

|
If you've not already caught these reviews from Sweden's Stephen Fruitman (who occasionally posts to Hyperreal's Ambient Mailing List), here are his latest. Stephen's attentive ears and expressive thoughts are appreciated by many, and I'm glad to offer this forum to my e-friend. |
- Simon Haram: Alone... (Black Box)
- Simon Haram is a saxophonist who has apparently worked closely with
"minimalist" composers like John Adams and Michael Nyman, several of whose
pieces are covered here on his new CD Alone..., all to fine
effect. Haram restricts himself to the soprano sax on all the cuts, often
accompanied by a small ensemble of strings. Very pretty music indeed. His
cover of Bowie and Eno's Warszawa is surprisingly faithful to the
original, or perhaps even closer to Philip Glass' orchestral arrangement.
Over a discreetly pulsing bass and small string ensemble, the saxophone
naturally takes the melodic, narrative lead, even "voicing" the Bowie
nonsense vocals, the only instance on the record when a chord of dissonance
is struck. In the final moments, the saxophone combines nicely with the
strings to bring it all home. A fine CD, worth having if you are curious to
hear the saxophone as a mild, melodious ambient instrument, though perhaps
not so much for the Eno cover, which though pleasant indeed, is hardly
essential. However, this CD provides yet another example of how "seriously"
Eno is now being taken as a "real" composer rather than the fringe figure
critics have regarded him as throughout the eighties and most of the
present decade.
- Gavin Bryars: The North Shore (Materiali Sonori)
- The name of Gavin Bryars is often associated with high-concept minimalistic
works like Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet or The Sinking of the
Titanic; I've even seen them pop up on All-Time Greatest Ambient lists
compiled here. And rightly so. But the English composer also scribes less
grandiose pieces as well, and three of them are now available on a
wonderful little album released by Materiali Sonori in Italy. The North
Shore is an evocation of the coastline at Whitby in North Yorkshire, where
Bryars spent his childhood summers, displaying (ambiently speaking) as much
evocative power of "real" landscapes as Eno's Dunwich Beach, Autumn 1960.
A fine version of this already exists on A Man in a Room, Gambling, but
here Bryars has rearranged it for cello and piano and the result is
stunning. The players are members of the tiny ensemble Harmonia, and while
only two of them appear on The North Shore, pianist Alessandra Garosi and
cellist Damiano Puliti are joined by remaining member Orio Odori on
clarinet for Intermezzo, commissioned directly from Bryars by Harmonia.
Finally, the cellist withdraws and Odori and Garosi approach Allegrasco
(also previously available, on ECM's After the Requiem and with a larger
ensemble including violinist Alexander Balanescu and guitarist Bill
Frisell) as a duet featuring luscious, fluid clarinet lines. Lyrical and
melancholic, the three pieces provide an excellent showcase for Harmonia,
who perform throughout with consummate musicianship and admirable
restraint. A brief 42 minutes in length, it is still perhaps the finest
chamber music release of the year.
- Antonio Testa & Alio Die: Healing Herb's Spirit and
Five Thousand Spirits: Mesmeric Revelation (Crowd Control
Activities)
- Two collaborative efforts starring Italian ambient minimalist Stefano
Musso, aka Alio Die. Healing Herb's Spirit is a perfect example of
everything that is right with ethno-ambient music. Gorgeous,
slowly-evolving atmospheres - perhaps best exemplified on the track
Icaros - conjuring both comfort and unease are lent pulse and physicality
through Antonio Testa's exotic percussion, ranging from the rattling of sea
shells to beating of the "water pumpkin". A strangely aquatic atmosphere
dominates throughout, but be wary of the undertow.
Trading under the name Five Thousand Spirits, Mesmeric Revelation pairs
Musso with Raffaele Serra in five untitled pieces. The first, at over
thirty minutes taking up half the record, is an exploration of subtle
drones flavoured with sparing percussive elements and the odd synthesizer
twinkle. Stellar. In comparison the four remaining tracks appear as
miniatures (on track three, Serra makes excellent use of a harmonium),
brief exercises in timbre and tone, interesting but overshadowed by the
majesty of the first track.
- Bill Laswell: Rasa: Serene Timeless Joy (Meta)
- Rasa may just be Bill Laswell's finest exercise in True Ambient ever.
Layered over soundscapes captured at the Buddhist monument Borobudur and
its surrounding sacred mountains in Java, magical tones, bell-like loops
and soft tom-toms develop organically for a full hour. Rich and varied, its
evolution is both linear and cyclical. The piece quite simply "breathes",
in the way in which a classic Vidna Obmana record does. Wave upon wave of
sonic stillness washes up and recedes, only to reveal new and unexpected
charms. And interestingly for a Laswell album, the bass doesn't make its
appearance until the thirty-sixth minute, and then only as a brief
interlude. Truly timeless music.
- Aki Onda: Beautiful Contradiction and Un Petit Tour (All Access)
- A new voice emerges from Japan and immediately stakes its claim to a
territory all its own. Thirty-one-year-old Aki Onda has paid his dues in
elektro, noise and hiphop, as well as being a sought-after producer, and
now emerges as an ambitious soundscaper of great gifts. A mature hand
guides the sounds culled from collaborators as diverse as Europeans Simon
Fisher Turner, Blixa Bargeld and NoÎl AkchotÚ and brilliant Japanese
players like Jyoji Sawada, Kazutoki Umeza and Onda himself (cassette
recorder, sampler, programming), with a handful of American avantjazz names
like Steven Bernstein and Ben Perowsky thrown in for good measure.
Recorded
in London, Tokyo, New York and Paris, his first solo CD Beautiful
Contradiction has the atmosphere of an imaginary movie soundtrack. Opening
with Chrysanthemum, an ambient piece of great beauty which then gives way
to the sampler/flugelhorn/guitar duel of Red Light, the record thus
embarks on a fifty-minute journey featuring an array of styles and
top-flight musicians so diverse yet so cohesive, and including occasional
vocals in German (the wonderfully suggestive In Windungen sung by
Bargeld), Turkish and English (a slightly seedy story of doomed love
growled forth by Linda Sharrock). Rosemary is a remarkable composition
featuring the trilling of glassharps propelled along a bed of electronics
by snare drum, while Petal is a short jazz chamber piece that wouldn't
sound out of place on one of John Zorn's Masada ensemble recordings.
Beautiful Contradiction dwells at the crossroads of acoustic and
electronic music, extracting the essences of both and producing something
quite unique in the process. The final impression is that of a restless
cosmopolitan in love with sound, not merely for its own sake but for its
narrative properties.
The second and latest release, Un Petit Tour, is unavoidably more of a
hörspiel due to the predominance of narration - reflections on love
penned mostly by Onda and told in French by several voices. The spoken
words are linked a kind of free-jazz scarlet thread, with the trumpet of
Bernard Vitet (a little bit Hassell, a little bit Kondo) and the
programming of Onda dominating. A delicate solo on the Japanese sanshin by
Jyoji Sawada (who by the way is all over Beautiful Contradictions,
playing a wide array of instruments and even composing one of its tracks)
leads off the track Oú es-tu donc?, before other instruments begin
scraping away at its fragile veneer. The music on this release is much more
jagged than on Beautiful Contradiction, though the smokey, late-night
guitar/trumpet duet which closes the album is just lovely.
Both are packaged in equally handsome digipaks, with the latter featuring a
gallery of photographs by Ayako Mogi which serve well as a visual
complement to the sounds within. Aki Onda is an artist worth keeping a very
close eye on in the years to come.
- Jon Hassell: Fascinoma (Water Lily Acoustics)
- Among all the so-called ambient musicians both old and new, Jon Hassell's
music has always seemed to me to be imbued with the most "emotion"; while
an Eno or a Budd can certainly conjure up moods and feelings with their
unparalleled soundscaping abilities, Hassell's music seems to come directly
from the gut and out of the bell of his trumpet itself. Therein perhaps
lies the explanation: in common with Eno, many ambient artists have styled
themselves as "non-musicians", idea men who are adept with a synthesizer,
sequencer, programmer, whatever, but whom one rarely hears referred to as
"one of the great [name of instrument here] players of our day". Hassell,
on the other hand, while also a brilliant idea man, is precisely that.
Over
the decades since his first recording he has fashioned a trumpet sound
which defies comparison - only inspires admiration and imitation. And
though the whispering, breathy style which made him and his Fourth World
sound famous is likely to be that which gets him into the history books, he
has also shown that he can blast it and funk it up (City: Works of
Fiction). Now he proves that he knows how to caress it, too.
Backed up by the likes of Ry Cooder on guitar and Jacky Terrasson on piano,
Hassell has chosen for the first time to interweave other composers' works
with his own on Fascinoma - "musical exotica", he calls these tracks
(there's a lot of that in the air nowadays, isn't there? Perhaps it is not
surprising to discover that Hassell is quite good friends with David Toop,
who has recently written a book on the subject). He does marvellous things
with Nature Boy and Duke Ellington's Caravanesque (twice), but truth be
know, he could choose to interpret "Mary Had a Little Lamb" or the old
Soviet national anthem and still spellbind. Together with the five tunes he
and his collaborators have penned, the ten tracks comprise a seamless,
thematic whole, an exercise in stretching space and time which succeeds
over every second of this recording, where the silences between notes say
as much as the melodies. On Fascinoma one hears the trumpet more clearly than any previous Hassell album, its sound more rich and
well-rounded than ever before. This is undoubtably the acoustic ambient
album of the year, indeed one of the best jazz albums of the year, too, and
a brilliant extension of the work of a constantly evolving, challenging
musician. Still, all things considered this is no drastic about-face from
his previous production, and fans of Possible Musics and Powerspot will
feel quite at home.
Stephen Fruitman's Reviews were posted here on October 27.
|
| AmbiEntrance © 1999-97 by David J Opdyke (except CD cover art, rights retained by original owners). | |
|