Saturday, February 27, 2021

Playlist

Preface

"Take history: it is a determinate reification of the antecedence of our sentient existence, a demonstrated perspective on who we are, on where we are. Its truths are inescapable, and pervasively account for major aspects of the world that directly and significantly affect everyone's life. Nevertheless, persons do not perforce experience their conscious living as history, as historical events, or qualify their experience in the vocabulary of historical predicates. You could say that history proceeds, in a self-defined, self-contained way, on the outside of most people's lived lives, accumulating and accessible at any time by observations which can be perceived by anyone as true, without being, except in that sense, the actual content of anyone's experienced life-events."

- Benjamin Boretz "Prologue to ("Whose Time, What Space"): [A Seminar Talk at Eastman]" from "Being About Music Textworks 1960-2003 J. K. Randall Benjamin Boretz Volume 2: 1978-2003"

Texts

Streaming

February 20, 2021

Choral Tapas - Seattle Pro Musica, Karen P. Thomas, director

Laudate Dominum from Solemn Vespers - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

western music cleaves to the linguistic model
notes
syllables
statements
making language as beautiful as possible
to say what it says
in the best possible taste

My Heart Be Brave - Marques Garrett

among other entries in a compendium of modern music types
what is this
or would it be
choral
secular
inspirational

February 26, 2021

nevertheless, we persist . . . (a virtual concert) - Julia Lougheed, clarinet, etc.

music by Bill Clay, Jessi Harvey, Kim Farris-Manning, Gabo Champagne

we had this going while eating dinner
hence few notes 

but I would like to lift up the piece by Jessi Harvey, formerly of the Seattle area,
involving spoken texts
overlapping spoken texts
(I think,
we were eating)
and clarinet percussion.
perked my ears right up. 

stray notes about the set as a whole

::
euro vision
re-canceled 

there is an integrity about this event
that I truly admire 

this silence can not be imagined
it can only be done

Wayward in Limbo

With the Chapel closed indefinitely due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Wayward Music Series now moves from the concert hall to the living room. In place of our usual ten monthly concerts, Nonsequitur is curating and commissioning ten Seattle artists each month to create a series of streaming audio sessions of exclusive material. Many of these will be essentially “live” performances recorded at home for this occasion. Others may create a mix of pre-recorded material that has not been previously released elsewhere.

- from the Wayward Music Series website at https://www.waywardmusic.org/.

February 20, 2021

Josh Medina

steady state
sounds exist together
like a river and a hill
exist together 

neither moves the other
they keep their places
the light changes around them
through the hours 

but there are no landslides 

and if we move to a new viewpoint
we have no qualms
any of it has vanished from continued existence 

 the mix is distinguishable from other mixes
clearly
just as one landscape is distinguished from another 

visitations occur
but don't change the river
or the hill 

larger changes may incrementally alter everything
but can only be imagined 

we are left with a sound
that analyzes itself acoustically
without demarcated objects
syllable-less
phoneme bereft

sequence not confused
nor fraught
just not possible
flow without motion

February 21, 2021

Tiffany Lin

autoharp unzipping
reveal each chord
accept as such (familiars) 

a chord change sequence
is not
primarily
a method for establishing* a key
*or evoking one
is its own thing 

more like 16th Century practice than 18th

Recorded

February 20, 2021

Camptown Races - Stephen Foster - the Gregg Smith Singers [from The Great Sentimental Age]

complete
with
carefully
enunciated
gwines

Largo for Violin, Clarinet and Piano - Charles Ives - Chamber Music Northwest, David Shifrin, Eriko Sato, Irma Vallecillo

violin and piano
kept in separate room
from the clarinet and piano
and from the three together 

no fraternization allowed

Meditation on a Theme by Claude Debussy - Zoltán Kodály - Jenö Jandó

we are conveyed on the dream stream through perfumed grottos 

will-less

February 21, 2021

Images - Claude Debussy - BRT Philharmonic Orchestra Brussels, Alexander Rahbari

key click immediacy in recorded image
pitch structure is as essential to hearing what's going on
with these music sounds
as the motions among instrument groups
he's working with 

each together and more 

our shape shifts
different parts of our shapes
shift differently 

the depth of focus
in the mix of sounds
making up
that just so sound 

it isn't that he's the best orchestrator of his age
though that he may be**
but that he composed*
with his orchestration 

*lyric doubles of ravishing dance 

**but then Stravinsky

Hungarian Peasant Songs and Dances - Béla Bartók - June de Toth

National Identity
was a thing back then
still a problem 

arted up transcriptions

these sound like they were recorded in a small room
another peculiarity in the production
with no reverb as such
small room
the sound just stops
the signal clears quickly 

so they squeeze the tracks together uncomfortably 

Lisztian transcription for concert performance

Wind Quintet - Carl Neilsen - Athena Quintet

such pleasant harmless games
must be a gas to play
everybody gets to sound great
social orchestration 

and a very nice hymn indeed
variations
everybody comes out in a new costume every minute or so
hymnody in the background

Let's Misbehave - Cole Porter - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey

nice job past us

Gone Dead Train - King Solomon Hill [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

flexible tempo extreme
strict when it wants to be
generous with the surface of time
upon which to spread
the blues are a prayer

Barefoot Boy With Boots On - Roy Cox [from Evans 78s]

a question
the blues is a particular confluence
of harmonic structure and lyric slant
were there
are there
other such confluences
that never made the big time 

extemporary verses in a solid frame

Danses Concertantes - Igor Stravinsky - Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, Neville Marriner

every move repercusses
and there are many moves
every pass
any segment
is a slide specimen of music history
orchestration
sharper edges
brighter more primary colors

{from my blog post of April 25, 1995: the sense of a set of pieces, without, somehow, the actuality. Overlapping of tempo boundaries/thematic boundaries/activity envelopes. more clearly: out of precisely sized fragments of pieces a sense of listening to a set of pieces is formed. Slipping continuously into a new piece: almost Mahleresque in the constancy of its shiftings.}

February 23, 2021

Ritmo Afro Cubano - Chano Pozo [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

fast multipitch drumming with cyclic punctuation
regularity presumed
as an image
if not graspable
as obviously true
with vocals overlain
that may match up with the cycles
or have their own

Symphony in C-sharp minor, Op. 131 (#7) - Serge Prokofiev - Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Neeme Järvi

back to the CCCP
because unlike in the USA
symphonic concert music was still a vital cultural activity
here:
moribund
what was vital here
was alien
back to where people remember
what he remembers

Why Baby Why - Pat Boone [a Rescued Record]

why (won't you please me when you know you care (can)) 

let me count the whys

Baby, I'm In the Mood for You - Bob Dylan [from Biograph]

trying on another Bob Dylan for size
can't quit nail the yokel vocal

February 24, 2021

24 Preludes, 5-8 - Lockrem Johnson - Keith Eisenbrey [from Preludes in Seattle Part 2, March 17, 2007, University Temple United Methodist Church, Seattle]

rushed

Tableaux - Milton Babbitt - Robert Taub

this music has a plenitude of corners for music to hang out in
and it does
 jumps out like spiders 

arachnid
xtuple-dimensional
speed chess

("...my chart shines high where the blue milks upset...") - Benjamin Boretz - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded at a home recital on February 26, 2020]

this music
seeks out 
explores carefully
checks back in
fills

Wimpy - Orbaneja [from Orbaneja]

this music is on stage doin' a show

February 25, 2021

Prelude - Aaron Keyt - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded October 19, 2006]

nicely played past me!
nothing in this piece is overwrought
a lovely study in figuration, melody, counterpoint, and harmony
all in a balance
quasi pastiche

Introduction to Grand Serenade - P.D.Q. Bach [from Music for an Awful Lot of Winds & Percussion]

that's it, just the introductory we're all in on it wink wink

Banned Rehearsal 442 - Isaac E, Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Anna K, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [January 1997]

recorded hot so drums have presence
even the light percussion is right there
drums electric guitar tenor sax violin light percussion 

we are a large crowded painting

my journal page from September 28, 2004

in lively colors 

we gentle out

slightly raucous
lurking cornet

the era between the last Brechemin gig
(Banned Rehearsal 440)
and Teach Yourself to Drive
(our CD) 

banjo speaks dulcimer also
as amplified
or perhaps tenor banjo
with steel slide 

giant
belly
raspberry
jams 

 ticka ticka tickle too 

some synth sound I don't recognize
the Wurlitzer possibly
yes the mighty W
its
self 

nothing will be turned down
play it big
blast furnace
white hot

theme song for the decade of chaos
Mosh at Banned Hall
even the funmaker gets its jollies 

we make this noise because we are here
before we hung the plow wheel
from the rafter 

In Session at the Tintinabulary

February 21, 2021

Banned Telepath 71 Toad Hall - Aaron Keyt

February 22, 2021

Banned Telepath 71 Tintinabulary - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Anna K, Neal Kosály-Meyer

Banned Rehearsal 1020 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Anna K, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer

As has been our practice while in seclusion, Aaron sent sound from Outpost Toad Hall and Anna and Neal called in from Outpost Lake City to where Karen and I were improvising at the Tintinabulary.

Postscripts

::Consult the Oracle

sint mecum ut maybe also may work

in the which I do by nature which is

looking out 11 tells you that that

Reality Check::

a such beetle like thing

spins the blades 

of Jack the Ripper

Saturday, February 20, 2021

Playlist

Preface

"A music musically 'real' but verbally indeterminate - or at least verbally neutral- susceptible to infinite experiential variety and unlimited creative response, but opaque to judgment; a discourse expressive and committed but removed from the territory of truth or authority; a pedagogy intensely holistic but non-abstract and untestable, are all subversive to the existing social order of musical things. They cannot be controlled or institutionalized without being transformed into their negations. They threaten to materialize a world of acts which are expressive and rational but not manipulative or usable as criteria of judgment. Can our world stand to have any even so insignificant a stratum of it running around loose like this?"

- Benjamin Boretz "Music, as a Music" from "Being About Music Textworks 1960-2003 J. K. Randall Benjamin Boretz Volume 2: 1978-2003"

Texts

Recorded

February 13, 2021

Aria 'La Capricciosa' Partita diverse sopra una aria d'Inventione in G, BuxWV 250 - Dietrich Buxtehude - Simone Stella

a model for the Goldberg Variations? 

the aria stays in view at all times
like spokes
rather than a venturing path 

doesn't even get far from the 3/8 meter 

demonstrating what one can do with a thing
not where one can take it
nor how far

Huitième Ordre (si mineur) -  François Couperin - Kenneth Gilbert

works at lifting its spirits
but is in a mood 

echoes of an older metrical practice leak in 

what differentiates this from virginal music of the 1500s
how the ornaments are styled
variety of figuration
underlying harmonic* syntax
predominant framing of piece-ness
subject and elaborations
binary derived formats
*cadences are harmonically structural
rather than being demarcations
phrases are dialogic
a conversation
rather than a yarn being spun 

rondeau not just a familiar place to return
but also an exact shape of time to measure by

Die Wohltemperierte Klavier, Band I - Prelude and Fugue in D Major - Johann Sebastian Bach - Sviatoslav Richter

a happy little creek finds a noble purpose

the bit of dramatic homophony at the close of the Fugue
is an echo of the 'both hands play all of a sudden' episode in the Prelude

Menuet in E-flat Major - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklos Spanyi

in the best fashion
just so

Capriccio in G Major "Acht Sauschneider müssen sein", Hob. XVII.1 - Franz Joseph Haydn - Christine Schornsheim

from what operetta could such a line be lifted?
was it a popular ditty sung upon the streets?
or an inside joke for Joe and his drinking buddies? 

subsequent research reveals that it is based on an Austrian folk song about how many people it takes to castrate a pig (eight)

February 14, 2021

Symphony in D Major, K. 135 - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Academy of Ancient Music, Jaap Schroder, Christopher Hogwood

corporate crescendo
the latest trend
(trendy crescendi) 

marks off
corners
lengths
fills with flash and dazzle

brilliant plumage
ein Vogelfänger bin Ich ja

Sonata in C Major, Op. 9 #2 - Jan Ladislav Dussek - Viviana Sofronitsky

at about the time of the increased promulgation of the fortepiano
individual movements began to be full of highly differentiated episodes
both expressively (affect)
and figurationally (mechanics)
the model of the human mind became a less simple creature 

when was the damper pedal introduced? 
we blame Gottfried Silbermann (1683-1753) who used a hand stop rather than a pedal

ends with a comic song sort of number

Sonata in C minor, Op. 10 #1 - Ludwig van Beethoven - Emil Gilels

holds reserves
generous with time
we get to know these movements
live them 

night sprites

February 15, 2021

Sonata in C Major, Op. 2 #2 - Muzio Clementi - Howard Shelley

includes its own asides
bass line remains completely structural
subservient

Impromptu in F minor, Op. 142 #4 - Franz Schubert - Murray Perahia

where will this single figure take me 

bravely drawn

Etude in E Major, Op. 10 #3 - Frédéric Chopin - Alfred Cortot [1942]

sing the song first
the rest will fall into place

Piano Quintet in E-flat Major, Op. 44 - Robert Schumann - Budapest Quartet, Rudolph Serkin

trapped in an ecstatic loop
fights like crazy to break free
opens with a measure that brings us to a new trap
all modulations descend
we rage to emerge
avail-less
the pages fly off the desk
can't write quickly enough
over it all an angel hovers
we struggle
hopeful
everybody loves a fugue

February 16, 2021

Variations Brillantes on a Mazurka of Chopin - Friedrich Kalkbrenner - Francesca Carola

a 19th Century Art Tatum plays Chopin
heavy on the Brillantes

Boris Godunov, Act IV Scene I - Modest Mussorgsky - Polish Radio National Symphony Orchestra, Jerzy Semkow, Martti Talvela, Leonard Mroz, Nicolai Gedda, Bozena Kinasz, Andrzej Hiolski, Aage Haugland, Halina Lukomska, Polish Radio Chorus of Krakow, Boys Chorus from the Krakow Philharmonic Chorus

disjointed parts add up to a discollective identity
things are falling apart

Symphony in D Major, Op. 73 (#2) - Johannes Brahms - Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Charles Mackerras

the spotlight moves to different parts of the orchestra from segment to segment
then becomes two spotlights
avoiding full tutti
if one doesn't emphasize the common warm glow
the individuated scoring of each passage
provides a drama told piecemeal 

a symphony of things to notice on a Summer day in the country
idyll of pre-industrial bucolic life
in the rearview mirror 

even the beginning of the 4th movement is a mitigated tutti
not until the last few pages does it go all in

February 17, 2021

Parsifal, Act III (Beyreuth 1966) - Richard Wagner - Bayreuth Festival Orchestra, Pierre Boulez, Thomas Stewart, Kurt Bohme, Josef Greindl, Sandor Konya, Gustav Neidlinger, Astrid Varnay, Hermann Winkler, Ger Nienstedt, Ruth Hesse, Elisabeth Schartel, Dieter Slembeck, Erwin Wohlfahrt, Ruth Hesse, Anja Silja, Dorothea Siebert, Lily Sauter, Rita Bartos, Helga Dernesch, Sona Cervena, Wilhelm Pitz (chormeister)

out from hopelessness
triumphal despair 

all the leitmotivs have settled into a stagnant sump
headway unmakeable 

Beethoven: a melody is a tool to build with
Berlioz: a tune can stand for something, can signify
Wagner: I can work the significations as a tool to build a drama with
even when nothing happens 

doomed days go by
nothing left to signify
some shouting

February 18, 2021

Slavonic Dance in D-flat Major, Op. 72 #4 - Antonín Dvořák - The Cleveland Orchestra, Christoph von Dohnányi

light classical? if so, how to approach?
study in balance and stability
a composition game
like still lifes

150 Psalm - Anton Bruckner - Eugen Jochum

every few measures is part of something else uncontained

In Session at the Tintinabulary

February 17, 2021

Work / Architecture / Unity / And /The - Keith Eisenbrey - Keith Eisenbrey

I made another recording of this 2002 piano work. I need to think more about the space between each of the bits. The original idea was that we would come upon each bit suddenly as though from a dense fog, so I waited for each bit to at least be a finished thing before moving on. Now I think it might be better to not have breaks between them at all, let the out-of-nowhere effect emerge from the rhetorical contrasts rather than from a literal nowhere.

Postscripts

::Consult the Oracle

tiring by the guard and I to each

usually were small talk we inn new

have known city shadowing very

Reality Check::

we turn a corner

in stop frame motion

and hear

Saturday, February 13, 2021

Playlist

 Preface

"A music is not a tree, or an earthquake, right, but it's also not a story, a fact, an opinion, a structure. Metaphorically, music is said to be, and can be, any of these things; but except in the most extravagantly abstract fantasies, such semiosis is never literal or exact or rigorous, but always looks across an unfathomable analogical gap. Cognition, nonverbally, does not entail recognition, or representation. Seemingly basic musical 'facts' such as repetition, chords, melodies, parametric geographies, etc., are really only verbal 'facts', primarily opaque to music, but radically reductive to it if they're ontologically transferred into music as representational 'musical facts'. But since intersubjectivity is supposed to be restricted to the symbolic-linquistic, and since cognitivity is supposed to depend on intersubjectivity, how is it possible to identify in interpersonal space a linquistic but nonverbal 'music reality'?"

- Benjamin Boretz "Music, as a Music" from "Being About Music Textworks 1960-2003 J. K. Randall Benjamin Boretz Volume 2: 1978-2003"

Texts

Streaming

Wayward in Limbo

With the Chapel closed indefinitely due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Wayward Music Series now moves from the concert hall to the living room. In place of our usual ten monthly concerts, Nonsequitur is curating and commissioning ten Seattle artists each month to create a series of streaming audio sessions of exclusive material. Many of these will be essentially “live” performances recorded at home for this occasion. Others may create a mix of pre-recorded material that has not been previously released elsewhere.

- from the Wayward Music Series website at https://www.waywardmusic.org/.

February 6, 2021

Harold Budd & Keith Lowe

[recorded at the Chapel Performance Space, Good Shepherd Center, Seattle, on June 11, 2009]

a tree speaking by its roots
past sunfall
near moonfall
long hours 

landscape with fence and shore 

degloaming lazily
allowing
soon
bright hills
still far 

monasterial
all the steps
are taken

spinning voidward

Recorded

February 6, 2021

Sonata in D Major, Op. 40 #3 - Muzio Clementi - Howard Shelley

differentiated tempo episodes
depends on
who is looking at the time 

we can be well behaved
but fun is harmless

Impromptu in E-flat Major, Op. 90 #2 - Franz Schubert - Murray Perahia

affect changes from within the figuration
the ground shifts under us while we frolic

weather arrives

characterization by implied description

Scherzo in B minor, Op. 20 - Frédéric Chopin - Vladimir Ashkenazy

internal focus
we hear a self
reflecting thinking
thoroughly 

multimovement work folded into a single thought

Piano Quartet in E-flat Major, Op. 47 - Robert Schumann - Quatuor Via Nova, Jean Hubeau

balance is background as frame of thinking
what is out of balance with itself
is to balance other phrases
pulling other ways 

excitement and horror
for the thrill of it 

3rd movement owns
so gentle 

now for a game a tag

February 7, 2021

Boris Godunov, Act III Scene II (1872 version) - Modeste Mussorgsky - Polish Radio National Symphony Orchestra, Jerzy Semkow, Martti Talvela, Leonard Mroz, Nicolai Gedda, Bozena Kinasz, Andrzej Hiolski, Aage Haugland, Halina Lukomska, Polish Radio Chorus of Krakow, Boys Chorus from the Krakow Philharmonic Chorus

almost blockprint clarity of parts 

an element of fear to begin
but rising to the emotional high point 

big martial pageant
everybody loves a parade

nothing lasts
situation is unstable 

Dmitri's heroic tune has a family resemblance to Walther's Meisterlied 

tied in a knot
the eroticism
of patriotic
upwelling
feeling

Concerto in D minor - Max Bruch - Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz, Nai-Yuan Hu

midway life's drama
wrote some tunes 

sempre espressivo

these melodies don't talk to each other
they just spin on and on 

all monologue
all the time 

too much tutti 

a tearjerker
jerk's tears 

2nd movement
more intensity
as an opera scene
than the 1st movement 

orchestra's default is monolithic
it all speaks as one 

moral
things are bad
but will modestly improve

Parsifal, Act II - Richard Wagner - Bayreuth Festival Orchestra, Pierre Boulez, Thomas Stewart, Kurt Bohme, Josef Greindl, Sandor Konya, Gustav Neidlinger, Astrid Varnay, Hermann Winkler, Ger Nienstedt, Ruth Hesse, Elisabeth Schartel, Dieter Slembeck, Erwin Wohlfahrt, Ruth Hesse, Anja Silja, Dorothea Siebert, Lily Sauter, Rita Bartos, Helga Dernesch, Sona Cervena, Wilhelm Pitz (chormeister)

a different part of the woods entirely 

these two have a difficult relationship
but it makes sense as a relationship
unlike anything in Act I 

getting the old coven
back to gather again 

her attempt at seduction is well planned
she impersonates his mother
and never stops talking at him 

again icky
but completely believable 

all I want is a kiss wink wink 

fill a voice with anguish
fill a room with a voice
fill a room with anguish

Slavonic Dance in F Major, Op. 72 #3 - Antonín Dvořák - The Cleveland Orchestra - Christoph von Dohnányi

a slavonic dance
being a dance
has a rigid format
so that folks know
where to move
and when 

we can decorate the wall
as we wish
but the walls remain
a voluntary restraint 

[NB this one is a stronger composition than the first two]

Fuge in E minor, Op. posth. - Alexander Scriabin - Michal Ponti

turns it into a Schumannesque essay on repeating transparent transformation

from my journal entry of May 21, 1995: clear and colorful. academic, yes, but almost nostalgically so.

Three Piano Dances from Good Times and Dances - Stephen Foster & Charles Ives [from The Great Sentimental Age - Gregg Smith Singers]

straight from that hotbed of intellectualism
the Harvard beerhall
late 19th Century 

the keyboard style reminds me of simplified Brahms Hungarian Dances
or Chico Marx 

I presume these are all by Stephen Foster

Symphony No. 2, Op. 16 "The Four Temperaments" - Carl Nielsen - London Symphony Orchestra, Ole Schmidt

the meta affect of an older psychology
better sibling of
or cousin of
The Planets 

neo Baroque
trying to make itself small
such frustration
everybody is allowed to wear a corset 

The 4 Impersonations of the Temperaments in Symphonic Sound tm 
we choose 4
because it might
could
balance 

this may be an inaccurate characterization

February 8, 2021

6 Songs - Francisco Ernani Braga - Teresa Berganzo, Juan Antonio Alvarez Parejo

#1 features a low repeated tone drone in eighths
echoed by the single pitch drone in the 2nd part of the vocal. 

clarity - French influence?
well written but challenging for voice
supportive in both line and harmony
unpretentious but well made
popular in the operatic way of being popular
or even in the cabaret way

Grizzly Bear  - Jack Charman [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

nothing refined about it
this here's 'Merica! 

dance crazed
[thanks, Irving Berlin,
I guess]

February 9, 2021

Le Tombeau de Couperin - Maurice Ravel (Fugue arranged by David Diamond) - Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz

providing a serviceable orchestration of a non-threatening piece
a money making venture? 

interesting times to be composing such music

modernist:
impressionist
neo-classicist
symbolist
primitivist
expressionist
formalist 

a sad feature of this lush instrumentation for keyboard pieces is a loss of definition
something is obscured
diffused

Piano Sonata, Op. 34
- Alexander Krein - Jonathan Powell

like Scriabin, full invested in a heady brew
of expressionist
impressionist
formalist
(in the speculative formalist sense) 

intent on pursuing the new

God's Gonna Separate the Wheat from the Tares - Blind Joe Taggart [from Allen Lowe's Really The Blues]

flipping his Rs

meter determination:
standard procedure:
first find one 

already on the wrong track

Violin Concerto No. 1 - Bohuslav Martinů - Czech Philharmonic Orchestra - Vaclav Neumann, Josef Suk

comes out fighting
temperature is high
we're being squeezed
into small spaces 

in the last decades
before it became ridiculous
to compose such things
as violin concertos 

this should be the happy domestic movement
it's nervous 

is this whole thing on the E string/?
loves motors

Chanson russe for Violin and Piano - Igor Stravinsky - Joseph Szigeti, Igor Stravinsky

means match ends
as cabaret ready
as Satie or Weill

Fanfare For The Common Man - Aaron Copland - Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz

who are the drumwhaps for? 

tries for that
also sprach Zarathustra vibe

Thermopolae - Stan Kenton [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

for the movies
the mean streets
noir 

not for the dance floor
nightmare cabaret

Lawdy Miss Clawdy - Lloyd Price [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

music for a new mode of dissemination
radio first
jukebox
45 platter

Winter Music - John Cage - The Callithumpian Consort, Stephen Drury

for dismembered pianist and scattered gestures

Wedding Song - unknown composer - Betty Eisenbrey, Joanne Deacon

from a private tape. This is a setting of the same text different translation from Ruth that I set for David and Yvonne's wedding way back in the way back

February 10, 2021

Agnus Dei - Samuel Barber - Robert Shaw Festival Singers, Robert Shaw, Arietha Lockhart

the all-purpose adagio
ka ching 

better settings
much better
of Agnus Dei exist
and inflating the string quartet movement
does it no particular favors 

but
ka ching

The Lord Is My Shepherd - Randall Thompson - Lake Washington Singers, Betty Eisenbrey, Joanne Deacon [April 14, 1972]

choral arrangements can be lucrative
relatively
for the publisher anyway
since they sell so many copies per performing group 

the trick is to make them anodyne and yet skillfully done

Games - Ann Peebles

everything fits
everything makes room

Pastorale: "The Color of Water" take 3 of October 12, 2010 - Neal Kosály-Meyer - Neal Kosály-Meyer

such a frail bark for so much words 

may be the last time he finished a piece
that had written down notes 

a line of hills
slowly rehearsed 

Yonder She Comes - Seeger Family [from American Folk Songs for Children]

greetings and small talk for light courting

Banned Rehearsal 286 - John E, Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Aaron Keyt

variations on a baby babbled theme
for piano and horn
at Toad Hall
else whence the piano
which we didn't have available
in the room we used
at the Tintinabulary
then 

so much empty space in the signal
I can hear Aaron's horn entrance
2 wraps of tape
before it arrives
such magnificent blats
as though we took cues
from the future 

John does very good standing 

I don't remember how we set up the microphones at Toad Hall
I presume we brought the PZMs but may be mistaken
Aaron might have had some microphones
too long ago
no picture in head

Stillborn - The Keeners [a Rescued Record]

socially acceptable mode of social dis-acceptability trapped in song form

February 11, 2021

Piano Trio Movement - unknown composer - unknown performers possibly including Betty Eisenbrey [from a private recording]

I believe this is from a local adult chamber music camp my Mom would attend in the early 2000s

Violin Duo - Elaine Barkin (electronic realization by Loren Norell) [from Open Space 24]

centered much further east than the angels
much further even than our east
an emptiness more empty than the emptied east

Banned Rehearsal 805 - Pete Comley, Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Steve Kennedy, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [January 2012]

after announcements it accumulates slowly
radio ice breaker dragging heavy chains
rough terrain
fights back 

foregroundless

vanishes

Looking - Benjamin Boretz [from Open Space 44]

plain parts on severe paper
plain light
harsh
without echo

Nancie, Fvb 12 - Thomas Morley - Claudio Columbo [from Fitzwilliam Virginal Book]

a mere nothing
in all its glory
to show how 'tis done

Voltes - Michael Praetorius - New London Consort, Philip Pickett [from Dances from Terpsichore]

musicians who wrote music down
were trained to do so
for vocal part writing
that being how and why
written down music
was written down
they made instrument families
to imitate the voices
so they could write written down music
for instruments
too

In Session at the Tintinabulary

February 8, 2021

Banned Telepath 70 Tintinabulary - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey

February 9, 2021

Banned Telepath 70 Toad Hall - Aaron Keyt

Banned Rehearsal 1019 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Aaron Keyt

The banned gathers for times to meet

Postscripts

::Consult the Oracle

of vapour the is serene to habitually

caused in soul by thee divine be a

spirit as well by reason of the

Reality Check::

drifting away on a seaweed covered surfboard

through his left hand as orange

the cat sleeping on my ankles

Saturday, February 6, 2021

Playlist

 Preface

"And yet, and perhaps even consequently, it's possible that music, in our culture, is drowning, may even already have drowned, in saying, in discourse; that musics as musics have become virtually unrecoverable except as illustrators of saying, as contentless placeholders used as soundless referents in deluges of program notes, pre-concert lectures, newspaper reviews, pedagogies, a whole headful of philosophical and theoretical and political and critical expressions identifying themselves in the name of music. Could it be that the seductive, imaginative, thoughtful, intricate, acute, profound qualities of critical thinking simply become the entire residual experiential content of 'music' in our world; and, shorn of their music-determining power, would the texts of discourse simply be vacuous? And would music, leached beyond metaphor and model, dredged  back up out of the morass of discourse, come up blank, faceless, voiceless, meaningless? Deprived of linguistic explication, music, in a verbal world, really doesn't signify anything; it doesn't even signify nothing."

- Benjamin Boretz "Music, as a Music" from "Being About Music Textworks 1960-2003 J. K. Randall Benjamin Boretz Volume 2: 1978-2003"

Texts

Streaming

Wayward in Limbo

With the Chapel closed indefinitely due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Wayward Music Series now moves from the concert hall to the living room. In place of our usual ten monthly concerts, Nonsequitur is curating and commissioning ten Seattle artists each month to create a series of streaming audio sessions of exclusive material. Many of these will be essentially “live” performances recorded at home for this occasion. Others may create a mix of pre-recorded material that has not been previously released elsewhere.

- from the Wayward Music Series website at https://www.waywardmusic.org/.

January 30, 2021

Mark D. Cooper

Asteroid 1

Exosphere

Oort

Axion

Orbits

Eridanus

Asteroid 2

constant constancy
a surface
across which ephemerates
shades casting shadows
substanceless cyclic drumming 

why such
ever returning
to cycles
round round 

to dislocate nowness
and sequence
and number 

inside the machinery of chronos
chronopath 

an object of time
pick it up
an organism with behavior

redundant as a policy
all the lines are closed
loops
a dimension in which a circle is a straight line

a story may have rubbed this crystal
left shades
drums
like fire
keep back night 

keep back

January 31, 2021

Christopher Icasiano

small sticks in a large space find drums
stability of cyclicity
gets in the groove

a gradual drift to a variant of the stability of cyclicity
a way of thinking about a musical idea
forming it plasticly
through its clear continuous cyclic presence 

back to the sticks
a breather
start with rubbing tapping
linger on the breath strokes

February 2, 2021

Francis/Callahan/Witscher (RM Francis, Jack Callahan, Jeff Witscher)

Every Single Person Has Some Muscle

narrative
literal
fractured 

in collisions we grasp at momentary coherence 

lexicon modulation

Seattle Modern Orchestra 

Kaleidoscope - Reflections in Sounds

Mikhail Shmidt violin; Ha-Yang Kim cello; Michael Nicolella electric guitar; Bonnie Whiting percussion; Cristina Valdés piano

ALVIN SINGLETON Greed Machine for vibraphone and piano (2003)

three yellow stools
now only two

these events transpire in the difference
the lack
or overage
of stools

JÉRÉMY JOLLEY (contro-)clessidra I for violin and electric guitar (2015)

an idea
a balance
a ratio
and rationale 

a guitar
and a violin
pluckstrummer
and scraper 

not so much two instruments
as two mindsets

differentiation
specialization
composer performer
heirarchy
(so starchy)
but it does create here a vibrant tension that thrums like a drum

CHEN-HUI JEN across & between II – into the chasm for electric guitar and portable percussion (2015 [Seattle Premiere]

the artist's statement
is to provide every possible route in
none of which routes
quite prepares us
for anything
that might be
remotely
surmisable
as being 
about this 

a duet between color balances
a further distinction
and camera angles
and body lingo
how faces and hands move to each other

HELENA TULVE lumineux/opaque for violin, cello, piano, 3 wine glasses (2002)

the stools are back
they are crucial to how this sounds

string trio
two scrapers and a hammerer
outlier
the escapement lever system
hammered zither

CHRISTIAN WOLFF For Bob II for violin, cello, percussion, piano (2015)

splotches

co|mm|une
com|mun|ity 

com moc
mun num
cum muc
mon nom  

Recorded

January 30, 2021

A Much Married Woman, Chapter 1 - Nancy Cole Silverman - Adam Verner

style is the thing
the only thing
style
of everything

Nancy is a cousin of mine. She writes in various genres. I found this audio-book in my Mom's collection. This scene is set on a train moving through the American West sometime in the past, late 19th Century I think.

Banned Rehearsal 926 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Steve Kennedy, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [January 2017]

take words in the order desired
the words that follow 

of course my listening is skewed
because I recognize these sounds
with their instruments
and operators and
to some extent
the discrete sources 

imprint of ontology
though they speak
the source telepaths
speaking across
chronopathically 

we've hit a bit of weather here
glorious old sounds indeed
uncoil so spirally

simultaneous times
as perceived
and a permeable bubble
coeval
in any order


January 31, 2021

Galliarda to My Lord Lumley's Pavanne, FVB 11 - John Bull - Claudio Columbo [from the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book]

mode and register and voice

the lyric paths of each and every

La Sarabande - Michael Praetorius - New London Consort, Philip Pickett [from Dances for Terpsichore]

for a dance
the fancy decorations
take a background role

Suite in F Major, BuxWV 238 - Dietrich Buxtehude - Simone Stella

a metrical beat is a basket
with plenty of room for more
a heftable moment
with polyjanus faces

Neuvième Ordre (la) - François Couperin - Kenneth Gilbert, Martha Brickman

two soundboards made to sing harmony
with each other 

clear differentiation of rhetorical function
between the main tune
and the accompanying figures
though they still echo each other
and dance the same dance 

hierarchic design
to mimic multiple instruments at once
to be the whole orchestra 

no moments during which he isn't designing something happening
and moving 

unlikely to get into much trouble
being so closely chaperoned

February 1, 2021

Die Wohltemperierte Klavier, Band I - Prelude and Fugue in D Major - Christiane Jaccottet

left hand
old dog 

right hand
eager pup 

which leads 

a fugue that hides inside an overture

Excerpt from Notebook for Anna Magdalena Bach - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklos Spany

life at home

Sonata in E minor, Hob. XVI:47bis - Franz Joseph Haydn - Christina Schornsheim

an affective scene
searching out the threads of sensibility
lighten up
strike a balance 

that first movement would be a good clavichord piece

February 2, 2021

Symphony in C Major - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Academy of Ancient Music, Jaap Schroder, Christopher Hogwood

complete with proscenium and audience separation
fun with bits of counterpoint 

music that speaks
from the company on stage
to us in our seats

Sonata in B-flat Major, Op. 9 #1 - Jan Ladislav Dussek - Viviana Sofronitsky

selling the instrument
it sings
it thunders
it babbles along
brook-like
doesn't much hold still 

any deficiency in sustain
is mitigated by figuration 

building its own mini adventures

February 4, 2021

Sonata in C Major, Op. 2a #3 - Johann Nepomuk Hummel - Constance Keene

chafing at surface unity
or parts of it
impatience

contrast
once possible
becomes necessary 

the new piles on
never rests

Sonata in E-flat Major, Op. 7 - Ludwig van Beethoven - Artur Schnabel

a gesture is an idea
in its own sphere 

in what person is this

a space is vacated
into which
we are compelled
to form ourselves 

medium of self reflection
the thought must finish solid

from my journal entry of March 21, 2004: more violent reckless - and more accurate to the markings [in comparison to Kempff]

In Session at the Tintinabulary

February 3, 2021

Work
Architecture
Unity
And
The

- Keith Eisenbrey - Keith Eisenbrey

I have been thinking about this 2002 composition of mine, in anticipation of recording it again. This is my first go at it. It consists of 17 bits of musical thought each of which is composed of two mod-17 pitch sets related by transposition of 2 unit intervals (T2). My recollection is that a function of some kind (probably mod-17 multiplication) was used to generate each successive bit. I was unable to spend more than a few minutes in an attempt to recover the specifics of that function, which remain elusive. Part of the impetus behind it was to find a way of making a composition that could be played by Banned Rehearsal. That project might have led to some interesting results, but wasn't that great an activity as a Banned Rehearsal thing to do. I recorded a version of this with Doug Haire at Jack Straw late that year. I overlaid the piano solo bits with improvised percussion. I also performed it at Seattle Composers' Salon once when that was being held at the educational space on the lower street level of Benaroya Hall, and also once in a joint recital with Gavin Borchert at Polestar Gallery - the space currently occupied by Gallery 1412. In those solo versions I would play each bit and then wait for a good long time before playing the next one. I wanted each bit to come upon the listener suddenly and vanish thoroughly before the next one. I'm not so sure I hear it that way anymore, so I have been working at leaving just enough time between each to clear the air.

Postscripts

::Consult the Oracle

her bed doctor why that business passing

flags even while he was speaking he I

to his talk directly said words he lay

Reality Check::

circle voice

more than one

monologue in the world