May 2010
29 posts
1 tag
Ring carbons
The ring carbon atoms in substituted benzenes exert a larger attraction on the valency electron cloud of the hydrogen atom resulting in an increase in the C-H force constant and a decrease in the corresponding bond length. I’m on the train, and that’s how it reads on the laptop of my next-seat neighbor. I thought you wanted to know. I’m also sure that you’d want to know...
May 25th
Meticulously written down spontaneous folk music
Is prog a dirty word for you? Ok, I will try not to bore you with childhood reminiscences again. But here we have one more guy who meant a lot to me when I was little. My favorite record is Gravity from 1980, and as I’ve made you buy no more than four or five records while writing this blog, get that and we’re cool. Since then, Fred Frith has done a lot of stuff. He has become a...
May 24th
1 tag
Hypnagogic jazz
This morning I rode a shuttle with Andy Hamilton of The Wire. I wasn’t quite there yet, else I’d have brought up a serious subject you’d all be very interested in. Instead we mostly discussed the toad in the hotel pond which is quite the discovery of the festival. I mean, he croaks in tongues. He’s just so happy to have conquered a kingdom that I suspect it hasn’t...
May 24th
1 tag
Not a single straight note
I’m sorry, I’ll have to take you deep into my past. I’m the kind of guy that has A Taste of DNA on vinyl. That’s Lindsay’s no wave band from a long time ago. Can’t say I enjoyed it much, but when I was little, it was an important statement for me to have it. By the time I was aware enough to follow his moves, Lindsay played with the Golden Palominos and his...
May 24th
1 tag
We want our Tyshawn back
Strange gig from Tyshawn Sorey so far. Well, not really strange. It’s good music, Ingrid Laubrock and Kris Davis are on form, most of the material is written by Sorey and sounds distinct, they don’t just play stuff, they are a band, but … Tyshawn Sorey does not play like Tyshawn Sorey. I mean like I think he should. That static groove thing, that Steve Coleman thing with the...
May 24th
1 tag
A sense of privacy
Back on the big stage a set from Mari Kvien Brunvoll. She sits alone on stage, with a loopstation and some small instruments, and plays music with herself that depends on a certain sense of privacy. Tough enough in such packed house even without cameramen bustling about, which is why she didn’t want a stream. That’s unfortunate, but it makes sense.
May 24th
1 tag
The sweetest melodies
Now that was amazing. Brilliant. If awesome would still mean anything, that would be the word. I’m sitting here pointing at something that is too great for words, making funny noises. I’m still in shock. This was one of the side events, therefore unfortunately unstreamed, a trio of Peter Brötzmann, Mats Gustafsson, and Ken Vandermark at the protestant church here. Let me get this...
May 24th
1 tag
The shadow of the girl on the flying trapeze
Oh, and I just notice I have a picture which sort of shows what Paolo Angeli was after yesterday. I listened in on an interview he did later, and he’s quite serious about wanting to enchant us all, about the spiritual background, and the fact that everybody involved is friends or family. Here he’s contemplating the shadow of the girl on the flying trapeze.
May 24th
1 tag
The middle of the road
Toshi Reagon & BigLovely. Before I start bitching again, let me quote a tech who shall remain anonymous: “This music lacks any kind of character. I don’t know, the main acts are quite weak somehow.” Amen to that. Everybody had fun, though.
May 24th
1 tag
Campfire music
We had advance warning. Bill Frisell and Arve Henrikson had never ever played together, not in public, and not even in a practice room. They blithely took the stage and drove the first number against a tree firmly. What they did with the wreck of that was not exactly great music, but their attempt to make something work, and above all, to entertain the audience, was so honest and likeable, that...
May 23rd
1 tag
Orotund sonorities
This is the second time today I see Paolo Angeli. He’s in completely different mode now, hammering out bass notes (on the one) while elegiacally bowing his Sardinian guitar (think an acoustic Sigur Rós). He’s accompanied by Takumi Fukushima on viola and very grungy vocals and Ganesh Anandan on frame drum and whistling. They do some kind of faux folk laced with lazy soundtrack muzak. ...
May 23rd
1 tag
Ghost voices
So. What can I say. He came, saw, and delivered. And, one has to add, he looks really good. That was the first thing I thought, what a beautiful man. It’s become sort of a critical trope to stress that the old firebrand these days also plays surprisingly tender passages. (Which is not really surprising if you’ve heard Schwarzwaldfahrt from 1977 with Han Bennink. Hey, I think...
May 23rd
1 tag
A lifetime of tinnitus
I have a confession to make. I didn’t go see Grubenklang, although with Frank Gratkowski they had a true Plush artist in their midst. How can you ever forgive me. Instead I went to the Concerts in the Dark series because I wanted to hear John Wall. Definitely worth it. He began with waveforms crashing on a digital shore. (This is pure computer music, where Wall improvises with prepared...
May 23rd
1 tag
The Teufelsgeiger mode
Paolo Angeli’s modified Sardinian guitar is a thing of beauty. It has the head of a violin rammed into its guitar head, carrying a set of slack strings that lead to a double bass bridge glued unto the body right above the endpin of a cello. It has five footpedals that trigger metal claws which beat on the strings. It has a little motored ventilator inside which plucks at the strings in an...
May 23rd
1 tag
Pop acts
Wait. Let me get back to the Miss Platnum show I copped out of yesterday. She does pop with a heavily Balkan tinge. My difficulty with this is: I have seen Fanfare Ciocarlia. They take no prisoners. Their music is wild and woolly, but still they have no problem with a mainstream audience, on the contrary, even uptight folks like me start shaking their booty. Their kind of music has nothing to...
May 22nd
1 tag
Every move counts
That was good. How was that so good. It was just Bill Frisell, Eyvind Kang, and a drummer named Rudy Royston having fun. They played a rock number, they played something from Mali (which I can’t point my finger to, though I have that song somewhere), they even played a jump tune where Frisell suddenly remembered a whole book of Charlie Christian licks. It didn’t come across as that...
May 22nd
1 tag
Savour the note
Spectacular gig by the Steve Lehman Octet. I wish they would let up now and then. This is the first time I see Tyshawn Sorey on drums. Spectacular. I wish he would let up now and then. (He has a nagging snare, I love that.) Will he play like that on his own gig? I’m totally impressed. But I do think I’d prefer the record where I suspect they maybe will let up now and then and savour...
May 22nd
1 tag
Strange objects
Ok, Carlo Mombelli and the Prisoners of Strange just wasn’t for me. Thick electric bass, mostly ostinati, now and then leaving that for jazz rock licks, over that some sub Jon Hassell trumpet sound (I’m not talking about the playing, I didn’t have sufficient patience to analyze that), plus the band’s only asset, Siya Makuzeni on trombone and vocals. Well, I can’t...
May 22nd
1 tag
Sloppy alliances
Really nice set from trumpeter Sanne van Hek’s new group. (Ahm, if that sounds like I knew the name five minutes ago, I didn’t. She’s now composer in residence in Moers, no idea how heavy that is.) It began like a live emulation of trying out your new loopstation. The first layer was some crackle from a computer, then a few bass notes, trumpet and bari, piano, trumpet sampled...
May 22nd
1 tag
Don't hear me
I sure am a mean bastard. These guys are all in their early 20s. They have a funny name: Super Seaweed Sex Scandal. Now if everybody in their early 20s were in such a band the world would be a better place. They have quite smart compositions. They know all the moves, they can do the skronk, they can do the half contemporary classical, they can do the back and forth aacm-style, they can do music...
May 22nd
For the die-hard fans
(pun intended): Miss Platnum.
May 21st
1 tag
A matter of casting
Like in a movie, good casting is the key. If you have clear roles that border on stereotype and find the right faces to fill them with life, chances are you have a hit. For the first half of the concert, it was an absolute hit. Colin Stetson on bass sax did a very impressive strongman act grounding the trio, all bulging muscles and energy, laying down circularly breathed drones and wicked single...
May 21st
1 tag
Second-lining the Six
Wildly enjoyable set from a duo called Donkey Monkey, which is made up of Eve Risser on piano and Yuko Oshima on drums, both completely unknown to me. Very nice bitonalities from the piano, not like you’d usually expect in that kind of context, no mock-twelve-tone aesthetic, but rather a hint of ragtime sublimations as tried out by serious French composers. Now if I’d want to launch...
May 21st
1 tag
Aurora polaris
… Northern lights entered through a wormhole on stage and the big band rode out on a blissful finale …
May 21st
1 tag
Non-combustible modified foam
Miles Davis has been invented for the Norwegians. No? Oh wait, trumpeter Palle Mikkelborg is actually Danish. This started out as if Strangers in the Night had been part of the Ascenseur pour l’Échafaud soundtrack, only with the hangman leaning on a synth (for which he should be hung). But also shades of early electric Miles played through non-combustible modified foam (I have that from...
May 21st
1 tag
1970
Terje rypping it, he’s still at it. What I like most about this pic: it has aged so well. Remember, this is 1970 :-)
May 21st
1 tag
Warming the taste buds
   Damn. My opening gambit has been destroyed. I haven’t been called a ripper on this here blog. The good folks at Plush home base (Hi Kat and Matt!) have called me that everywhere else but here. The epithet was used in every piece of blurbage but here. I was depending on it. What do I do? So I’ve shipped the family to the Balticum to be able to be in Moers. They’re lounging on the beach, I could...
May 21st
1 tag
Moers improvisation from global talents
The 39th moers festival swings into action this weekend - celebrating the vitality and joie de vivre of contemporary improvisation from around the world. Watch concerts, interviews and behind the scenes musical anaylsis streamed live here at Plushmusic.tv. This gem of a festival sources and catalyses real talent and risk taking - bringing together artists from different generations, continents...
May 18th
Frankfurter Rundschau review of LOFT festival
Its been a little while since we filled these pages with insights from LOFT, brought to you by our trusty live blogger Lutz - so here’s a view from the outside. Ulrich Kurth wrote this piece for the Frankfurter Rundschau, here’s our translation. Read the original German post here.  Inner Mogolia is not a real place but rather a vision, somewhat like the mythical Shambhala. The...
May 4th