CONTENTS
PUSHING THE ENVELOPE:
THE PROGRAM , 3
The New Music Champion
Award, 4
The Envelope,
Please, 4
THE
HONOREES, 5
ALL ON BOARD,
6
LIVE EVENTS
(March 4 to May 27, 2003)
Clothed
in a Redemptive Tale (Paulk on Heggie), 10
When Everyone Benefits (BLC on the Cassatt, Larsen), 10
Nightstallions? (Kroll on Rorem,
et al), 11
Featuring
a No-nonsense Violinist (Patella on Greg Harrington),
12
More Thoughts on War and Peace (BLC
on Hoover, et al), 12
Fresh to the Ear (BLC), 13
Willie or Wont He (Pehrson
pm Joshura Fried), 13
Separating Wheat from Chaff (Kra on), 13
Tribute to a Polymath (Pehrson on Kupferman), 14
Serious Fund at Carnegie Hall (Kroll), 15
Quite a Concert in Store for Us
(Pehrson on Carter) , 16
A New Kind of Recital (O'Neal),
16
An Eclectic Retrospective (Snellgrove),
17
DOTTED NOTES
from
Kroll, Pehrson,
BLC, 17
LEGATO NOTES:
More on Board, 19
NMYE
at the Ripe Age of 30 (BLC), 19
George
Crumb and Black Angels (Burwasser), 20
On the History
of Composers Concordance (Pehrson), 21
THE SCOREBOARD:
Occidental Accidentals (Drogin), 22
THE CINEMA;
The Story of the Weeping Camel (BLC), 23
RECORDINGS:
Mixing History and
Mystery Electronically (BLC on Martin Gotfrit),
24
Using Vibrato Effectively (Auerbach-Brown on Krenek), 24
A Bridge
to Grechaninov (Calabrese on Neva Pilgrim), 25
Hark, Some Glorious Quotes (Calabrese on John Rutter), 25
RECENT RELEASES,
25
COMPOSER INDEX,
25
SPEAKING
OUT!, 27
BRAVI
TO
, 27
RECENTLY
DEPARTED, 27
THE PUZZLE PAGE:
The Diagramless Takes Stage, 30
|
Songs of a Different
Sort
Chanteuse with vocalist Jacqueline Humbert
Review
by Dr. Helmut Christoferus Calabrese (2004)
The
Chanteuse CD states "songs of a different sort." My review
is based on the Lovely Music, Ltd. recording dated 2004. "Songs
of a different sort" may be an underestimate. Some of the songs
are not really song forms.
Mosquitolove
by Sam Ashley is filled with cricket sounds and other terrestrial
creatures including dripping water and the smooth voice recanting
lyrics that state, "I
was in paradise with cannibals
. Dreaming is roaming through space and time." Jacqueline
Humbert is very convincing; she incorporates the poem and becomes
one with ephemeral acoustic environment.
Attunement
by David Rosenboom has an electronic sound accompaniment to the
narration, "Socializing with the rocks," which becomes
more processed as time elapses. Via Dolorita, street of sorrows,
street of sighs by Joan La Barbara takes its title appropriately
with a "soundscape" of sighs, murmurs, and humming in
a polyphony of human wordless expressions. Don't Get Your Hopes
Up by Robert Ashley, included in his opera Dust, is a
parody what people find ordinary; it uses electronic detuned sounds.
Short Subject by George Manupelli begins with sounds of doors
opening and a truck pulling away. A hilarious melody begins, "I
love you, I miss you, I need you, Written from another (wo)man's
bed[!]"
Profile
by Jacqueline Humbert is an interview between psychologist and neurotic
patient; Ms. Humbert overdubs both characters. She is humorous,
evocative, and very convincing. Listen by James Tenny has
lyrics that describe man's devastation of the environment and the
human race; the music is a piano
plucking away in ostinato fashion. A Pregnant Pause by Larry
Polansky is
reminiscent of a Gyorgy Ligeti score until it cadences in a parody
of harmony.
Peace Piece by Gustavo Matamoros is a processed voice with
an electronic
high-pitch sound accompanying the narrator. Empty Words by
Robert Ashley is a time-warp music that gets acoustically closer
over the crackling sound of a fire using a tuneful melody on marimba;
the composition is a time shifting
experience on multi-levels.
Grace
by Katrina Krimsky is lovely, poetic, and electronic; the voice
smoothly romances the lyrics, "Leave the past and that ol'
place, Layered with years of tonal lace." The electronic music
does this: it layers the tonal lace. Adieu by J. Humbert
and D. Rosenboom is the sound of a narrator with raining falling
in the background and echoing sounds of organs and electronic sounds.
Oasis in the Air by J. Humbert and D. Rosenboom is interesting
in its juxtaposition of electronic sounds, vocals, percussion, and
time shifting melodies.
There
is quite an assortment of styles in this collection; it is a collage
of our electronic music heritage juxtaposed with simple melody processed
by a randomness that is a metaphor of our contemporary lives.
|