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AUGUSTÍ
FERNÁNDEZ / WILLIAM PARKER
2nd Set
Radical Records
M PE 047
AUGUSTÍ FERNÁNDEZ / CHRISTOPH IRMER
Ebro Delta
Hybrid
CD 18
Every day it seems, impressive improvising musicians are appearing in
places most North Americans don't associate with innovative sounds or
even modern music. Appearing, of course is a relative term. In cases like
this the "appearance" isn't any more a description than our
concept of Columbus "discovering" the New World, which had existed
for many previous millennia.
Pianist Augustí Fernández, 47, for instance, a resident
of Barcelona, Spain, has been a professional since he was 13, under the
acknowledged influence of one American and one European model: Cecil Taylor
and Iannis Xenakis. In the years since 1985 he has recorded at least a
dozen CDs and worked with musicians as different as saxophonist Evan Parker,
cellist France-Marie Uitti, Butoh dancer Andrés Corchero and a
local improvising vocal group. Reflecting his bifurcated regimen, these
two accomplished CDs pinpoint both sides of his pianistic conception.
Fernández first played with ubiquitous bassist William Parker in
New York in 1997, and recorded with him and drummer Susie Ibarra in Barcelona
the following year. More than a follow up, 2ND SET is both an intensification
and an expansion of that trio meeting.
Divided between two massive -- almost 25 minute and more than 32 minute
-- improvisations with a fleet interlude separating them, the disc finds
the pianist in his most weighty free jazz role. Confining himself mostly
to the bass region and bottom notes of the instrument -- and heavy on
the sustain pedal -- his constant keystrokes can remind you of a building
orgasm, waiting for release.
"Part I" finds Parker stroking his bass strings with similar
intensity, as his bow thrusts push the pianist closer to the edge, exposing
a forward motion that soon has him ranging all over the keyboard. Echoing
overtones that range from bass to treble soon begin to suggest other sounds
like dense electronics as well as different chordal instruments with what
could be as a whimsical harpsichord pluck or a pedal steel guitar whine.
Later, as Parker moves from scratching out arco cello parts to creating
guitar-like strums with his bass, Fernández climaxes by rubbing
and manipulating the piano's strings until both musicians are spent and
satisfied.
Following the interlude, "Part II" -- which is the same length
of many 1960s' LPs -- is even more intense. Proving that he's ambidextrous
as well as multi-functional, Fernández at times appears to be advancing
two -- or sometimes three (!) -- themes simultaneously. As light and airy
as "Part I" was dark and dank, the pianist begins playing so
quickly that the wood of the piano practically echoes. Not thought of
as the retiring type, the bassist usual Herculean plucks are practically
rendered inaudible by Fernández's efforts. Displaying his mettle,
Parker eventually signals the piece's conclusion with some high-pitched,
metallic bowing.
If 2ND SET exposes the so-called American side of Fernández's improvisations,
then EBRO DELTA, recorded more than two years earlier, showcases his purported
European persona. If his playing is thick and note-crammed with Parker,
here it's roomier, more expansive and intentionally hesitant. A shorter
disc than the first, it's also divided among 13 tracks -- most in the
one, two and three minute range.
Also, as opposed to Parker, a free jazz maven since the late-1970s, who
is best-known for his work with Cecil Taylor, David S. Ware and his own
large and small bands, classically trained Christoph Irmer, a native of
Wuppertal, Germany, has only been improvising since the early 1990s.
Still his use of unconventional techniques have helped him make up for
lost time and since then he has been a member of bassist Peter Kowald's
Ort-Ensemble, and recorded with guitar torturer Hans Tammen, bassist Dominic
Duval, and percussionist Jay Rosen.
Collaborating in the language of scratches and scrapes, the pianist and
violinist approach the shorter tunes similarly with sharp, machine-like
runs from the keyboard and extended, jagged arco gashes from the fiddle.
Sometimes you can imagine the two as mechanized robots, performing in
a sci-fi chamber recital on Planet X.
Only "Was da im Wasser blinkt," which melds dancing piano patterns
and straightforward, almost 19th century bowing from Irmer produces a
different sort of duet, as do the CD's two longest pieces.
"Fire Animals Laughing Creeping Screaming," with its English,
rather than German title and lasting a little more than 10 minutes could
be heard as the complete score for a short ballet mechanique. With Irmer
reverberating more than one string at a time, Fernández responds
by diving hands-first into the piano bowels, producing harp sonorities.
When Irmer turns high-hatish and begins to play a short, sprightly melody,
the pianist dons his aural clown's costume and begins crashing and banging
on the reverberating strings and keys. Merely touching the string with
his bow, the violinist then creates something analogous to a saxophonist's
pitch vibrato, encouraging both players to create a series of piercing
tones that sound like nails whistling as they're being pulled along unyielding
metal.
Even more extensive and totaling more than at 121/2 minutes, the four-part
"Suite in D" comes across as a parody of oh-so-pretentious Mittel
European chamber concerts, with the duo's presentation resembling a knife
fight more than a courtly fencing session.
From the beginning, when the two seem to take turns banging on the sides
of their respective instruments as often as they sound the strings, they
manage to musically move the suite frontward as they mock it. "Adagio
morbido" is just that, oozed out so morbidly slowly that the notes
appear to be so nearly motionless that they're almost stillborn. "Furioso"
must relate more to haste than anger, since the violinist, especially,
creates speedy bowed lines, that are occasionally interrupted by the occasional
finger pluck. In the finale Fernández appears to be reaching inside
the piano to pluck strings as well, as he and Irmer move from arco (well,
touch, in the pianist's case) to pizzicato and back again. Gathering his
strength the pianist ends the piece with a crashing heavy note, only to
have the violinist get in the last word -- er, note -- with a final yank.
As demonstrated by these CDs, Fernández, like his countryman Picasso,
can create in different modes, with the texture and color varying with
the mood and situation. Both sessions are worth investigation, with your
choice depending on your particular preferences. Maybe you'd like both.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing 2nd Set: 1. Second Set Part I 2. Interlude 3. Second Set
Part II
Track Listing Ebro Delta:1 Hartes Gestein 2. Vögel in Pappeln gehen
schlafen 3. Barceló 4. Fire Animals Laughing Creeping Screaming
5. Was da im Wasser blinkt 6. Luxury 7. La casa del piano 8. Suite in
D: Allegro 9. Suite in D: Adagio morbido 10. Suite in D: Furioso 11. Suite
in D: Finale 12. Halbschlaftraum (nach der Siesta) 13. Was geschehen ist
(Erinnerung/Coda)
Personnel 2nd Set: Agustí Fernández (piano); William Parker
(bass)
Personnel: Ebro: Christoph Irmer (violin); Agustí Fernández
(piano)
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