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Archive for October, 2010

Day 155. Charles Mingus, Jean Sibelius.

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

Last night was a stack of Mingus, and a stack of Sibelius. Both who were pretty amazing artists with a strong sense of history behind them. On the one hand you have Sibelius who’s output through the first half of the 20th century sounded more like a polishing of the romantic tradition. And it is hard not to get a sense that he was a composer born about 50 years too late. But I while my inclination is to think that someone writing in such an out of date style shouldn’t necessarily be celebrated, Sibelius was able to write symphonies and chamber music that while sounding older also had a very personal stamp. His orchestration especially can be very unique, and there are times where I hear granular synthesis textures that remind me of Sibelius string writing. At times there are masses of sound that are dense but clear at the same time in his music, and analyzing the score doesn’t always immediately show how he does it.

During my time at Berkeley the orchestra played the Fifth Symphony, and this piece still really holds a special place for me. The music is great, but I also think Sibelius was able to create a sense of urgency in a cool tricky way between the ‘two parts’ of the first movement (originally, these were two separate movements). The first part is quite slow, but as the transition happens, what were once quarter notes become whole notes… and as the tempo increases the performers eyes have to scan the page faster and faster. I remember feeling like the page turns were hectic. As a result of this, of the musicians playing the music having to read the page so much faster, I think he created momentum in the music as well. I would have to look again, but if I remember correctly the whole second section of the movement could have been written with a slower notation (similar to the first part – where what is a fast whole note would become a quarter-note), but my guess is the fast pace wouldn’t quite hold. The other result of this is that almost every note that is played is a downbeat. It is a great example of how much the notation of a musical idea can influence how it is played, and it is something I still think about constantly when I start putting musical thoughts down on paper.

Mingus’ connections to an older time go back to his childhood hero Duke Ellington. And he even was employed (and was the only person ever fired by) Duke Ellington early in his career. Mingus never lost respect for Ellington, and even worked with him in other situations later on, but Ellington’s style permeated Mingus’s throughout his career. You can often hear Ellington in Mingus’s orchestration and melodic shaping and phrasing, but mostly there is an sense of energy and style that Mingus seems to keep alive. And most of all, he took his position as a connector between old and new very seriously. He led workshops at community colleges in California, and kept the older traditions alive. Part of this tradition included performing standards, but making them a groups own, keeping them alive by changing them. Listening to ‘Mood Indigo’ across different sessions shows how the music kept growing with Mingus at the lead.

And like Duke Ellington, Mingus as band-leader seemed to have a great time making room for the musicians he has brought together. There is the occasional bass solo (and recording engineers certainly would bring the bass out in a recording a bit), but mostly you hear quite a bit of the other players that he has assembled for a recording. And he places these players in great relief to the history he is making them a part of… you hear Mingus, Ellington, homage to pre-WW II and even pre-WW I jazz styles, as well as the very vocal encouragement from the band leader. Call and response, going back to the earliest of jazz and blues traditions is part of the excitement of many Mingus recordings. And while so much looks to this history, Mingus is a great composer and innovator. I’m sure he saw himself as adding new material to that history and he took his role there very seriously. It’s what all great artists need to do.

We’ll just say Day 154… Miles Davis, Grateful Dead… lots more…

Sunday, October 17th, 2010

Well… it’s been a couple of weeks. The first week I was in Italy for concerts and workshops and just didn’t have discs with me. It was a fair trade off, to say the least. Then last week was dealing with jet-lag as well as just adjusting to teaching again… but in the past couple of nights I have gotten back into the swing of things. Last night was some Radiohead, The Spinanes and Oasis, tonight features a two-disc opportunistic greatest hits Grateful Dead set (‘The Arista Years’) as well as the first Dick’s Picks, the complete Miles Davis ‘In A Silent Way’ sessions and an Arvo Pärt disc.

I say ‘opportunistic’ about the ‘Arista Years’ discs because they came out within about a year of Jerry Garcia dying. For the label to just throw together the collection was surely a way to try and milk the Arista catalog for what it could. And while there are some good songs on ‘Terrapin Station’ and ‘In The Dark’, for the most part all these albums sounded weak compared to live concerts (which is amazing… 1977 is a time of generally high quality Dead shows, and the studio albums from around that time some lifeless). What is even more amazing to me is that this collection represents 18 years of the band’s 30 year existence, yet a small portion of their recordings. So while in some ways it seems like the release of the disc may have been a little ‘too soon’, at the same time I can understand why it was put together. With the exception of ‘In The Dark’, I imagine none of these albums really paid for themselves. And for the most part, the collection puts together just about the songs I would want off these albums. I certainly wasn’t ever going to put down cash to buy any of these records, not when I could probably get just about all of them in great live performances. But in a two disc set, well, not bad. I bought it. And so it seems a little cold to me on the one hand that just after this band has officially called it quits after Jerry died that their label would carve the work up for such commercial purposes. At the same time… sure am glad they did! I certainly wouldn’t have paid for the ‘Complete Arista Years With Outakes’ discs.

Which is basically what Columbia did for Miles Davis. The box sets they released over the past decade or so that capture his output during his time at Columbia are nothing short of amazing, and I think the ‘In A Silent Way’ sessions is the last of the Miles box sets I have to rip. While only three discs, the liner notes comment that this set covers about six months worth of sessions that have Miles leaving the Quintet behind while looking ahead to what will become ‘Bitches Brew’. While I would never question the genius that is ‘Bitches Brew’ I like ‘In A Silent Way’ better. The music is haunting at times, at other times it is stretching out and searching. And some of the tracks almost feel like younger Miles Davis. It is experimentation building on foundation, and it is amazing to hear the progression while listening to the discs from beginning to end. The rehearsals that were recorded also show how this music was shaped in the studio, and while they are rehearsals they are just as exciting as the material that made its way onto the final discs. Also of note is the presence more and more of the electric piano and organ (sometimes there are three keyboards playing on a single track!) as well as more electric guitar (welcome John McLaughlin). The tunes get a funkier, sometimes denser, feeling as a result.