|
|
MARCOS FERNANDES
Hybrid Vigor
Accretions
ALP-027 CD
Sound Art at its most elastic, with its ever-shifting cast of characters
and usual sounds, Hybrid Vigor could be a piece of cinema waiting to be
shot. But considering Hollywood's obsession with blow-'em-up blockbusters,
this narrative of mixed improvisations put together by percussionist/tape
manipulator Marcos Fernandes is probably truer to the artist's eye on
CD than anything would be on film stock.
One of the founders of San Diego's Trummerflora Collective, Fernandes
was born in Yokohama, Japan of Portuguese/Japanese heritage, and raised
Catholic in a Buddhist country. Thus this disc includes hybrid elements
of out-rock, so-called trance music, ethnic sounds and pure sonic manipulation.
Despite the addition of synthesized sounds, for instance, a couple of
pieces are mostly percussion explosions, analogous to field recordings
of ostensibly primitive natives working their polyrhythmic magic on sound-makers
that appear to be snare drums, cymbals, kettle drums, triangles, cow bells,
xylophones, steel drums, sound trees and sheets of metal. Another track
is a mix-and-match compendium of ambient recordings taped in San Diego,
Kona, Hawaii and Asakusa, Tokyo and Yokohama, Japan. There's even an instrumental
with the New Economy title of "Convergence" that, despite the
name, ends up being a muted elaboration of tone-melding, featuring Lisle
Ellis' bass, Philip Gelb's shakuhachi and what sounds like Fernandes working
out on sticks, hand drums, basket shaker and small objects resonating
on a drum head.
But the key elements in his vision appear to be those tracks with extended
personnel. Built around a shifting organ continuo and a metronomic drum
beat "Bullets For Ballots," highlighted male and female voices
discussing in Spanish what's probably a South or Central American election,
with "soldiers" one of the few words that comes through clearly.
Soon the ghostly bamboo flute and constant piano vamp are succeeded by
an extended screechy alto saxophone solo in counterpoint with racing piano
chords and what could be described as No Wave peal point percussion.
Repetitive in an AMM or fusion-era-Miles-Davis sort of way, "Undercurrents"
highlights a radio broadcast where mentions of Osama Bin Lade vie for
attention with reports onpetty crimes and traffic accidents plus weather
reports and season's greetings. Later, Michael Dessen's plunger trombone
chorus jockeys for auditory space with Jason Robinson's squeaky alto sax,
as well as facing a constant barrage of what sound like processed electronic
sounds, sampled keyboard echoes, mechanized swooshes and static.
Dessen playing extended cadenzas, that neatly sidestep mainstream jazz
trombone, is accounted for on "The Orange Line," at nearly 15
minutes, the CD's most lengthy number. On the same tune, guitarist Scott
Homan's contribution range from mere plinks to protracted amp buzzes to
a whole section of chicken-scratch rhythm guitar beats. Moving between
overt jazz-like allusions, which include a walking bass solo from Joscha
Oetz and a standard percussion turnaround, non-generic tones make their
appearance as well. There's what appear to be calliope music, sampler
swirls and an unvarying percussion cadence arising from a combination
of Robert Montoya, Nathan Hubbard and Fernandes himself. Finally, the
funk-influenced number ends with voices speaking Spanish. A five-minute
concerto of short-wave static, surf sounds and an actuality featuring
Fernandes' late uncle Chris playing a Hawaiian ditty, the final track
reifies the mixtures of electronic modernism and ethnic universality that
characterizes the rest of the session.
Overall, this CD is a fine achievement, and one that piques interest in
the composer's future creations.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing: 1. Port of Call+; 2. Science Boy#; 3. Undercurrents&@;
4. Convergence*; 5. Bullets For Ballots+%; 6. Manifested/Manifesting!#;
7. The Orange Line&+@; 8. Scintillation (Don't Sing Aloha When I Go)^+=
Personnel: Michael Dessen, trombone &; Philip Gelb, shakuhachi*; Jason
Robinson, bass flute; alto saxophone (tracks 5, 7); Scott Homan, guitar
&; Damon Holzborn, guitar and electronics (tracks 2); Lisle Ellis,
bass*; Joscha Oetz, bass &; Marcos Fernandes, percussion (except tracks
1, 8), shortwave^, tapes+, sampler%; Kristy Cheadle, percussion, handclaps
(track 2); Nathan Hubbard, percussion, handclaps#, percussion and electronics&;
Hans Fjellestad, synthesizer (track 2) piano (track 5); Robert Montoya,
sampler@ percussion! ; David Gould, percussion (track 6); Marcello Radulovich,
guitar, radio (track 3), bamboo flute, (track 5); Chris Fernandes, ukulele=
|