rare and forgotten experimental music
Showing posts with label updates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label updates. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Dickie Landry on CD & LP


Hurrah! Dickie Landry's fantastic Fifteen Saxophones album has been re-released by the very, very fine folks at Unseen Worlds records. I highly recommend everything in their catalog - only six releases so far, but all are fantastic, underheard gems. Their Elodie Lauten CDs are among my favorite re-releases of the past few years.
You can buy Fifteen Saxophones on CD or limited LP here. Only $10 including shipping in North America!


I'll try to have a new album up sometime next week.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Stephen Montague - Slow Dance on a Burial Ground



What's this? Two posts in two weeks? And more coming!
I'm trying to make my posting a bit more regular, rather than the super-infrequent posts of the past. Another post is coming up next Sunday. I can't promise that I'll be able to maintain a once-a-week posting rate, but I'll definitely aim for at least one entry per month. Anyway, on to the music!




Stephen Montague doesn't seem to be a terribly well-known composer. I never see him mentioned in lists of post-minimalist composers, possibly because he's UK-based, though he was born and raised in the US. Maybe he's better-known in Europe, I don't know. I only discovered him because I was checking out every LP on Lovely Records I could find. No real internet presence either, aside from a bio and work list at his publisher's page.

Montague is one of the group of post-minimalist composers who combined elements of minimalism with romantic classical music, like John (Coolidge) Adams, Daniel Lentz, and others. He's got a number of CDs out, of which I have a couple, on ASV and Continuum Records. They're nice albums, some orchestral stuff, some chamber music and some mixed electronic works, and I would recommend them to anyone interested in the more accessible end of the post-minimalists, but this here LP is rather different.

Side A of the LP is taken up by the 24 minute piece which gives the LP its title, "Slow Dance on a Burial Ground", a tape piece constructed from electronic sounds, recordings of log drums, field recordings and folk flutes. It reminds me a little of Alvin Curran's early work, with its mixture of drones, electronics and field recordings, but Montague's piece here has a strong ethnic/folky element, what with the prominent flutes. It's a beautiful piece, static and textural, which sticks with a consistent sound and feel throughout.

"Paramell I" is the next track, for muted trombone and "muted" piano. Fantastic new music trombonist James Fulkerson plays the trombone, while Montague plays the piano, presumably muted with some fabric or something. Much of the piece features the two instruments playing in unison together, very fast staccato notes, sometimes with longer drone notes from the trombone. Surprisingly the sounds of the trombone and piano blend together, and it can be hard to tell which instrument is which, and when they play together it creates a nice combined texture.

"Paramell Va" (meaning Paramell 5, variation a) is a somewhat similar piece for solo piano, here played by Philip Mead. It features very fast staccato playing on the piano, alternating between high and low chords. I could again compare it to Charlemagne Palestine's Strumming Music, but this piece has a very, very different character. It's more melodic rather than textural, and not what I would call droney at all. It's minimalistically repetitive, but with a more natural, free-flowing character than, say, Philip Glass' piano music, with fantastic crescendos caused by the use of the sustain pedal.

This is a really excellent LP from an under-appreciated composer, and certainly the best work of his that I've heard. It was released on LP on the amazing Lovely Records in 1984, and is one of the very few items on that label that has never been re-released. Lovely seems to have been doing some archival releases lately, though, so maybe that'll happen someday.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Update

The always fantastic New World Records has done the commendable job of compiling and releasing Alvin Curran's 70's solo albums in a 3CD set - Songs and Views from the Magnetic Garden, Fiori Chiari Fiori Oscuri, Canti Illuminati I and The Works are now available together in a very nice looking package. I have removed the MP3s of Fiori Chiari from this site, since I don't want to hurt their sales at all, but if you're one of the 400 or so people who downloaded that fantastic album from this site, please buy this set from New World.

I'll be posting a new album soonish, perhaps a different Curran LP to make up for taking down Fiori Chiari.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Updates, again

Again, sorry for the long time without updates. I'm in school finals now, but should be finished-ish soon, and should be able to get some stuff up sometime in December. Next things coming up are probably Laurie Spiegel's "Expanding Universe" & Pauline Oliveros' amazing, stupidly out of print 2LP "The Well and the Gentle". Stay tuned

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Updates

Good to see some people are actually getting to this site & downloading the music. I've been away for a few weeks but now I'm back & plan on posting some more music.. Once I get into the swing of things I'll try to be posting at least one entry per week. BTW, any suggestions on good places on the web to promote this here blog would be appreciated. I haven't quite figured this blogging thing out yet.

upcoming entries include
- Alvin Curran - Fiori Chiari (Amazing 2nd solo LP from Curran, released in the mid 70s)
- Ingram Marshall - The Fragility Cycles
- Laurie Spiegel - The Expanding Universe
- David Rosenboom & Don Buchla - Collaboration in Performance
- Fred Rzewski - Plays Rzewski, Braxton & Eisler