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Posts Tagged ‘review’

Concert Review: Steve Reich Drumming, Queen Elizabeth Hall, 16/02/10

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

Ah, Steve Reich – favourite classical composer and key influence of many an electronic musician. A DJ friend of mine once declared that Steve Reich invented techno back in the 50’s, and often drops Reich into his club sets. It’s easy to hear why when you listen to Reich’s rich back catalgoue of textured, polyrhythmic compositions, and Drumming is an obvious choice for reverence by the percussively obsessed such as myself.

The Colin Currie Group performed the piece to a packed Queen Elizabeth Hall, part of the Southbank Centre in London. Centre stage was a row of bongos, which is where the piece begins. Several musicians hammer out an utterly hypnotic beat that starts simply enough but grows increasingly complex as more drummers join the frey. The nature of the piece is such that you’re ‘tripped up’ regularly as the beat you’re tapping along to is subtly skewed when a new phrase comes in. This gives the piece an unpredictable momentum despite it’s cyclical nature.

Seeing how some of the percussionists stood rigid and composed while others moved and swung with the groove was interesting. No doubt their movement (or lack of) was dictated by the parts they were playing as well as by their individual way of physically engaging with music.

After a mesmerising first part, the marimbas come in. Another fascinating aspect of Drumming is that the timbral quality of each new instrument is echoed in the preceeding one, so for instance you’re not sure whether you’re hearing an actual marimba or a marimba-like effect arising from layered bongos. The same is so when the female vocal and the piccolo come in – the vocal sounds like layered glockenspiels, and the piccolo sounds like a female voice. Very clever composition, and kind of amusing and rewarding at the same time for the audience!

After the marimba section it’s the turn of the glockenspiels. There are a few moments in Drumming where the generally wave-like, evolving and subtle sound is punctuated with a brisk and overwhelming change – one such moment is when the glockenspiels drop. The hall was suddenly drenched in a sweet, high pitched, metallic ringing after the steady, wooden plonk of the glocks.

The vocals and the piccolo ebb and flow throughout the piece bringing ethereal whisps of character and melody to an otherwise fairly mechanical piece. Having said that, the mechanical nature of the music (in other words its tight, repetitive rhythmic structure) never leaves it lacking warmth or vitality.

The crescendo sees all the instruments joining in for a truly breathtaking finale. The combined sound is simply beautiful and by this time I was so transfixed I just didn’t want it to end. Such a tangible, emotional and visceral effect from a performance is rare and was akin to meditation. But of course end it did, and I was left dazed, exhausted and wondering how it had been an hour already!

Following the concert was a talk with Steve Reich himself, lead percussionist Colin Currie and the Southbank Centre’s Gillian Moore. The piece has a clear West African influence and it was fascinating to hear how Reich travelled to this area and Indonesia where percussion take centre stage in the orchestra. On returning home he transcribed what he’d heard and set about composing a Western interpretation, the results of which can be heard in many of his pieces but most notably in Drumming. I was also interested to hear how the piece is scored leaving much room for interpretation by the performers, depending on how they feel on the night. No doubt this adds to the organic flow of the piece. Reich also revealed how his use of tape loops while composing Drumming accidentally lead to the timbral ambiguities described above. He was listening to a recorded section of marimbas, thought he heard a female voice, and thought “hey, why not add an actual female voice!” Magic and accident, as Matthew Herbert puts it.

Steve Reich remains a hero of mine – his use of rhythm is thrilling and inspiring and hearing Drumming performed by such an accomplished group of musicians was a treat indeed.

Watch a performance of Part 1:

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Gig Review: Carl Craig, Francesco Tristano & Moritz von Oswald, Matmos, Bugge Wesseltoft & Henrik Schwarz duo

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

The Red Bull Music Academy visits a different city each year and presents a series of gigs, lectures and workshops to promote music both new and old. This year it’s Londons turn to play host. Friday 12th February saw techno luminaries, jazz men and classical musicians collaborating for an exciting 3 hours of experimental music at the Royal Festival Hall.

Starting proceedings were Norweigan jazz musician and producer Bugge Wesseltoft and German deep house producer/DJ Henrik Schwarz. As the audience filed in the duo got off to what looked like a juddery start but soon settled into a pleasing, off-kilter rhythm – they obviously work well together and their sounds and approaches to making them are well suited.

Wesseltoft had at his disposal a grand piano and a table of electronics including a MIDI keyboard, a synth and a laptop. He stretched between the two, looping up piano melodies ranging from delicate to grandiose and applying filters and effects as he went. Shwarz, meanwhile, introduced electronic beats, textures and effects via a Macbook and an array of pro-audio gear.

While there were times when the combined sounds built steadily to impressive and interesting peaks, each musician also had time to shine individually – Wesseltoft’s incredible jazz piano being given dominance before Shwarz’s gradually building 4/4 beats took over and had the audience (or me, at least) wishing I was on a dance floor instead of sat in a concert hall.

As the set proceeded Weesseltoft employed various unconventional means to produce his sounds including plucking the internal strings of the piano and squatting in front of an African glockenspiel-like instrument. The set ended here, infact, with Shwarz joining him at the front of the stage armed with a Novation Launchpad (one of my favourite MIDI toys and interesting to me as it implies Shwarz is a fellow user of Ableton Live) for an improvised avant-glitch-rock-out!

Next up were Baltimore experimental duo Matmos. Introducing themselves as ‘the comic relief’ and explaining how they’d fought through the worst snow storm in 90 years to be there, they proceeded to build a slightly menacing soundscape with found objects (whistling through a biro lid, shaking childrens toys previously dug out of a plastic baggie), a high-hat, the obligatory macbooks and various other bits of kit. I was under the impression that they were primarily sound artists so when a seriously fat techo beat dropped I was pleasantly surprised, as were several other audience members who whooped and cheered in true dancefloor style. I liked that they spoke to the audience as well – too many electronic and experimental musicians hide behind an aura of mystery or geekery and remain quite faceless. Matmos were engaging and amusing as well as playing a blinding set.

The main draw of the evening was the collaboration between Carl Craig, Moritz Von Oswald and Francesco Tristano. Carl Craig needs no introduction, being a figurehead of Detroit techno and recently working on increasingly diverse projects. Moritz Von Oswald represents the Berlin side of the techno coin and is a pioneer of the more minimal style. Francesco Tristano is a classical pianist but is also heavily involved in contemporary experimental music, too. Joining them was a fourth musician on saxophone – unfortunately his name escapes me.

Seeing such a diverse ensemble in such a setting (the huge, revered space of the Royal Festival Hall) was quite something and it was thrilling to hear the blending of the elements that each musician brought to the table. For me, Tristano’s piano was the most exciting, particularly because he was armed with a laptop, too, and seems to instinctively think outside the classical box. The addition of the saxophone gave proceedings an earthy soul. In fact the piano and brass sat in perfect harmony with the techno beats that Craig and Oswald laid down, Detroit techno being particularly drenched in soul as it is. To hear it as a live element rather than a sample was fantastic.

Speaking of those beats, again I wished I was on a dancefloor (as did the guy in front of me who got up to boogie by the speaker stack) as Craig skillfully wove waves and washes of rhythm through the live instrumentation, which periodically dropped out for bouts of hard, 4-to-the-floor action.

While this performance was probably the most rounded and polished, it actually lacked something for it copmpared to the others which had an element of rough-and-readiness about them. Varying the strict 4-to-the-floor beats would have been a nice touch and made the electronic elements more dynamic. This would also have been the case if Moritz Von Oswald actually moved during the performance. Stood motionless behind his computer as he was, it looked like he was doing his accounts.

Overall, though, the evening offered up an exciting and inspirational array of music and it was a pleasure to see such diverse musicians coming together. The boundaries between live and pre-recorded, classical and dance, continue to be blurred. On this subject, interesting questions about context were raised in my mind, but I’m going to save those for another post. I’m going to see Steve Reich’s Drumming performed at Royal Festival Hall’s sister venue next week and I’d like to compare the 2 gigs before drawing any conclusions.

I should also mention the visuals that accompanied the concert. A huge screen formed the backdrop to the stage, on to which were projected various visuals from the bizarre and slightly disturbing brain-like ripples during Matmos to the perfectly judged pixel-like blocks and 3D lattices during Carl Craig et al. Since live electronic music is prone to being slightly dull to watch, the projections added a visual energy that matched the music.

Once the concert itself had finished, DJ Sprinkles (aka Terre Thaemlitz) DJ’d some fantastic house music in the Southbank Centre’s Clore Ballroom. An initially trepidatious audience soon gave themselves over to the atmosphere and it was good to see a wide age range getting down to some proper house music in a classical venue!

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