
|
Various Artists AMPLIFY 2002: balance Erstwhile Records |
|
October 2002: Jon Abbey, of Erstwhile Records holds a festival in Tokyo of new improvised music. Its lineup includes many of the Japanese and European standouts of a niche community, some of whose roots lie alternately in free-jazz and modern composition, two poles of the avant-garde whose difference rests on a structural issue. Modern composition makes structure external, its methods are intelligible – at least in theory they are – and visible, where in free-jazz the structural mechanics are all internal and accessed as such through the intuition (that “brewing luminous,” in the Cecil Taylor sense). This new improv (third generation free improv?) takes the material concerns of new music avant-garde, and applies to those materials a method derived in part from the legacy of jazz. The festival proper is three days long, with satellite shows (which included the only non-Japanese or European improvisor on the set, Australian Oren Ambarchi) running before and after through the surrounding days. Out of the festival emerges this boxset.
AMPLIFY 2002: balance is comprised of seven audio cds, and one DVD, a visual document of the festival by Jonas Leddington. Six of those audio cds are live recordings, made on location, in front of the audience attending the festival. And there’s “tint”, a studio recording from Toshimaru Nakamura and Günter Müller, carefully constructed, as all of the recordings are on Erstwhile.
If we would take a leap, and classify the variety of music that is documented in the AMPLIFY 2002: balance box, as “expressionistic”, we immediately run into a problem. Abstract Expressionism, in particular was, in part, about the subtle interaction of eye, hand and brush. All mimesis was drained from the act of painting, and gesture was abstracted therefrom. It was, in many ways, a recording of a particular subjectivity, a recording of interior vision. Expressionism is about singularity, about one brain, one heart, and one object. But, in improvised music, solo performances are the exception, rather than the rule. Interaction with another being, whether it be the audience or a room, seems to be a necessity. But with expressionist painting, especially of the abstract variety, the idea of a collaborative piece between two artists seems preposterous. What would a collaborative painting between both Phillip Guston and Mark Rothko look like? Clyfford Still and Jackson Pollack? The mind rebels against the prospect. We then need a way to describe how a pluralistic expressionism would work.
In
this boxset, we find the following means being employed: acoustic and
electric guitars, turntables, analogue and digital synthesizers, laptops,
a no-input mixing board, an “empty” sampler, an ipod, a minidisc
player/recorder, percussives, voice and the occasional intervention of a
clarinet. But, this is not
the totality of what we are talking about when we say “material.”
Those that know me must be tired by now of this Cardew quote by
now, but I’ll repeat it again:
“...it
is impossible to record with any fidelity a kind of music that is actually
derived from the room in which it is taking place - its size, shape,
acoustical properties, even the view from the window...” - Towards an Ethic of Improvisation This
is one of the primary pleasures of Jonas Leddington’s DVD visual
document, “balance beams”, that is included in the boxset.
It offers its viewer “the view from the window”.
“‘How
do you prepare for a performance of highly abstract music?’
I think you begin by preparing yourself.
It’s not in the manipulation of the instrument…it’s in the
perception of how you see the performance, or how you view performance.
I’m really honest when I say....when [at] a performance I put my
guitar on the table, I get it all working, I go off [and] do something and
it’s eight o’clock and it’s time to play, and I kind of look at the
guitar in absolute horror at that point, and I really don’t have a
single idea. I’ll go
further and say, when my hand descends to play the very first notes of a
performance, I still don’t have any ideas.
As the hands or the fingers are just beginning to touch the
strings, ideas begin to come, and you just take it from whatever begins to
happen at that stage....I think what a performance is, is basically
focusing on what is happening in front of you.
In order to focus, and to have something worthwhile within you to
be reflected, that comes from constantly observing what’s happening
around you and scrutinizing your work…looking very, very quickly....” - Keith Rowe, from “balance beams” Viewed from the perspective of the listener though, this form of interaction is invisible. We see only the external manifestations of this form of interaction, this relationship as extending into materiality. In that we hear something like music, we’re hearing a precipitation of all of those material events described. Electronic improvised music, “balanced improv”, as Abbey once referred to it, grows climactically. Weather and pressure become a metaphor we can use to describe this external blossoming of the image, in that there is no set form prior to each concert to adhere to. The musical results are predicated exclusively on the interactions of material conditions. Each set is a grouping of conditions, which, through the mediation of the artists, plays out within the venues. What prevents this from being cold and sterile is the depth of character of each of these musicians. Their discipline must be enormous, to be able to keep their heads in the midst of this complex “unfoldment”. It feels like something alchemical.
Among
the many joys of the DVD are the short glimpses of after parties and
pre-concert preparations. To be honest, it humanizes the musicians.
When you see Taku Sugimoto with a big grin on his face, twirling
his hat on his finger, the yawning valleys between notes in the Sugimoto
Guitar quartet seem less about austerity, and more about humility, as per
Günter Müller’s comments. As
it is tied to the circumstances of weather, the variety of improvised
music documented on this box defines itself by the atmosphere it creates.
We seem to experience abstract music as we experience climate, in that we
are reacting internally to external changes in pressure. Abstract music
does not have the cognitive currency that music that employs melody does.
One imagines that there is basic pattern-recognition taking place, but
nothing on the order of perceptual gymnastics that occur when listening to
complex melodies and harmonies. Atmosphere,
as precipitation, is not just its outward, visible facts. There are hidden
relationships, which are not only mechanical; they are felt as much as
they are seen. It is not just the rain that we enjoy, it is the
accompanying wind, the smell it brings from the soil, the way clouds dim
the sun, the humidity, etc. In a similar way, the dancers in the Degas
painting are not just an occasion for paint. It is their relationships; on
one level those relationships of the dancers as their physical selves,
graceful and lithe, and on the other level, the hidden, invisible
relationships - friendships, rivalries, affinities, disinclinations among
themselves that structure their outward organization as framed and denoted
by Degas. The music described within the AMPLIFY boxset offers similar
relationships that are as often as hidden, and as complex as those in that
painting, and in climate. The boxset offers us a picture (with well
defined edges and frames, it is an image of the festival, not the
image of it, one imagines that the participants and immediate spectators
have memories that are quiet different than what is documented here) of a
system of subtly interacting elements: room, temperament, temperature,
etc. It is has a peculiar variety of organization that may be visible to
those in the future. At the present, though, any sort of descriptive
physics remains unwritten. It
is difficult to describe where exactly the pleasure of this music arises
from, but it seems to be akin to the feeling of the sun against skin. |
| ~Nirav Soni |
~ Nirav Soni
Posted by derek on January 17, 2004 9:00 PM.................................................. © 2003 - 2006 bagatellen ..................................................