Showing posts with label Jon Forshee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jon Forshee. Show all posts

Saturday, June 15, 2024

Playlist

Drinking to Mr. Pell
Preface

Hablot K. Browne (Phiz) - from "The Posthumous Papers of The Pickwick Club"

Texts

Recorded

June 8, 2024

Track 1 - Richard Rorex, Reid Merryman [from Mood for Richelle]

light jazz for background decoration
no payoff for following every move from the start
no penalty for missing any of it
a homogenous texture on all fronts
guitar and bass

24 Preludes: 5-8 - Ken Benshoof - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded live at University Temple United Methodist Church, March 17, 2007]

simple lines
that move down multiple tonal slants

ars antiqua: 2 with piano - J. K. Randall [from Open Space 22]

a bit of nose thumb taunt to this
in its plain-as-dirt unfanciness

Banned Rehearsal 829 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Steve Kennedy, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [February 4, 2014]

lay down a primer layer
through which we fill out the space 

a skin to touch
it spreads itself slowly
flood in tide
line ascending
ripple lap
by ripple lap 

low pedal tones
slumbery snores

Shiinto - Yuji Takahashi - Takashi Matsudair, Shinya Hashimoto [from Open Space 43]

ritualized conversation
two poems
in a common transformational relation

Gradus 377 - Neal Kosály-Meyer - Neal Kosály-Meyer [February 20, 2023]

ideas within a circumscribed field
might be infinite in extent
within that circumscribed field
such as human language 

between rungs we wait
but not to clear the air
the wait is too full of intent to clear anything

June 10, 2024

Spiritui Sancto Honor Sit (De Undecim Milibus Virginibus, Responsorium) - Hildegard Von Bingen - Sequentia [from Spiritual Songs]

leaps up to launch
and fly in effortless billows 

ends as though cut off
missing a page or two

Tirsi Morir volea: Freno Tirsi il desio - Carlo Gesualdo - Delitiæ Musicæ, Marco Longhini

European written-down music
is a technology 

music appreciation
in that sense
is a process
of familiarization
with the forms
that technology
begat
as fashions
and mind-sets
changed

Gaudens gaudebo - Peter Philips - The Choir of Royal Holiday, The English Cornett and Sackbut Ensemble, Robert Gough

the meter shifts itself
resets downbeats freely

Verleih uns Frieden genädlich - Heinrich Schütz - Capella Augustana

borne aloft on many arms
a weighty fabric of tones

Yakima Area Arboretum
Canzonetta in A minor, BuxWV 225 - Dieterich Buxtehude - Simone Stella

music
to dance
with the cathedral dome
chirp birds

Deuxieme Ordre (re): Sarabande la Prude - François Couperin - Kenneth Gilbert

the rubato
(small-scope tempo fluctuations)
results
from the negotiations required
to be sure
every ornament
sings clearly
and
that the line
moves
with grace

Sinfonia in C Major, BWV 787 - Johann Sebastian Bach - Edith Picht-Axenfeld

three voices
three entrances
one right after the other
they then proceed
to bewilder us

Keyboard Sonata in B-flat Major, Kk. 228 - Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

he hides the most remarkable things
by allowing them to appear naked

Sonata in B minor, Wq. 63/4 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklós Spányi

this music poses puzzles
with remarkable resolutions 

non-sequiturs
ornamented pointing
masquerading as a non-sequitur 

this music
makes a point of pointing
but subito elsewhere man 

I would not want to play cards with this guy

don't interrupt
this music is asking itself questions
and needs to pay attention

Sinfonia in G Major, Op. 3 #6 - Johann Christian Bach - Camerata Budapest, Hanspeter Gmür

the superior Handel
just as clear
but infinitely more sophisticated

Symphony in D minor, "Lamentation" (#26) - Franz Joseph Haydn - Le Petite Band, Sigiswald Kuijken

leans in to the tininess of the orchestra
an almost chamber music intimacy
brings out the intensity of the composition
the near Beethovenian urgency
Haydn does it all with less than you 

musical utterance
is necessarily
always
under suspicion
after all
it can't be understood
at least
not in any adequately explainable notion
of the meaning
of understanding 

tactical sequiturs

Symphony in E-flat Major "Lanassa" K. 161a(184) - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Academy of Ancient Music, Jaap Schroder, Christopher Hogwood

excessively theatricalized gestures
this music is a great actor
don't bother this music
it's thinking
acting out thinking

Yakima Area Arboretum
Sonata in E Major, Op. 14 #1 - Ludwig van Beethoven  - Paul Badura-Skoda

this music
is laying out an argument
with confounding terms
worry wears a circular track

Caprice in G minor, Op. 1 #6 - Niccolò Paganini - Salvatore Accardo

clearly he could play
but was he civilized?
or not?

finding the demonic in the demotic

Die Schöne Müllerin - Franz Schubert - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Gerald Moore

a playfully folksy word repetition scheme
puts us off our guard
each frame completely filled
completely blind
poets making hay
out of the erotics
of country life 

time passes
between songs and verses
never during 
if there is music
time does not pass
if there is no music
time passes

Yakima Area Arboretum
June 11, 2024

Grand Fantasia on Polish Airs, Op. 13 - Frédéric Chopin - Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Charles Mackerras, Emanuel Ax

at the open
we alternate
between being firmly planted
and slipping away
to some-uncertain-elsewhere 

the point of modulation
is to index the key
where we may have landed
as having been arrived at
through a particular aperture 

also acts as a chaperone
between the keys
leave room
for a few chromatic sequences
to unfold
or who knows what might happen
should they touch
or commingle

Karen at Yakima Area Arboretum 
Impromptus on a Theme of Clara Wieck, Op. 5 - Robert Schumann - Florian Uhlig

a book figure
with odd inclusions
he keeps to his key
as if it weren't the same anymore 

the theme appears
within the figurations
as if
by some unfingerable magic
or
as if some packets of it
went through different servers
and only came back together
well enough
to be noted

6 Character Pieces: Largo con Espressione - Fanny Hensel - Beatrice Rauchs

weighs every word and phrase to balance

Liebeszauber - Clara Schumann - Dorothea Craxton, Hedayet Djeddikar

it does its thing to us
and leaves us with it

La Traviata, Act 3 - Giuseppe Verdi - Orchestra del Teatro alla Scala di Milano, Antonio Votto, Renata Scotto, Giuliana Tavolaccin, Gianni Raimondo, Franco Ricciardi

a silver light enters
uncertain
before the curtain 

stage
pitch black 

voice
disembodied
distanced 

opera
story-book cartoons
graphic novels
if music were graphic 

they are rejoined at last
and their voices embrace 

plot
happy ending
lovers reunited
elders reconciled 

but the patient died 

curtains

Yakima Area Arboretum
Rinaldo, Op. 50 - Johannes Brahms - New Philharmonia Orchestra, Claudio Abbado, James King, Ambrosian Chorus, John McCarthy

thick with plot points
at first
but gets rather bogged down
by duty
and enchantment 

it's a lot of male voices
and low strings
engaged in gooey polyphonic games
like vigorous heroes 

we love to be morally instructed 

knightly blueprint
for a man of position in the community

Variations on an Original Theme (of an Exceedingly Dismal Nature) - Ethel Smyth - Liana Serbescu

working with figurations
to project an orchestral piano
and a heavy dreary thing it is too 

it keeps finding itself
back at the same old variation
clearly likes Brahms' pianism

6 Etudes, Op. 16: Allegro Moderato (#2) - Feruccio Busoni - Wolf Harden

circus waltz
master of ceremonies
your host

Russian Easter Overture - Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov - Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz

heavy use of soloists within the orchestra
concertino for trombone there
and little duets 

orchestration from the Russian school
taking Berlioz to heart

Piano Concerto in E-flat Major, Op. 75 (#3) - Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky - New Philharmonia Orchestra, Lorin Maazel, Emil Giles

starts with a mid concerto movement
gets all the finale stuff over with right away
then sets in
to find this movement
what it is 

two-fisted tempest tantrum
storms and peace

Yakima Area Arboretum
Sea Pieces: From a Wandering Iceberg (#2) - Edward MacDowell - Fred Karpoff

depictic
expressionistic
music must depict
or express emotion
or heart
or whatever
or else what?

Cakewalk - Anonymous [from Turn Me Loose White Man]

minstrel show oompah
mechanical music box
black-face cockadoodle

Dèsir, Op. 57 #1 - Alexander Scriabin - Ruth Laredo

to
just
touch
the key
at a tangent point

Prelude - Maurice Ravel - Vlado Perlemuter

if depiction
or sentiment
is the requirement
then
at least we can be coolly civilized about it
no need to get tawdry

Shepherd's Hay - Percy Grainger - Percy Grainger [from Grainger plays Grainger]

two-fisted clown music
jolly old England

Yakima Area Arboretum
June 12, 2024

Viola quebrada - Heitor Villa-Lobos - Teresa Berganzo, Juan Antonio Alvarez Parejo

use of low-brow stylings
in high-brow music:
Villa-Lobos, Gershwin, Weill, Satie 

an early Modernist thing

Georgia Stomp - Andrew & Jim Baxter [from Turn Me Loose White Man]

seems to be calling a dance

K. C. Railroad Blues - Riley Puckett [from That Devilin' Tune]

throw in any trouble in the book
use one of the standards if you like

regional pronunciation
rhymes
blow/before (be-faux)

Billy the Kid (Ballet Suite) - Aaron Copland - New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein

music composed
so that action can occur along with it
(to it)
and they will somehow match
must allow space within it
for the dancers
to make their fancy moves
the music
must allow
for the rhythms
and tempi
of human motions 

to stage ballet
is to demonstrate their relations 

a Western
for the silver screen
of the ballet stage

Yakima Area Arboretum
Four Transcriptions from Emerson: (tracks 1 & 2) (1933) - Charles Ives - Charles Ives [from Ives plays Ives]

getting his elbows into the murky murky

Violin Concerto in A minor, Op. 77 - Dmitri Shostakovich - BBC Symphony Orchestra, Colin Davis, Dmitry Sitkovetsky

1
in anguish of soul
we modulate without moving
this dark room exists nowhere
nowhere surrounds it

awareness bubbles
music expands them
(or can) 

2
bowing blowout
factory line hurry-up
all the fuss
that makes the circus go 

3
big boss
pronounces judgments
from on high 

sadness and wistfulness
mess up each others thinking 

this is the scene
where all the hearts get poured out 

the cadenza
is a whole other movement
unmarked 

4
and now
for the circus itself
never a slack moment

Yakima Area Arboretum
Kontra-Punkte - Karlheinz Stockhausen - London Sinfonietta

this piece takes me back
or brings a memory forward
into awareness bubble 

listening library
UW
78/79/80/81 

every piece
had its cloud of pronouncements
in manifesto baldness
there is something strange
in the idea
of thinking
that whatever cockamamie thing
one came up with
would be
ought to be
and will be
publicly announced
to be
the absolute next thing
creating and riding
the cutting edge
in ones own mind

Smoke Gets In Your Eyes - The Platters [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

singer controls not just his production
but also his relation to the microphone
we hear only what the mic did 

(if that)

Be My Baby - The Ronettes [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

all about the sound as a whole

Back In The U.S.S.R. - The Beatles [from The Beatles "The White Album"]

takes on whole new layers of associations these days
it's a different song than it was

Turn On The Radio (mono) - Jerry Tawney [a Rescued Record]

road song
country vibe
a song
in search of a cheap screen play

I Just Wanted to Have Something To Do - The Ramones [from Road to Ruin]

to not!
to not!
well all rot!

Girls Just Want to Have Fun - Cyndi Lauper [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

the 80s desperate bid
to be the 50s again
but kinkier

Bickleton Burger - Banned Rehearsal [from Purple Stripe]

no pickles
no mustard
no ketchup
no buns
no meat 

it's a Bickleton Burger
Bickleton Burger
have 'em away
yes it's a Bickleton Burger
have 'em away 

no relish
no special sauce
no sesame seeds
no bacon
no cheese 

just a side-order of fries
on my Bickleton Burger
Bickleton Burger
Bickleton Burger
have it away
have it away
just a side-order of fries
on my Bickleton Burger
have it away 

those are the officially doubly-cross-checked original lyrics
everything else is a sham

A Single Woman - Nina Simone [from A Single Woman]

ritzy joint orchestration
spot lights and sight-lines and everything

Minute Etudes Book 1: Playful - Emily Doolittle - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded February 8, 2023]

oh yeah
this is that one
with the absolute bear of a two-handed note-collapse in it

Organism 2 - Christian Asplund - Tom Baker [from Sounding The Curve]

melting clock pots

Track 2 - Aaron Keyt [from 7(7)]

sounds spaced out on a rigid grid
punch the button
get a sound
buttons may only be pushed
at times marked on the master schedule 

why might it matter to me
to know when it is over
or not?
anxiety?
about what?

Desiderata - Jon Forshee - Zara Rivera, Matt Barbier, Luke Storm [from Open Space 36]

knows its way through the pitch thicket

Selections from Second Thoughts - Keith Eisenbrey - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded live at Seattle Composers Salon, January 13, 2018]

my box of parts
the sensual experience of thinking

Gotta Mean Kind of Love - Star Anna [from Love Shades, streamed February 14, 2023]

hm
says Star
Happy Valentine's Day 

some talk then a song

Yakima Area Arboretum
June 13, 2024

La du Buq - Jacques Duphly - Christophe Rousset

trading statements
back and forth
moving by step
sharing accomplishments

Sonata in C Major, Op. 37 #1 - Muzio Clementi - Howard Shelley

uptempo
with witty asides 

phrase/structural use
of figurational busy-work
viable material for development 

2
first the key is explained
its pertinent parts
pointed at 

3
chasing greased oinker downbeats

Mosé in Egitto, Act 3 - Gioachino Rossini - Philharmonia Orchestra, Claudio Scimone

the sea parts
right there on stage
time is given
for the spectacle to unfold

Sonatina in F Major, Op. 55 #4 - Friedrich Kuhlau - Loredana Brigandi

makes feints to the side
but keeps to the straight path

Yakima Area Arboretum
Symphony in A Minor "Scottish" (#3) - Felix Mendelssohn - San Francisco Symphony, Herbert Blomstedt

1
this works best
when it isn't trying to be symphonic
and work things out
with development
and tonally manufactured drama
and a storm depiction 

2
like a Scottish Billy the Kid music
not a bad thing
any pretense evaporates
vigorous and noisy lads

Mefistofele, Act 3 - Arrigo Boito - London Symphony Orchestra, Julius Rudel, Ambrosian Opera Chorus, John McCarthy, Norman Treigle, Plácido Domingo, Montserrat Cabeallé

opens
with a killer passacaglia line
Donizetti X Chopin X Goethe 

the scene is Margaret's to steal
uh oh!
who's that devil with you?

Via Crucis: Station I - Jesus wird zum Tode verdammt - Franz Liszt - Nederlands Kamerkoor, Reinbert De Leeuw

all those piano octaves baldly pounded
(JKR?)
an unfinished vocal line

Yakima Area Arboretum
Symphony in E Major (#7) - Anton Bruckner - Philharmonia Orchestra, Otto Klemperer

1
as might emerge from nothing
beats count
as a nudge of time going 

nudging time along
we follow
into this narrow darkness
chambers of peril
to pass through 

this music
proceeds neither symphonically
nor dramatically 

2
holy Sehnsucht thoughts 

how confusing
nothing proceeds
nor recedes
all of it
simply waits
it's all stuck
disvolitioned 
yearning without motion
full glorious fruition
blessed assurance
rest in peace 

3
our daily toil and torture
struggle and torment
every day
a new trial
seven times seventy
some days
better than others 

3
a quick recap
of the story so
far perseverance perseverance
no end
just a stop

In Session at The Tintinabulary

June 9, 2024

Effingham - Keith Eisenbrey

the 49th of my arrangements of tunes from an 1843 shape-note song-book

June 11, 2024

Invocation for alto horn (performed on clavichord) - Keith Eisenbrey

I wanted to see how this would go on a non-sustaining instrument

Postscripts

Drops

Keith Eisenbrey 18: 2021

Études d'exécution imminent - Exercises
Anybody's Fingerbook

What set of etudes would be complete without finger exercises? Anybody's Fingerbook (number 14 of Études d'exécution imminent consists of 38 perverse note lists that become progressively more fiendish to play. They mark a particular ebenezer of acerbicity in that still-expanding back 40 of compositional doohickies that contains my oeuvre. The 38 are gathered into eight groups of finger twisters. Try these at home kids!

All tracks were recorded in 2021 and 2022.

Prior volumes are available at keitheisenbrey.bandcamp.com

All are free for download.

Skaldmud's Doodle Gallery

listening journal doodles from 2023







Saturday, September 11, 2021

Playlist

Preface

"It's okay to come clean on what we care about. Even if it's not nice stuff. It's a bad scene to have to pretend that everything you care about is nice. If music is serious then that's how it's serious, because it somehow enables all kinds of characteristics about people, most of which are not admissible in polite society, to be expressed, and to be endured and survived and perceived and understood."
- Benjamin Boretz - "July 29, 1989: a talk with Ben (about writing Meta-Variations and other things)"  from "inside in . . . / . . . outside out" Open Space Publications, 2020

Texts

From Recent Arrivals

I thought I would try to do better to listen to and share at least a few new tracks as they come in. The following are arbitrary selections new to the library.

September 10, 2021

Apokatastasis - Jon Forshee [from Open Space 48]


surface similarities to Stockhausen
(to the best aspects of him anyway:
sensitivity to instrument color
phenomenal textures)
but these players sound like they mean what they say
without all those grinding axes
KS always seems to throw around. 

It draws in rather than pushes out
a deep focus surface 
or 
not a surface at all

King Arthur's Seat - Slothrust [from Parallel Timeline]


a growing up song
through one's mid thirties

Riven - Heather Stebbins - loadbang [from Plays Well With Others]


the pattern of the opening gestures,
a near echo 
shade of the mid 18th Century 

something heavy and loose 
is trying to move 
there are pests 
flying pests 

pitch/note thinking?
(this is not, not really) 
more pitch/gesture thinking 
each sound speaks its character. 
Joycean?

Recorded

September 4, 2021

Sweetie Dear - Isham Jones [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

we may have lost our money
but we can still dance 
filling every beat with liveliness

Blue Ridge Mountain Blues - Vernon Dalhart [from Evans 78s]

guitar voice and fiddle
suitable for a traveling stage act

3 Sacred Songs (Psalm 150, Angels and Shepherds, Whitsuntide) - Zoltan Kodály - Kodály Girls Choir, Ilona Andor

each verse moves to a new stage of rhetorical complexity

a theme is announced 
gloria in excelsis deo 
which is then explored
bit by bit 
segment by segment

wears its Gregorian duds proudly 
followed by bum bum bells 
similar in some ways to Carmina Burana 
but loads more fun

For Every Man There's a Woman
- Peggy Lee [from The Complete Recordings 1941-1947]

encouraging words
if you don't dig too deep into the misogyny 
but 
the little chorus 
stands in a different 
though not much better 
light 
superbly sung of course

Baby I'm Coming Home - Charlie Booker [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

rockin'! 
close acquaintance of I'm a Lonely Frog 
the advent of fuzzy guitar and sloppy drums

Good Golly (Pretty Molly) - Rusty Draper [a Rescued Record]

very white party music for lusty teen boys 
I presume they dressed in matching outfits

Shepherd's Song - Lake Washington Singers, Betty Eisenbrey [April 10, 1962]

sophisticated simplicity 
though the verse to verse composition is a bit clunky

Goin' Back - The Byrds [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

so sentimental! 
empowering the empowered 
not quite a slow dance 
but certainly no twist 
the dancers can move 
and their movements chat 
flirtily 

the male-centric lyrics lead me to wonder who it was that wanted to be seen? 
I guess it's so the girl can admire the nice sincere guy she's with?

Praise Him - Bellevue First United Methodist Church Children's Choirs, Betty Eisenbrey [April 14, 1972]

I fully presume I'm one of those voices

Postlude (ERB for AVB at 65) - Elaine Barkin [from Open Space 29]


this piece, short as it is, opens a place for tunes to think about themselves

Book of Windows - Keith Eisenbrey - Keith Eisenbrey [realized March 20, 2005]
the dance mix
to show just how 80s this piece always had been 
the voice isn't speaking in common rhythm with the instrumentals 
but it isn't not so speaking either 

looking back at it from its realization in 2005
it is quite clear I knew what all that had been about
back in 82
when it was composed
but
back in 82
I would not have been able to articulate it so clearly 

makes quite the stew of Stus in there
with all of them stacking up like that 

accidentally 
a nearly Schützian play of pattern and line
not a bad tune to finish it with, past me!

September 5, 2021

H'un (Lacerations): In memoriam 1966 - 1976 - Bright Sheng - New York Chamber Symphony, Gerard Schwarz

outside forces 
impress within
after the manner
if not the style
of late Shostakovich 

Schwarz performed this with the SSO back in the day. I enjoyed the piece then, but remember thinking it extremely odd that a composer who grew up in China would gravitate toward a Euro-centric New Music style, of all things. 

It is hard to see the political/cultural ramifications of one's own time in one's own time.

Banned Rehearsal 295 - John E, Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Aaron Keyt [July 2, 1992]
We begin
(shall we)
with a D.C. 
The 8th Bannediversary 
Prudence and Kuru appear herein 
we attempt
to cajole
a toddler
to toot 
a trumpet 
I'd rather toot
than
give a hoot 
toot timely
to timely toot a toot 
that none have e'er so timely tooted before

{{from my journal entry of January 9, 1995}}
::

lullaby diaper change
ostracized from our society of cannibals
like a lid on it
nothing coming in
hoot
too many distant rooms?
toot it
sink mazurkas 
toe tooting at Toad Hall
TONIGHT 
rolls in his boots
the problem with simplistic music
is that it requires of the listener
far too much work
to make of it
anything more than its simplisticness. 
tonight is a continuity problem. 
K on piano
solve by slowing?
A: I'd rather toot than give a hoot
simple simplistic simpleton
sophisticated sophistry sophist
subtle subtly subtlist

close-up sounds in this room are fine
but not so far away
is so far away

"anyone lived in a pretty how town" - Jeremiah Lawson


He sings some pretty mean vocals there! 
Wow! 
yet another wow for JL
one of our most imaginatively skillful guitar player composers
a student of figuration
a fellow wizard

Work / Architecture / Unity / And / The - Keith Eisenbrey - Keith Eisenbrey [February 3, 2021]
this time I'm leaving a solid thinking space between each bit,
but not a long one,
just enough. 
It's working pretty well. 

It's like they're lined up on a shelf,
but not packed together,
allowing the page reassembly time
to determine some longer breaks 

- this one's a keeper

Beautiful Beast (for String Bass) - Robert Morris - Scott Worthington [from Robert Morris at 70]

irascible
I love all the fancy bowing
a character study
it wants out
perhaps to get to know them

some fine playing there Scott!

September 6, 2021
Banned Rehearsal 808 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Steve Kennedy, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [February 27, 2012]
I say 809
but that was not correct 
playing with rhythms on the Yamaha
they can't be combined like they could be on the funmaker
digital not always best
washboard
low roar
and brass
and some bells
drums contribute to the roar
I think the Yamaha (a midi synth) 
may also be involved
attempts are made to jumpstart things
but it may be contrary to our mood
tone tubes
bop
periodic blats from brasses
gets silly
swing batter batter batter
ping pong balls roll
inside the bodhran
xylophone
lots of tiny tapping
playful now that we've stopped trying to jumpstart it
flute tones and a quiet Aaronsbundler
with soft brassberries 

which proceeds then
to snore quietly in a corner

Huge Guy in the Mosh Pit - Your Mother Should Know [from Demos of February 23, 2017]

please don't crush me
actually a St. Rage Song

September 7, 2021

The Woods so Wilde, Fvb 40 - Orlando Gibbons - Claudio Columbo [from The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book]

innocent of any impulsion to cadence at balance points
or to hint at such
anywhere
except at period's end

each note of the reference tune
is a sufficient location
this allows a subtle composition
of each such moment 
without looking so eagerly
for the end of the phrase

Symphoniae Sacrae II, Op. 10, #18 "Iss dein Brot mit Freuden" - Heinrich Schütz - Capella Augustana

. . . and drink your wine with good courage

Praeludium in G Major, BuxWV 149 - Dieterich Buxtehude - Craig Cramer

Praeludium 
as in 
the music played before
or at the start of
the service 

establish 
the tone
the key
the whole atmosphere 

this is quite an elaborate piece
not based on a chorale as best I can tell
it follows its own fancy
without informing us just what a skillful composer
the composer is
he is
but he's not as concerned you know it
as JSB
generally
is

Prelude and Fugue in D minor (Die Wohltemperierte Klavier, Band 1)
- Johann Sebastian Bach - Christiane Jaccottet

I like her execution of the short ornaments 
very clear unfussy

Sonata in A-flat Major, Kk. 130 - Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

if it's fun to play it's fun to play more than once
and pulls one in 
balanced with subtle disbalances
to keep it lively 
and apparently I listened to this twice
(see last week's blog post)
joke's on me

Sonata in B-flat Major, Wq. 62.16 - Carl Phillip Emanuel Bach - Miklos Spanyi

hang time
ponder time
question time
includes its own study questions

wandering about in its key as if in an empty room

gently playful

September 8, 2021

6 Variations in C Major, Hob. XVII:5 - Franz Joseph Haydn - Christine Schornsheim

theme provided with an elaboration angle for each thematic note
these he proceeds to expand subsequently
as though the theme consists largely of the index to the variations

Concerto in A Major, K. 414(385p) (#12) - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - English Baroque Soloists, John Eliot Gardiner, Malcolm Bilson

all entrances are carefully prepared for drama 

how far back does the extensive cadenza go:
it seems like a creature of the 18th Century.
CPEB? 
as instrumental virtuosity was really getting going
- stemming from organ improvisations?
opera?
some of both? 

I love the later piano solo entrance in the rondo
where it is clearly a new entrance
even though it's been there for pages

Sonata in D major, Op. 47, #1 - Johann Ladislav Dussek - Zvi Meniker

posing in fancy clothes

the same advice over and over 
warning label

sing a comic song
weave it into quite the story
before returning
oh that's right
this was a funny story

Coriolan-Ouverture, Op. 62
- Ludwig van Beethoven - Philharmonia Orchestra, Otto Klemperer

the long opening notes get an added boost at the end
not a stable world
this Sturm done dranged 

interjectionary orchestration
heavy on the underlines
by the end we're sure ready for something!

Etude in E Major, Op. 10 #5 - Frédéric Chopin - Alfred Cortot [recorded 1933]

a frenetic moth and its observers

Ballet Scene, Op. 6 - Ferruccio Busoni - Wolf Harden

clearing the cobwebs from out of Lisztomania

Selection 10 for Selections from The Nutcracker - Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky - Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy

lots of harp in this one 
we'll get to the waltz shortly
here we go
such a sweeping off of feet 
Empire's sensual triumph

Circus Band - The Gregg Smith Singers [from The Great Sentimental Age]

of a piece with silent film of the next age 
clumsy

2 Poems, Op. 63 - Alexander Scriabin - John Ogdon

nothing flimsy or diaphanous in these
full of razors and arrows

Fuzzy Wuzzy Rag - W.C. Handy [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

behind it one hears a verse format
like doggerel
aiming at the punch rhyme

September 9, 2021
Finnegans Wake, Chapter 1 (start) - James Joyce - Neal Kosály-Meyer [at Gallery 1412 on November 22, 2015]

the gathered chat before listening
doors squeak and we start
Neal being Neal
with a lecture 

each line at first invents its own character to speak it 
one story told from a thousand voices 
speech afore feast 
the book that talks all talkings 
all reports 
accepted 
first set piece 
The Willingdone Museum
stutterland
(history lesson) 
how we talk 
second set piece
scuse us chorely guy 
Jute and Mutt 
(geography as history)

Moonshiner's Dance Part One
- Frank Cloutier and the Victorian Cafe Orchestra [from Anthology of American Folk Music, Volume 1]

yeehaw oompah
allegro energico
calling the dance
a collaborative endeavor
fancy duds not required

Say It Isn't So - Lil Armstrong [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

her long sung tones have stories to tell 
the backing vocals are amazingly weird, mocking

Emaline - Art Tatum [from Classic Early Solos]

any half of a second stretch is pretty straightforward 
he just has more dimes to turn on than you have

Rodeo (4 Dance Episodes) - Aaron Copland - London Symphony Orchestra, Aaron Copland

muscular americana
now with costumes and manure 

what did this look like as a dance?
one imagines a technicolor glow 

hey a canon
how learned 

let's feel good about ourselves for a moment 
we're at war and all 

it isn't Billy the Kid (my favorite Copland) but the focus is pretty clear
my problem?:
East Coast romanticization of the Empty West
as a masculine paradise
(there may be some Nez Perce
who beg to differ) 

exoticism as a form of colonialism?

The Freedom Train - Peggy Lee (and others) [from The Complete Recordings 1941-1947]

advertisement for our collective delusions
pablum
but there it is
early version of Live Aid
rah rah

Reeling and Rocking - Fats Domino [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

And here I am in a rocking chair my own self as I listen. 
The piano sound is awesome, pungent.

Flying Saucers Rock and Roll - Billy Lee Riley [from Sun Records Definitive Hits]

topical!
to both then and now
little green men 
real hip cats
something new
just a decade or so ahead of Ziggy too

Up On The Roof - The Drifters [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

where they landed?

Astronomy Domine - Pink Floyd [from The Piper at the Gates of Dawn]

on topic!
complete with weirdass celticky solo
on what?
a keyboard of some kind?

Five Years - David Bowie [from The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars]

and here they are right on cue
not quite what was promised 
for little green hip cats
a wake up call

September 10, 2021

Prelude for Clarinet and Piano - Keith Eisenbrey - Paul Eisenbrey, unnamed pianist [June?  1979]

in which my motives, the structural ones, are clear
up one whole step
down one half step 

for all its one track mind
the mechanics of the counterpoint are rather good
as a whole it wanders around as though lost
without being aware of the fact
stuck 
nicely played, Paul! (and unnamed pianist!)

I Confess - The English Beat [collected from Nancy's Mix]

post Elton John post Bowie
the more pop version of Elvis Costello

Gradus 3 (San Diego Series) - Neal Kosály-Meyer - Neal Kosály-Meyer [January 13, 1987] 

the first ever Gradus with two different notes.
In this iteration of Gradus the duration of the session is set by the length of the tape, as we did in Banned Rehearsal then, and as was the Bard practice. By the next iteration he had replaced that with a specific chosen length of session. I think BR may have been doing that also by then, as a response to the differently durationed digital media (cassette sides were 45 minutes, DAT media could be 2 hours) in use by then. An aspect of BR etc. entirely born of the cassette tape industry. There are some strange artifacts on the audio. Briefly, at the start of the digital media time, we tried putting an old fashioned cassette tape in a machine, running silently, just to time how long the session should be. We clung to it. Finally it seemed cumbersome and silly. Probably, as well as pitch, the two notes are played on different numbers of strings. the lowest A nat on one string the next A nat on multiple strings. Do the longitudinal vibrations of the multiple stringed note behave differently in acoustic space than those of the single stringed note? Choral in places, downright.

In Session at the Tintinabulary

September 6, 2021

Gradus 370 - Neal Kosály-Meyer

the 5th D down appears
the damper pedal can be used to isolate acoustic parts of sounding tones
as well as to mix them
or prolong them
or lush them up
once isolated it is hard to hear those parts of tones as parts and not as distinct sounds
secondarily associated with the note's incipit
once analyzed always analyzed?
like trying not to think of radishes 

a low C-sharp quieter
and fewer
role swap
temporary

Postscripts

::Consult the Oracle

the dorm door in to slipping down away

him standing like a platform in moves the

walls and hell of a clip beds and all the

Reality Check::

is language itself

the risen throne

the corridor

Saturday, March 30, 2019

Playlist

Recorded

March 24, 2019
Puyallup, WA ca 1966
The Witch (Live) - The Sonics [from Boom]

somewhere in the back of the palate of those wailing shrills is an emulation of Screamin' Jay

Nice Work If You Can Get It - Thelonious Monk [from The London Collection]

so he's a singer at one with rhythm
a Satie-esque end game

New Lace Sleeves - Elvis Costello [from Trust]

this song's kind of all over the map

Fire - Bruce Springsteen [from Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band Live 1975-1985]

odd bridge
an out of affect experience
briefly
it jars a bit I think

Immediate Impact Zone - Infamous Menagerie [from Kill Rock Stars]

its implied architecture
repetition structures
social inventions
mini ritual

about as great a thing as it could be

Dudley's Song - Dean Evenson [from Native Healing]

not completely without merit in the pitch play department
though rather enclosed, as in a vitrine

Sweat Sex - Thee Emergency [from Can You Dig It]

comin' on like The Who and all
full stadium roar
an altar call

Sow Took The Measles - Train Case [June 2011]



I take pride in the fact that I convinced Karen and Neal to record the songs they were playing for their Mom. 

Opus - Jon Forshee - Joshua Charney, piano [from Open Space CD 36]

playful figurations
downright melodramatic!
all riled up

a really tremendous solo piano piece, probably some several gradations over my technical abilities. {frowny face}

Mt. Rainier National Park
March 26, 2019
Got To Get You Into My Life - The Beatles [from Anthology Vol. 2]

bared of orchestra

organ, bass, drums, vocals
lifted from the mix
or the rest of the mix leached away

how ideas are tried

Child of Heaven - Lake Washington Singers, Betty Eisenbrey, director [December 1971]

from my Mom's private tape

Track 8 - Empire Brass Quintet [from American Brass Band Journal Revisited]

another unnamed track that came into the mix through Karen's family

Banned Rehearsal 97 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Neal Kosály-Meyer [June 1986]


chorale tune is the thing
shabby by this time with no rehab done
correcting part work or grading

we spin some disks
let's shout

sight singin'
somewhere in this book is a good chord
sorry
false alarm

March 28, 2019
Laugh or Cry - The Vagabonds [a Rescued Record]

somewhere between the Buzzcocks and Simon & Garfunkel
this 45 was found in a box

Lost Tracks - Dean Evenson [from Native Healing]
Mt. Rainier National Park

piety without content
mood mix

so seeming mistrustful of what it could be
of what any bit could be
form lines reverberated out, dissipated

Liebeslied (Amended) - Keith Eisenbrey [Chapel Performance Space June 5, 2010]

When I returned to Seattle in 1984 Ben Boretz gave me the original pencil score of his (now withdrawn) unfinished composition Liebeslied (for a pianist alone) - composed in the early 70's. I copied it (in ink on vellum, and later with engraving software) and performed it several times over the next couple of decades. At some point Ben suggested that I re-compose it. Liebeslied (Amended) was my first go at it, my amendments consist of making a half-hearted but personally intriguing stab at drawing out the opening section, and revoicing a few of the big chords in the middle. This was not a particularly successful performance, due to my usual chronic rushing - and I still have trouble getting my paws around those big crashy chords.

Hammer in a Bag - Pouch

Sean Delaney's go to move is a Godzilla shriek 
containing multitudes
as shrieks go, high class indeed

Huge Guy in the Mosh Pit - St. Rage [June 25, 2016]


And it's Neal and Karen again! Your Mother Should Know impersonates Karen's fictional high school garage rock band. This recording benefits from being turned up loud. Sloppy but earnest.

March 29, 2019
Hear Us - Era of Peace - Lake Washington Singers, Betty Eisenbrey, director [April 1966]

the choral first person
as an operatic invention
derived from the congregational first person
the creepy politics of combinations
subversive anti-individualist propaganda

Nutty (take 1) - Thelonious Monk [from The London Sessions]

playing a polyvocal game with a sensibility that concerns where within phrase length spans one can play loose and off and where one is to play flat and plain
in order to play at platformers or web slinging
on the audio grid

The Emerald City (from a broomstick)
Forest Fire - Dead Kennedys [from Plastic Surgery Disasters - In God We Trust]

grown men impersonating 10 year old boys
as they thought themselves 
bethinking themselves
besmirched

This Is My Day - Julian Lennon [from The Secret Value of Daydreaming]

this arrangement is crying just crying for a big orchestra and a 100 voice backing choir
those synths just don't quite cut it

Loch Ness - The Velvet Sidewalk [from Kill Rock Stars]

some musics are sudden floriations
others are the belowground parts of the soil fungus
we rot music

Track 2 - The Seattle Chamber Music Festival [July 2001]

oh such glorioso amateur intonations! so robust! spritus maximus.

discointonations
dis-co-intonations
disco into nations

a half reeler silent accompaniment
morally upliftingly 

Workin' Man's Blues - Bob Dylan [Key Arena, 2006]

playin' the old guy 
playin' the old tunes

does anybody believe in this anymore, what he's saying?

Sow Took The Measles A - Train Case

When I first started recording them I kept a bunch of versions. this is one.
Karen has a superpower. She can sing.

The Ship - Brian Eno [from The Ship]

the soundtrack
to the film
of the finding
of the ship

das Rheingold's anacrusis

instrument of death to all
its sepulchral nature even at birth

vowels shaped at liminal register deep
epitaphony 

reverberance plucked by cotton candy tongue out
the after wave

And Your Bird Can Sing - The Beatles [from Anthology Vol. 2]

you can't see me
the poster child of isolation recording

Echo Song - Lake Washington Singers, Betty Eisenbrey, director [December 1971]

works it out nice
within its chamber 

the layers of media transfer 
as they successively disengage

Untitled Track - Throbbing Gristle [from Greatest Hits]

like something Pete Comley might have said

Banned Rehearsal 98 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Neal Kosály-Meyer [June 1986]


heart felt cry of bluesy oh city to ope
sprite at its funmaker makiest
"It Hurts" - Neal's sudden song

when we aim we are dead on laser bent
we are the generatoration 
that shreds the past
we are the past shredders

Port Macquarie, New South Wales, 1986
"this is banned rehearsal number ninety eight / the last banned rehearsal in this house for a long time"
actually probably the last ever full session
karen and I made some assembly rechoireds and some telepaths, but by the time there was a quorum again we had moved to the Front House, in front of the Half House, Greenwood, where we were

this hits on a large quantity of cylinders heretofore never known
intervals energize persistence
a sister worthy shaman fellow

accuracy presumes rectitude
precision does not
we dredge down
on
one 
to
one

(funny that karen should worry about echoing in her books the girl boy boy dynamic of Harry Potter plots, when banned rehearsal was all of that long beforetimes)

Love's a Hard Game to Play - Stevie Nicks [from Timespace]

a sexy viola register there Stevie
pretty hot

In Session at the Tintinabulary

March 25, 2019
Banned Rehearsal 978 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Steve Kennedy, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer


I played piano because I just had it tuned and because it's fun

March 29, 2019
"Mrs. Ramsay rose, Lily rose." - Keith Eisenbrey
Frankie and Johnnie [from Études d'exécution imminent] - Keith Eisenbrey

Port Macquarie, New South Wales, 1986
Karen has been in Portland for a conference since Wednesday, so Friday morning I took advantage of the relative quiet of a morning with nobody else up and about to record some takes and tests. Mrs. Ramsay (yes, it's from Virginia Woolf) is a piece I wrote shortly after Slow Blues and that I don't have a solid studio recording of yet. Frankie is an opera that comprises the 13th Etude of my work in progress Études d'exécution imminent. I hope to work on patching these together tomorrow to see if they tick.