|
|
RICHARD TEITELBAUM
Blends
New Albion
NA 118
QUARTET
NATTO
Headlands
482 Music
482-1018
Adapting
the sounds of traditional Japanese music to Western sensibilities has
occupied Occidental musicians from the time contact was first made in
the mid-19th century. Mixing electronics, computers and acoustic instruments
has been another leitmotif of the mid-20th century.
That
the musicians on these CDs attempt to meld both of these concepts is noteworthy
enough; that they add a dollop of free improvisation to the other ingredients
ratchets up the interest factor.
Each
session features the shakuhachi or bamboo flute plus electronics. Prominent
among those forging contemporary shakuhachi music, Japanese sensei Katsuya
Yokoyama is featured on Blends, playing music composed by Richard Teitelbaum,
who also plays a variety of computers and synthesizers here. The two compositions
were recorded 12 years apart with different musical partners. The title
track adds the percussion of Indian-born Trilok Gurtu, while "Kyotaku/Denshi"
adds jazzers, bassist Mark Dresser and drummer Gerry Hemingway.
Teitelbaum,
who first studied shakuhachi with Yokoyama in 1976, has always been interested
in forms beyond common so-called serious music. Besides membership in
the live electronic group MEV, he also played with a wide variety of musicians
including the bassist's and drummer's associate Anthony Braxton, Steve
Lacy and George Lewis.
Natto
Quartet ups the ante on both sides of the equation. On the Eastern side
is shakuhachi, played by Philip Gelb, who has studied the ancient Japanese
flute since 1988, and usually works in improvised music, alongside folks
like British saxophonist John Butcher. Also featured is kotoist Shoko
Hikage, who studied Japanese classical techniques on her many stringed
instrument.
Representing
Occidental sounds are Tim Perkis, founding member of the interactive computer
ensemble The Hub, who uses electronics-based, customized software and
hardware, and Chris Brown, another Huber and an electronic musician and
teacher who brought his prepared piano to improv bands with the late tenorman
Glenn Spearman among others.
Definite
program music, "Blends" (the composition), recorded in 1983,
plays on the differences between Yokoyama's winsome traditional shakuchachi
sound and the slow moving electronic pulses created by Teitelbaum. His
synthesizers perform a dual function, approximating the sound of gagaku
court music with emulations of the shakuhachi and sho, while inventing
shimmering electronic wiggles, swelling organ pulses and string section
suggestions. More meditative and gentle than the other disc, the trance-like
sounds produced by the blend of shakuhachi and electronics is only interrupted
occasionally by Western percussion or tabla pulses from Gurtu.
Subdivided into four sections with an equivalent back-story, "Kyotaku/Denshi,"
which was recorded 18 years later, finds the two main soloists even more
accomplished on their chosen instruments. Related to the mythology surrounding
his instrument, the flute sensei replicates the sound of small bell at
one point and at others pushes out those jagged, ghostly whirlwind bass
tones we're familiar with from samurai films involving menacing spirits.
With
his PowerBook creating sounds as disparate as European-based, romantic
keyboard pulses and harsh sampled percussion, Teitelbaum's bi-tonal melange
resembles traditional Chinese as much as Japanese music. Then when the
irregular rhythmic throb provided by Hemingway and Dresser is finally
obvious -- they seem a tad unutilized on the CD -- some of the sounds
seem to resemble those created by Italian film composer
Ennio
Morricone. Teitelbaum adds yet another lick to the blend as the suite
ends, with Yokoyama, playing his shakuhachi as traditionally as he can,
solos over keyboard samples of Western-influenced Japanese pop music called
Enka.
Nothing
can be linked to pop music on Headlands, with each of the seven tracks
a quartet-created instant composition. On "Yuba," for instance,
Gelb first sounds as if he's blowing into an elongated plastic tube, then
creates his own rendition of those ghostly samurai tones, while facing
down crackles and accentuated metallic hints from Perkins. Brown's mobile
preparations turn to high intensity chording, as the occasional pluck
from Hikage's koto gathers speed as she begins strumming away on it as
if she had a table top steel guitar.
Utilizing
many of the positions from her instrument's ji or moveable bridges, the
kotoist reconfigures her sound on "Kukicha" as half gagaku and
half Appalachian finger picking. Meanwhile, the bamboo flute is soloing
with such unforced airiness that you could confuse that pure tone for
one coming from a human soprano. While he trills, Brown works his inside-the-piano
prepared technique, as drones and percussion suggestions arise from Perkins'
electronics.
Elsewhere,
knuckle-dusters on the side of and inside the piano create more percussive
intimations. The electronics let out Bronx cheers or create electro-acoustic
shrills as the shakuhachi purrs out single tones. Overall, the stroked
plinks and plucks possibly arise from the 21-string koto. Gelb can match
stylists like Butcher or Evan Parker for circular breathing, or hack out
abrasive, rubato tones, while at times Brown produces fingertip legerdemain
from his felt pads and other preparations, delineating microtonal fantasias
using note patterns that are as unique as they are unexpected..
Happily,
none of the groups represented here have subjugated Oriental sounds to
Occidental ones nor used Japanese scales and clusters for mere exoticism.
By trying -- and for the most part succeeding -- in blending at least
four different musical traditions, they've created CDs that can be investigated
by both confident traditionalists and followers of the new.
--
Ken Waxman
Track
Listing Blends: 1. Blends+ Kyotaku/Denshi*; 2. Kyorei (False Bell)/Imperial
Procession; 3. Kikichu's Dream; 4. Samurai Combat; 5. Ronin's Lament/The
Coming of the West
Track Listing Headlands: 1. Miso; 2. Soba; 3. Yiba; 4. Nuka; 5. Kukicha;
6. Sake; 7. Mochi
Personnel
Blends: Katsuya Yokoyama, shakuhachi; Richard Teitelbaum, micromoog and
polymoog synthesizers, Kurzweil K200 sampler and Macintosh PowerBook;
Mark Dresser, bass*; Gerry Hemingway, drums*; Trilok Gurtu, tabla and
percussion+
Personnel
Headlands: Philip Gelb, shakuhachi; Shoko Hikage, koto; Chris Brown, piano;
Tim Perkis, computer
|