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AKCHOTÉ/AUZET/FERRARI
Impro-Micro-Acoustique
Blue Chopsticks
BC12
DAVE TUCKER WEST COAST PROJECT
Tenderloin
Pax
PR 90264
Eventually, it seems that when a musician truly wants to express himself
most freely, he must get involved with improvisation. Take these two CDs
as evidence.
Englishman Dave Tucker gained his greatest fame as guitarist for the rock
group The Fall in the early 1980s. Since then he's turned to improv, playing
with saxist Evan Parker and drummer Roger Turner at home and matching
wits with this Bay area crew on a visit stateside.
More fascinating still is the other session, for it features the improv
debut of French musique concrète pioneer Luc Ferrari as an improvising
pianist. Since the 1950s, Ferrari (born 1929) has experimented with different
instrumental combinations, used tape in composing and even written scores
that included space for improvising musicians. But it took the arrival
of the freer 21st century, and his appreciation of the guitar mistreatments
of Parisian Noël Akchoté to get one of the founders of the
Groupe de Recherche Musicale to contribute instrumentally himself. Besides
piano, Ferrari also utilizes hand-held mikes attached to an amp and loudspeakers
in the studio to create what he calls new, real-time concrète.
His many decades-younger collaborators are percussionist Roland Auzet,
founder of Cirque du Tambour, who has performed ultra-modern scores by
Ferrari and Iannis Xenakis, plus guitarist Akchoté, who has collaborated
with, among many others, Parker, plus British guitarists Derek Bailey
and Fred Frith.
There isn't that much of a generation gap between Tucker and his five
California colleagues, which may be why TENDERLOIN appears to lack the
same red-hot sense of discovery found on the other disc. Too many tracks
that aren't given sufficient time to develop, may contribute to this as
well. TENDERLOIN's 13 pieces, which take almost 671/2 minutes to unroll,
seem to engender a more drawn out program than what's audible on the five
tracks of slightly less than 673/4 minutes on IMPRO-MICRO-ACOUSTIQUE.
Not that Tucker doesn't have fine backup for his work on guitar and electronics.
Ernesto Diaz-Infante on amplified acoustic guitar has been involved in
experimental sessions on both coasts. Bassist Damon Smith has recorded
with German reedist Wolfgang Fuchs and British saxist Tony Bevan. Both
he and Garth Powell, who plays drums, percussion and idiophone here, recorded
with Italian saxist Gianni Gebbia, while Scott R. Looney who brings real-time
laptop processing to the proceedings, has recorded with Bevan and local
Free Jazz saxist Jim Ryan. Only cellist Danielle DeGruttola isn't that
well known.
On the other hand her contributions help define the basic tension between
the acoustic and electro-acoustic impulses showcased. On "Nihonmachi",
for instance, the busiest and most representative piece, her slashing,
tremolo work bridges the single note picking from Diaz-Infante's acoustic
guitar and Tucker's sudden exposure of the wah-wah pedal. Sonic shape
is provided by Smith's unvarnished, forward-pressing bass, as Powell thwacks
unattached cymbals and a bell tree, and Looney processes organ-grinder
sounds from his laptop. Buzzing, ponticello from both low stringed instruments
move the theme along as the other instruments stop and start around them.
The end features higher-pitched, guitar-driven contortions.
Methodical bow-lifting from the cellist often makes her playing an island
of calm among the extended techniques on display during the tunes, which
are all named for various hip Bay area landmarks. Sometimes, as on "Cow
Hollow", the rural-sounding, flat-picking, configurations become
paramount and mix with double-stopping shuffle bowing from the bassist.
"Mission Dolores" on the other hand, features the crackle and
static of electric-emphasized delay, reverberated all over the sonic space
with flanging and echoing effects from Looney and Tucker. Yet those sounds
still face off against Africanized percussion spirals, as the rhythm takes
on a modified, metallic berimbau pulse.
Elsewhere, oscillating waveforms shrill and quiver at different tempos,
morphing into otherworldly whistles and screams. Guitar reverb increases
in volume and adds feedback until shrill crescendos are reached, in contrast
to the folksy finger picking that sometimes arises from the acoustic axe.
And there are times when burbling video game timbres face off against
solid rhythm guitar-like strumming.
However, there aren't enough conflicting sonic impulses to properly illuminate
each and every track here. As good as TENDERLOIN is in small doses, the
overall appreciation of the CD as a single listening experience would
have been vastly improved by cutting some of the sounds and making it
a taut less-than-one-hour disc.
On the other hand, by limiting themselves to five tracks of no more than
11 minutes each, IMPRO-MICRO-ACOUSTIQUE's trio allows the sounds to germinate
organically. Interestingly enough as well, despite Ferrari's background,
the only piece which even touches on musique concrète is "Sur
le rythme," coincidentally or not the final track.
That impulse doesn't arrive until the final one-third of the track either.
It does so in the form of a welcoming phrase, that seems to originate
from pulling the cord in a mechanized child's toy and mixing the resulting
sound with the other improvisations. As Akchoté flat-picks beneath-the-bridge
kora-like suggestions and Auzet's rim percussion motions sound as if he's
playing a berimbau, the other image created is that of a tribe of African
percussionists set loose in a toy shop. Shortly, however, the vamp evolves
to toque, referencing both Latin and African percussion, but with the
tempo staccatissimo. Later, it appears as if the percussionist is playing
the most traditional of European noisemakers -- spoons.
Additional percussion arrives from the pianist applying pedal pressure
as he dampens the strings and hammering on the instrument's sides. Akchoté
adds harsh guitar strums; Ferrari abbreviated keyboard patterns, while
working his way up the scale with his right-handed single notes; and Auzet's
output morphs from xylophone-like slides to batá-like drum beats.
This primitive-futuristic dichotomy is present as early as the more-than
151/2 minute "Sur le contraste", where rolling clave-like nerve
beats from the drummer meet warbling guitar reverberations and a repeated,
low frequency piano part. Circling this are unconnected timbres that could
be paper being balled and crumpled, push button telephone dial tones,
or squirrels munching on the piano's wood.
Full force, two-handed piano crescendos and their echoes as well as arpeggio
manipulation of the internal piano strings are then exposed. So are chromatic,
banjo-like picking and single notes with bottleneck reverberation. Auzet
adds to the sonic soup, at points by exposing sharp objects being dragged
along cymbal tops, spinning unselected cymbals, and somehow creating an
electric hand drill buzz.
With key clips and flailing guitar fills sharing aural space with distortion
that works itself into Bronx cheer territory, organ-like tones that reconstitute
themselves as a robotic cha cha cha, and wriggling, atmosphere-piercing
sounds, there's little downtime on the session.
Making a case for the sonic marriage of musique concrète, pure
improv and folkloric impulses, the CD not only confirms one composer's
effort as an improviser, but is also a polymorphous listening experience
in itself.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing: Tenderloin: 1. SoMa 2. Cow Hollow 3. Amoeba cleaned me
out 4. Tenderloin 5. Tien-I-lou 6. Mission Dolores 7. Castro 8. Laguna
9. Nihonmachi 10. Crooked Lombard 11. Left Luggage 12. Presidio 13. Yerba
Track Listing: Impro: 1. Sur le contraste 2. Sur la pulsation 3. Sur le
continu 4. Sur le minimum 5. Sur le rythme
Personnel: Tenderloin: Dave Tucker (guitar and electronics); Ernesto Diaz-Infante
(amplified acoustic guitar); Danielle DeGruttola (cello, electric cello*);
Damon Smith (bass); Scott R. Looney ([except #11] real-time laptop processing);
Garth Powell (drums, percussion and idiophone)
Personnel: Impro: Noël Akchoté (guitar and objects); Luc Ferrari
(piano and objects); Roland Auzet (percussion and objects)
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