite all of these imaginative reinterpretations of the classic Baroque work, no one has ever created a fully realized four-voice arrangement of the “Goldberg Variations”—until now.

The Catalyst Quartet recently released their debut album, “The Bach/Gould Project,” which features the group’s own unique arrangement of the “Goldberg Variations” for string quartet. And in addition to this 45-minute masterpiece, the album also explores Bach’s lasting influence by featuring a one-movement work written by a world-renowned interpreter of Bach’s keyboard music: Canadian pianist and composer Glenn Gould.

The Catalyst Quartet’s arrangement of the “Goldberg Variations” combines Bach’s carefully-crafted counterpoint with the warmth, resonance, and timeless elegance of a string quartet. Comprised of violinists Karla Donehew-Perez and Jessie Montgomery, violist Paul Laraia, and cellist Karlos Rodriguez, the quartet’s polyphonic clarity, rhythmic verve, and graceful phrasing breathe new life into Bach’s classic work.

The string quartet arrangement allows each voice to shine through more sweetly and more whimsically than in the harpsichord arrangement, while still maintaining the original work’s complex counterpoint and multifaceted formal structure. Furthermore, the melodic ornamentation, musical imitation, and motivic interplay between voices sparkle in the quartet arrangement, creating a gorgeous and multidimensional musical texture.

Bach’s music is famous for its dense textures, complex counterpoint, and intricate harmonic and motivic organization. In fact, his music is so intellectually rigorous that some musicians have made an entire career out of specializing in Bach musical interpretation—and Gould is among them.

Gould’s 1955 piano recording of the “Goldberg Variations” is among the most famous renditions of the influential work—in fact, the recording turned him into an overnight piano sensation. But what many people don’t know is that during the years in which Gould was preparing to record the “Variations,” he was also composing a new string quartet. Thus, the second half of “The Bach/Gould Project” features a Catalyst Quartet performance of Gould’s 1956 composition String Quartet Op. 1.

The 35-minute work is written as a single long movement divided into five sections—and while some of its contrapuntal richness may have been inspired by Bach, for the most part the composition is far from Baroque. The Expressionist melodrama and dense musical textures are at times reminiscent of early Schoenberg, though the piece’s rich harmonies and lush lyricism also have clear ties to late German Romantics such as Strauss and Wagner.

The piece is darkly sumptuous; a bold contrast to the polished charm of the “Goldberg Variations.” But the Catalyst Quartet pulls off the dramatic mood change seamlessly, capturing the stormy and tempestuous character through their carefully-balanced contrapuntal dialogue.

The String Quartet ends with an extended fugue-like coda, bringing the album full circle back to its Baroque beginnings. And while the two works may be musical worlds apart, the Catalyst Quartet’s performance of both the “Goldberg Variations” and Gould’s String Quartet are pure gold.