Fat-Cat Rec.      Hauschka : Ferndorf (D,2008)***'

Despite the “classical” aspect of chambermusic-minimalism, Volker Bertelmann’s approach sound also like instrumental music for pop(ular) demand. The rather romantic piano melodies are catchy, descriptive, with a few note-repetitive patterns, are slightly rhythmically melodic and come over as being very filmic, while the cello’s and violin and some trombones improvise moodily a bit on the themes. Only small parts of prepared -often just a few single notes- are included into the compositions like extra textures. I don’t think it will take long before Hauschka will be asked for providing some movie score.

Info & audio : http://www.myspace.com/hauschka
Label info : http://fat-cat.co.uk/fatcat/release.php?id=268
Review with audio : http://www.boomkat.com/item.cfm?id=128107
Other reviews : http://feministreview.blogspot.com/2008/11/hauschka-ferndorf.html
& http://www.noripcord.com/reviews/music/hauschka/ferndorf
& http://www.metacritic.com/music/artists/hauschka/ferndorf?part=rss
& http://www.prefixmag.com/reviews/hauschka/ferndorf/21411/
& http://www.antimusic.com/reviews/08/Hauschka.shtml
& http://www.popmatters.com/pm/review/hauschka-ferndorf
& http://drownedinsound.com/articles/4063550 & http://obscuresound.com/?p=2046
& http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/node/145534 & http://www.dustedmagazine.com/reviews/4609
& http://www.themilkfactory.co.uk/st/2008/10/hauschka-fendorf-fat-cat-records130701/
& http://www.musicomh.com/albums/hauschka_0908.htm
& http://www.new-noise.net/album-reviews/hauschka/ferndorf/hauschka---ferndorf_4913.html
& withaudio : http://www.soundfixrecords.com/products/hauschka-ferndorf
& http://tinymixtapes.com/Hauschka,7238
Trace Label V.A. : Post-Minimalism -2CD- (B,CHI,F,US,2006)****/**°'

A lot has happened in contemporary classical music but little has reached the media well. E.g., in Belgium the only national classical music radio was taken over by a new director and given a new direction with a whole bunch of new consuming producers so that they now mostly only select from the predictable narrow areas of a 19th century based opinion on classical music. Minimalism was some attempt that could have reached the public easily. It was based on recognisable patterns of repetition, and, for the newer generations of minimalist composers, it made the area between contemporary classical music and modern music composers more vague so that a link to more serious pop(ular) music was somewhat restored, so that a composer was not always destined to live in one of both fields. The Trace label was curious on the heritage of this new field of possibilities, and asked many composers, through myspace to show them the legacy.

The result is two CD’s with new compositions. Especially the first CD for me succeeded like a perfect answer to a well put question. It shows a well compiled variety where each track complete the other, and the line between new and modern music becomes ultra-thin, and shows some ideas of possibilities in the new area.

I pretty much like Eric Schwartz composition, which is like a heated up, more directly-driven piece with contrasting contemporary classical sounds, as if Xenakis goes into a “rock” mood, mixed with a bit of tango ; very expressive and with a lot to contribute. This is followed by a piece by Steve Peters, a somewhat improvised minimal piece lead by accordion with gongs, metal bowl, loops, recorded for a choreographical piece, a good example of the thin area between classical and modern, and also between inspiration and rationalisation. Nick Didkovsky’s contributed electric guitar piece uses a combination of electric guitar improvisation, with deductively constructing rhythmic cells. The piece was originally performed with Bang On A Can and was later rearranged for a trio, for his band Doctor Nerve and then again as a duo with Mark Stewart. This is quickly followed by a new minimalist classical idea by Belinda Reynolds, using canons with overlays of different collections of fifths to create the melodies and harmonies that way. Mathematical ideas and minimalism can go easily hand in hand. With open intuitive composing this always works fine. Ya Jun’s performance is done with electro-acoustic ? and acoustic kitchen sink material, including noisy iron movements, as well as bowl like sounds ; and is a rather meditative piece that makes found objects speak, and turn their sounds into a communication of object, environment and its qualities, also with harmonies. It is very good that the next track switches back to a more melodic piece. Ryan Brown’s track is an inventive, melodic classical music piece performed by acoustic guitars, vibraphone, and shows a better sound balance than the overestimated classical orchestra (which is so much overly accepted, some composers or interpretations of even old pieces start to neglect the balance of colours of sounds, because with the 19th century orchestra, there is used only the same limited variety for every existing piece, and with it comes an overestimation of written note melody). Ryan Brown returns to that perfect balance of instruments for his own composition. In that way it is another brilliant piece. Also interesting is Pierre Yves Macé’s study of melodic language, of stand-alone instruments and melodies, finding its rhythmic pulses, with a few harmonizing and a few undisturbing combinations of different semi-simularities of the other instruments. In that way at times of different interactions, some elements of minimalism comes to mind. Alphonse Izzo’s track is composed from digitally altered electric guitars, an ambient guitar piece with in harmony and with overtones, overlapping echos, in a similar effect as the previous track, shows something of new form of minimalist music.

On the second CD more improvised, electro-acoustic and guitar sound based pieces are added, (Marco Oppedisano, Fathmount, Olivier Pé/Yannick Franck) with use of feedback, loops (Istvan Peter B’Rack, Josh Millrod). It is an area which I find less interesting, because I noticed before that on live performances it was mostly the most mediocre musicians who were hiding behind the techniques of guitar sounds, loops and pedals, like also often behind the use of noise and chaos. In this case, in general, it still is less clear to me if the influence of minimalism here was for such an area always constructive or it made results come a bit too easyily ; minimalism became here too often a minimum-alism, also in inspiration and intellect. When it works I think the pieces are able to recall a minimum feeling of sound meditation. Instead of describing these examples from this album, often more soundscape pieces, more particularly, I will pick out a few of the other pieces. Dan Becker’s piece sounds like a combination of minimalist classical music, a slightly jazzy bass, dealing with the idea of construction and destruction in it, repetition and breaking rhythms and melodies, in some way for me, if it continues this way, this strange balance seems like to direct classical music towards a different form of jazz. John King’s piano piece shows an interesting balance between pulsations of constructive piano notes and random combinations and electronically manipulated piano sounds, and in some way contributes his own new vision to the minimalist heritage. Dean Rosenthal however entirely took a rational idea of numeric pitch controlled variations in the composition. This kind of completely rationalised mechanical way of constructive composing was something which was typical for the 50s to the 70s, even trying ethnic music ideas at times. Without reworking the mathematical ideas to something more loosely performed form of improvisation, I think these pieces felt often very unnatural, and I am left with the same feeling here as well. A beautiful piece is Hervé Zénouda’s violin/electrosonic mix, which remind me a bit of Einojuhani Rautavaara’s Cantus Arcticus (1972) piece using electronic birds and landscape describing orchestra, a favourite of mine. Something similar happens here, in a semi-minimalist way.

The double CD provides an insight in new music and for me was successful to show a more clear answer to the question : what possibilities has the progression of minimalism into music in general given to us ?

Audio : Eric Schwartz : "Thunk..A Ghost Story" ; Ryan Brown : "Bansky" ; Yannick Frank : "Piragua"
Hervé Zénouda : "Mercredi 19 Janvier, 8h30" (click right title in link)
Label info : http://www.tracelab.com/03page/artiste/postmini.htm (from http://www.tracelab.com/)

A1 * Eric Schwartz homepage with audio : http://www.myspace.com/ericjschwartz
& intro : http://netnewmusic.net/wiki/index.php?title=Eric_Schwartz
& http://composers21.com/compdocs/schwartze.htm
& http://www.voxnovus.com/composer/Eric_Schwartz.htm
A2 * Steve Peters biography : http://www.portlandart.org/newsite/files/StevePeters%20ResumeBio.pdf
& more details : http://www.greenmuseum.org/content/artist_content/ct_id-231__artist_id-71.html
& http://steve-peters.blogspot.com/
A3 * Intro on Nick Didkovsky : http://www.doctornerve.org/nerve/pages/nick.shtml
& http://kalvos.org/didkovs.html
Other release I reviewed on next page->
Info on Kevin Gallagher : http://www.guitar69.com/
& http://www.newmillguitar.com/kevinandme.html
& http://myspace.com/kevingallagherelectricguitarist
(and his Electric Company  : http://www.myspace.com/electrickompany)
A4 * Belinda Reynolds : intro : http://kalvos.org/reynold.html
& http://www.heshemusic.com/about.html#br
http://www.belindareynolds.com/ & with audio : http://www.myspace.com/belindareynoldsbecker
info : http://www.commonsense.org/reynold.htm
A5 * Yan Jun homepage : http://www.yanjun.org/ & audio : http://www.myspace.com/yanjunyanjun
A6 * Ryan Brown-Bansky http://myspace.com/ryanbrowncomposer
& audio :http://www.ryanbrownmusic.net/bio.html
A7 * Pierre Yves Macé : http://www.pierreyvesmace.com/
& audio : www.myspace.com/pierreyvesmace
A8 * Alphonse Izzo : http://www.alphonseizzo.com/ & audio : http://www.myspace.com/alphonseizzo
& http://www.lulu.com/Izzo & http://web.mac.com/istvan_bracz/...
& http://www.soundunderground.org/Alphonse.html

B1 * Marco Oppedisano : http://www.marcooppedisano.com/
& http://www.myspace.com/marcooppedisanomus  & http://www.zebox.com/oppedisano/
& http://oksrecordingsofnorthamerica.com/marco.html
B2 * Dan Becker : http://www.danbecker.org/ & http://www.commonsense.org/becker.htm
& audio : http://www.myspace.com/danjbecker
B3* Istvan Peter Bracz : http://www.myspace.com/istvanpeterbracz
& http://www.myspace.com/bracz & http://www.lulu.com/bracz
& http://web.mac.com/istvan_bracz/... & http://web.mac.com/...
B4* John King : http://www.johnkingmusic.com/
& audio : http://www.myspace.com/johnkingmusic 
B5* Fathount : http://www.myspace.com/fathmount
B6* Olivier Pé and Yannick Franck : http://www.myspace.com/yannickfranck
B7 * Dean Rosenthal : http://www.voxnovus.com/member/Dean_Rosenthal.htm
& audio : http://www.myspace.com/deanrosenthal 
B8 * Hervé Zénouda : http://zenouda.free.fr/ & audio : http://www.myspace.com/zenouda
& http://www.tracelab.com/03page/artiste/zenouda.htm
* Josh Milrod : http://www.myspace.com/joshmillrod 
MINIMALISM & POST-MINIMALISM
review page :
Max Richter, Hauschka (2x), Dan Joseph, Nonloc, V.A. : Post-minimalism,
Eric Carbonara, Terry Riley's "In C"  inspirations, Wim Mertens


INSPIRATIONS OF
TERRY RILEY'S 'IN C' ON NEXT PAGE->

go back to the New Music review page here
See also new music from Belgium (like minimalist Wim Mertens,..)
on http://progressive.homestead.com/belgium4.html
or various new / modern chamber music related releases starting here

or go back to
<-- the experimental music instruments review page
or to the general index
(more new music on the progressive music review pages)




Fat-Cat Rec.   Max Richter : Songs From Before (UK,2006)***'

One of the most accessible new composers for the new alternative generation is Arvo Pärt, because he uses rather simple ideas to full effect. Max Richter follows his foundations, keeps it even more distant from classical music, and keeps it even simpler, minimal, (strings, and a bit of piano) still effective, adds tiny bits of layers of sounds, as ambient ideas, with some spoken word here and there. His filmic layers make the music easily understandable and useful (like for films ; he scored some Derek Jarman shortfilms before) and for many contexts. This is his second release for Fat-Cat Records. A very pleasant to listen to, and accessible album.

Homepage : http://www.maxrichter.com/ & http://www.myspace.com/maxrichtermusic
Label info with audio : http://fat-cat.co.uk/fatcat/release.php?id=203
Previous release : http://fat-cat.co.uk/fatcat/release.php?id=101
Review with three audio tracks : http://obscuresound.com/?p=206
Other reviews : --
Fat-Cat Rec. Hauschka : Room To Expand (D,2006)***'

John Cage during his education, had difficulties with creating compositions driven by melody with one-coloured notes. He much more had a feeling for sound colours and rhythm, and that idea with certain monotony in perception didn’t fit with him. So after some reconsidering what to do next he started to prepare piano’s with gums, and metal, and composed rhythmically coloured pieces that fitted with a series of strange harmonies, making a certain melody possible. Old compositions I am sure often dealt with the combinations of the colours of the instruments that were able to invent certain compositions dealing with it. John Cage in that way reinvented some aspect and essence of music composition, without really realizing it. Modern conservatorium students are completely spoiled by reading and playing classical composition from note papers, and in a Ravel-fashion of rearranged old pieces for big orchestra, and even when dealing with Cage still don’t get this essence right...

Hauschka (aka Volker Bertelmann) exploits prepared piano for his compositions, but this not at all in the way of John Cage. Hauschka’s music much more is of a minimalist improvised new music, like colourful pop music, using certain circular notes and repetition, for rhythmical musings with strange, and slightly annoying or at least odd clicking and vibrating sounds on attractive rhythms, like danceable pop minimalism, together with improvised, slightly swinging clear melodies on piano, in a rather bar or cinema piano fashion of improvisation. For the ideals of pop music this sounds filmic and moody, and a fresh new form of music.

Homepage : with audio : http://www.myspace.com/hauschka
Info on artist : http://www.intervall-audio.com/artists/hauschka.html
& http://fat-cat.co.uk/fatcat/artistInfo.php?artist=Hauschka
& http://www.thespacelab.tv/spaceLAB/2007/01January/MusicNews-11-Hauschka.htm
Label info with audio : http://fat-cat.co.uk/fatcat/release.php?id=218
Other reviews : http://www.noripcord.com/?q=node/464
& http://www.diskant.net/reviews/2007/01/hauschka-room-to-expand-fat-cat.htm     next album->
Mutable Music  Dan Joseph : Archaea (US,2006)**°°

This recording of New York based composer Dan Joseph consists of three recent extended chamber works: 'Percussion and Strings' (2004), 'Archaea Quartet' (2001), and 'Lotus Quintet' (2003). The Dan Joseph Ensemble consists of Tom Chiu (violin), Michael Lowenstern (clarnet), Danny Tunick (percussion), Marija Ilic (harpsichord), Loren Dempster (cello) and Dan Joseph himself on hammered dulcimer.

What is clear to me in Dan Joseph's pieces is how he tries different ideas of minimalism, of which some are more rewarding than others. Luckily the performance by the group is brilliant, precise and fluent at the same time. Especially the first two pieces show rewarding and fresh ideas. “Percussion and strings” starts while using minimalist ideas, with a kind of Celtic folk(rock) flavour. Dulcimer and harpsichord here fit very sound-related like united in close family. The piece evolves over certain melodic evolutions with some looped repetitions. The second part starts with mathematical changes in repetitive variations on harpsichord. When it seems to form its own logical field, then are added cello and violin and bass xylophone (?), in a hypnotic way, but fresh in nature as a composition, with a certain Terry Riley touch. With the hammered dulcimer coming thoroughly to the fore, the music gets a different, slightly improvised shape with the dulcimer as the fundament, because of the choice this instrument makes already a different sound of minimalism. When the harpsichord is added again, it plays like notes for swing. The cello with bit of percussion and harpsichord conclude with a chamber like vision. The last and shortest part, played with the same instruments, is the moodiest part, with the dulcimer as rhythm drive, with touches of harpsichord chords and moody cello almost like wind instruments and violin on top. The main piece, “Archaea Quartet” swings its themes, using the minimalist theme as an instrument on its own, while switching melodic themes on top of it, then moves like a toy clock with some variations of the play. The second part of it starts with a “rock” like melodic theme, in repetition and loop, with first one, then two and then three layers of it (in the bass line section, mid tones section and in high note registers), like a fundamental rock/jazz piece -even without percussion-, turned into a classical piece, with the impression of a rather heavy rewarding rock theme. This is repeated a second time, without leading at first to something else, but then clearly it falls back to its minimalist nature, before it gets another theme origin with only a few changing notes, like a one-note harpsichord, a slightly improvising dulcimer, a theme repetition on harpsichord, and a clarinet improvisation on this theme. Very enjoyable. The last piece, “Lotus Quintet”, completely falls back on over-minimalism and basic repetitions, tic-tac clock rhythms, and little variation or ideas. It still is consumable, it is not yet boring, but is on the edge of irritating because the content is stretched without much reasons, and there is minimalism without showing any reasons as some kind of essence. The group performance makes the best of it. But it is the first two pieces or 35 minutes of the CD especially which shows fresh visions.

Teachers from Dan Joseph included Pauline Oliveros, Alvin Curran, Mel Powell and of most obviously noticeable, Terry Riley.

Audio : "opening" & on http://www.emusic.com/album/10961/10961309.html
Homepage : http://www.danjoseph.org/ with info on release : http://www.danjoseph.org/archaea.html
Label info : http://www.mutablemusic.com/archaeainfo.htm
Info in French : http://david-f.livejournal.com/315472.html
Description on  http://www.squidco.com/...
& on http://www.forcedexposure.com/artists/joseph.dan.html
& http://www.scaruffi.com/avant/joseph.html
Review : http://www.paristransatlantic.com/magazine/monthly2006/10oct_text.html#10
Strange Attractors  Nonloc : Between Hemispheres (US,2007)***°

Guitarist Mark Dwinell of Bright (last group is reviewed on next page) now has his second solo album ready on the same label as his group. To some degree he shows himself as a composer with a vision, while keeping his visions based upon multi-layered improvisations.
“Corpus Callosum” almost entirely is based upon acoustic guitar real-time looped patterns and other plugged strings mixed with a slower electric guitar, bringing easily in mind, because of the two different speeds and cooperative different guitars, sounds vaguely like a late Richard Pinhas, but brought into a minimalist territory, in a Terry Riley way.
Nice to hear is that also song or words are added to this (“Candide”, “Sentry at Eleusis”, “Lost in the desert, near death”, which also has some cello, and “Two Dreams”), which takes minimalism to a new, alternative form of “poprock”, with this minimalist fundament.
Like some guitarists like Glenn Jones, Ben Chasney and Sir Richard Bishop distance themselves from their group projects with their guitar work, Mark Dwinell shows his vision mostly as a composer, even when the guitar musical instrument as a leading interest is not denied. He tries different ideas with minimalist, often with loop-like fundaments.
“The Golden Apple Pie” is minimalism but the music is played like a rhythmical dance.
“Piano Stream” is a minimalist piece based upon rhythmical monotone notes, something which is repeated with guitar mostly on “Clearing” later on.
I like also how sax loops are some of the instruments on “My Song before the Gates”.
On two tracks, acoustic guitarist Jesse Sparhawk (Greg Weeks, Fern Knight, …) participated.
The last few tracks are a bit less complex. The last song, “Two dreams”, more simply lingers on two notes and a drone, leaving the classical association for good, but this fall back of course does not spoil the listening pleasure, although that track is rather long. Last track is likewise built from moody drones, and sounds from water on iron, with some guitar effects, an ending that vaguely echoes all that happened before, to only pure sounds.

Audio : on http://www.myspace.com/nonloc
Homepage : http://www.nonloc.com/
Label info : http://www.strange-attractors.com/catalog/saah047.html
Other review : http://www.clear-spot.nl/catalog/view.php?item_id=281950
New American Folk Hero  Eric Carbonara : 3-track EP (US,2007)***

Eric Carbonara clearly experiments with minimalist ideas by using multi-track possibilities, as if experimenting with the device itself with the inevitability of a concentration on the idea of it, forming with improvisation its compositions along with the experiment of the multi-tracking itself. While perhaps, this might have been something relatively new for him, this way, the first track, “This May be the end” sounds layered a little too linear, with a portion of chaos in the harmonies as if build slightly amateur-like, and without a formal plan. We hear layers of minimalist repetitions of acoustic guitars and bass, which are mixed with one-note repetitions on piano, some extra sounds, and keyboard-like amplified guitar arrangements. This has surely a certain amateurish charm but has not yet a well developed composer’s direction. The second part of it mixes in with keyboard based layers, which are more in harmony combined and interwoven, while a bass rhythm remains, amplified guitar lingers on and a bit random glockenspiel adds a few accents. This sounds harmonically one step more interesting, even though it still is a bit rough and taken as it is, without reconsiderations, recorded rather straight-forwardly as an idea. This ends a bit abruptly without having led to anywhere, outside its, -I must admit-, rather interesting minimalist-repetitive harmony pattern. The second track is recorded from divided acoustic guitar pickings into a multi-tracked recording as if Eric is playing and improvising, forming a composition with his own previously recorded parts, adding new similar patterns and notes while listening, creating like this an odd idea of a stereo-in-time-schedules effect with its separate sections of notes. This is an interesting idea, but also this track ends without a real conclusion, as similar as it started. Could be promising, with further development of such ideas.

Catalogue : http://www.musicfellowship.com/catalog.html
& http://www.tomentosarecords.com/newamericanfolkhero.html
Homepage : http://www.ericcarbonara.org
& with audio : http://www.myspace.com/ericcarbonara 
Guitar related album (2008) reviewed on http://psychedelicfolk.com/guitar13.html