Saturday, September 25, 2021

Playlist

Preface

"Had we been on the West Coast (I speak only for myself) it would probably have been John Cage; because Milton [Babbitt] and Cage were the two composers of the previous generation who totally and organically embodied a total revolution in musical expression - as against the 'modernism' of incremental radicalization and subversion of musical surfaces overlying a fundamental continuity with tradition. Their new music was not a new way of doing music, not a way of being 'modern'; it was an entirely new sense of what music was, what it was doing, what it was for, why you did it."

- Benjamin Boretz - "A Quasi-Personal Reflection on Milton Babbitt's Centenary and its Celebrations"  from "inside in . . . / . . . outside out" Open Space Publications, 2020

Texts

Streaming

September 18, 2021

Finnegans Wake, Chapter 5 - James Joyce - Neal Kosály-Meyer

a head
in a dark space
a thousand and one voices
misremembered
specifically that they said
what they said
a polyhedron of scripture
one stable somebody
yes less
punctuation as specialty
the improbable
the inevitable
and the words have been jumbled into the rhythm of sense
this will never do
that ideal reader
suffering from an ideal insomnia
the fretful fidget
the third person
is the person darkly spoken of
these paper wounds

Star Anna and her guitar
September 19, 2021

Star Anna

And there she was
channeling the blues
from a green room
in what I presume
is her home
blessed us
with an awesome cover of Space Oddity
as well as a strong selection of original songs

From Recent Arrivals

September 19, 2021

Rocker - Miles Davis [from Birth of the Cool]

holding fast to singability

This Is Always - Morgana King [from This Is Always]

fascinating ping high in the mouth cavity
with a luscious deepness to it
extraordinary suppleness and precision
slow dance tempo
I like her drummer

Save Me - Nina Simone [from Silk & Soul]

right in the funk
whole
projecting an image of careless relaxation
tells a rather elaborate story

I Love to Love - Peggy Lee [from I Like Men! (Remastered)]

50s version of I Like 'Em Big and Stupid

Recorded

September 18, 2021

Feeling My Way - Eddie Lang, Carl Kress [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

shaped partly like a Broadway show tune
lots of parts worked out fully
fancy guitar playing

Ramblin' On My Mind - Robert Johnson [from The Complete Recordings]

throws the train whistle in there
with announcement

There Won't Be a Shortage of Love - Peggy Lee [from The Complete Recordings 1941 - 1947]

music for social relaxation
classy
comforting
without rough edges
settles for competence
which it has in spades

Irene - Lead Belly [from Where Did You Sleep Last Night? - Lead Belly Legacy Volume 1]

the chorus with which it opens
has no particular relatedness to the verses
nor they to each other

Octet for Wind Instruments - Igor Stravinsky - Columbia Chamber Ensemble, Igor Stravinsky

the second trumpet note
provides the nudge
in how it looks back
at
both
the first trumpet note
and
the fiddly bit
between them
basic research
into how repetitions
and groupings
in all sorts of parameters
can bounce around an ensemble
a model for group communication
and information sharing
understated audience friendly ending
in the sense
that he's not begging for an ovation
ta da!
just pausing
so that we can begin to converse

Love Is Strange - Micky & Sylvia [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

confession: I have this track in several different collections
including a 7 inch 33 1/3 rock and roll hits from the 50s  platter
can't go wrong with all those cowbells

September 19, 2021

Piano Concerto - Samuel Barber - Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, Leonard Slatkin, John Browning

1
opens with solo passage:
the piano acting the orchestra's role
since Beethoven, the piano solo has attempted to be a second orchestra,
battle armor on,
equal
rather than a selected part of it
this goes that route
contrast Mozart concerti
where the soloist emerges
from within the orchestra
|| the sound of this reminds me of Zemlinsky and Roussel, both.
has the American habit of grinding his tune in repetitiously
more so we hear that he's doing it
than in order to make each one a progression from the last
|| the piano is trying to put the orchestra back in the original packaging
has to chase parts of it
all over the room 

2
this is a lovely garden
if it's real 

it has the charisma of something long vanished
what is it nostalgic about
there's the rub 

3
back into the battle
I like the xylophone entrance
sounds like the piano is hiding inside it
this movement is fun
the piano and orchestra playing hide and seek
more duel with swords
than battle with artillery
the piano writing is quite good
uh oh
get ready to applaud

Treatise (Excerpt) - Cornelius Cardew - John Tilbury

thunder added by the outside world
fits right in
this is really pretty
with cymbal screech

If You Don't Know Me By Now - Harold Melvin and the Bluenotes [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

half singing
half declaiming
a pleading
with the repetitiousness of a simmering dispute

September 21, 2021

("...my chart shines high where the blue milks upset...") - Benjamin Boretz - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded live at University Temple United Methodist Church, Seattle, October 25, 2002]

it is possible that I am not in a right head space
for this performance
but the opening pages
seem confused
as though I'm reciting something
phonetically
without the flow that understanding brings
feeling my way into it
playing rather than inhabiting

Born In the USA - Bruce Springsteen [from Tracks]

reflexive indicting time
we leave traces

Gradus 4 (San Diego Series) - Neal Kosály-Meyer - Neal Kosály-Meyer [January 14, 1987]

factoid concerning this San Diego Series of Gradus:
they were made on 10 consecutive days,
January 11 through 20, 1987.

even so
if he had kept that going
he would not be close
to how "far along"
he has gotten
by "skipping ahead"
and would not get there
in many lifetimes. 

I heard there is a piano manufacturer pushing for a 108 key piano. 

found rhythm
between the original signal
encoded magnetically
upon the ghost imprints
of that signal
on what I presume are the blanker portions of tape
that lay atop
or underneath it
on the cassette reel

Gamelange - Elaine Barkin - UCLA Gamelaners [from Open Space 34]

for harp and Balinese/Javanese gamelan band
reversing a common trope
the exotic imported
here
the import
is the Western instrument
as stand-in
for the Western trained and wide open earmind
imported into a different sound world
no pretense being made
that this is anything but that
a creative earmind reporting what it heard
(it isn't making traditional western music either)

September 22, 2021

Banned Rehearsal 451 - Isaac E, Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Anna K, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [April 12, 1997]

clarinet guitar piano and various percussions in chamber symphony mode
(it was Elaine Barkin who called us (correctly) on that)

In listening
my desire
is to not be coerced
into a single track
a singular meaning
a monolithical narrative
I desire release
from coercion
(in this context)
(I'm more OK with being charmed or beguiled or invited or delighted)
but I desire a looser polyamory of voices
free to float
this session is largely affirming of that stance
a righteous rumble
as
I believe
the Mighty Wurlitzer enters the mix
a solid inhabitable mass
dense with intonation
I'm pretty sure that's me playing piano
which is a cheat I suppose
I do refrain from fancy fingerwork
stick to fancy thinking
at a spacious pace

{{from my journal entry of November 30, 2004}}:

clarinet starts off more solo-like in this one
we are orchestrating again
a danger is in playing as though pretending we know what we are doing
clarinet is problematic why?
because it is so blasted difficult to make it sound good
and most of its bad sounds
aren't very malleable
piano being noisy spiky
some of the agendas here
are aggressively pushing toward
what?
toward a high tight in your face sound
drumming calms us down
several factions here are not gelling
guitar and clarinet and piano playing
a music
drum playing another music
bitsy percussion playing a lot
as though that might keep up with all this sound
piano plays a big chorale
things seem to [be] straightening themselves out
after snare drums goes away
bass drum begins
the ungelling forces gather again 
but the ungelling becomes an active image of itself
fragmented
the gelled faction
more unhinged from its music
metal rolling against itself
falling into a moment of warm butter
from the session before
but not settling right in the groove
kick drum centers
grounds the ensemble
always settling back into something
very like music but not quite
some faction or other is always subversive of regular music
settling down
and thus it remains lively
because whatever we are constructing
we must always be re-designing the foundation of it
to account for the eternal nibbling of the percussion rodents
the piano chorale insists
though all spiritual possibility
for it has vanished
foundations
chewed away
we are here
even Isaac
in the upper bell pitch region
and re-surmise our fundament
drone tone
the vocal weakens [the whole] somewhat
[NB: I disagree now]
but may not kill the session
this last big is OK
but lacks the energy of that opening stuff
[NB possibly, but I doubt it]
we decidedly calm down bide our time

grandma grab the bourbon - The Weapon [a Rescued Record]

music minus one?
song without song?
a demo for the bass player
starts nowhere in particular
and stays put trapped

Consider the Birds 41 - Keith Eisenbrey [February 3, 2007]

melody exists
because we seek it out
melody and
our desire for melody
are one and same

Catfish - Waxahatchee [from American Weekend]

isolated memory unresolvable
no more than absolute

We had tickets to hear Waxahatchee at the Neptune for shortly after the 2020 shutdown. The concert was delayed until this month at the Moore, but we were not yet ready to spend that much time indoors with that many people, precautions or not. I'm sorry though we didn't get to hear her again.

Banned Rehearsal 929 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Steve Kennedy, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [assembled from Banned Telepaths 54, February 13 & 15, 2017]

given that speech is coercive on its face
and declaimed speech doubly so
my feeling is that I mixed this well
lots of double reed to compete
the sound as a whole is grand
each strike glows
from whereverwhence it hath come upon us 

In the doing of Banned Rehearsal
I find myself concerned (overly?)
that every sound I touch is cliché
every movement a habit
listening back
this is not an issue
pretty much ever 

It can be so easy to be elsewhere
anxiety forces us out of our present

September 23, 2021

Praeludium, Fvb 43 - John Bull - Claudio Columbo [from The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book]

in which: a multitude of ways are discovered to send internal voices in opposite directions

Symphoniae Sacrae II, Op. 10 #21 "Herr, neige deine Himmel und fahr herab" - Heinrich Schütz - Capella Augustana

duet for basso and basso profundo
energy can spill over into ensuing moments
internal picardian cadences

Prelude and Fugue in B-flat minor - Johann Sebastian Bach - Sviatoslav Richter

finding some of John Bull's opposite directions
but with intent to go somewhere
clear from the start
the picard at the end feels right
a resolution not a jarring surprise happy ending

Sonata in C Major, Kk. 133 - Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

glitters erupt
his figures point at locations within the motor
each pointed location
tilts the torso

Sonata in E Major, Wq. 62.17 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklos Spanyi

a thoughtful Allegro gives it time to be very clear in all its moments
a quiet mind in a quiet mood
balance games interrupted by disbalance games
will we find our way out?
ever?

Fantasia in C Major, Hob. XVII:4 - Franz Joseph Hayden - Christine Schornsheim

the nonseqs go by so fast you almost don't hear what just happened
they sneak in under cover of motoric propulsion
FJH feeling his oats

Symphony in D Major, K. 385(385) with March K. 408 #2 - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Academy of Ancient Music, Japp Schroder, Christopher Hogwood

the march opens with a great drum roll
I want one
and prefigures the big octave leaps
that open the traditional first movement
dynamic contrasts can also sound like force reductions
concertante
it is my understanding that it was customary at that time
to play other pieces
vocal solos, etc.
between the movements
that the symphony was a filler
for the real show
was there a standard sort of piece that would be played
after the first movement?
after an andante?
after a menuet? 

the concept of symphony arose out of another practice

Sonata in E-flat Major, Op. 31 #3 - Ludwig van Beethoven - Artur Schnabel

out of virtually nothing
so jolly
except the moments when it's terrifying
some parts get back to the key
before others do
some overshoot
keep getting slapped back into line
Artur sure is in a hurry for this one

September 24, 2021

Etude in F minor, Op. 10 #9 - Frédéric Chopin - Alfred Cortot [recorded 1942]

tune on offbeats
that lean over a precipice
we teeter
shift weight
drunk clumsy

Selection 13 from Selections from The Nutcracker - Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky - Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy

pretty nice sounding celeste
I wonder how many takes it took before they got all the notes to speak?

That Lovin' Traumeri - Al Jolson [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

love the cymbal hit
nothing subtle about it
whap! 

I'm trying not to imagine that he must be in blackface
but then is this an aural/linguistic/music-rhetorical equivalent? 

he does have an interesting voice

Sam - Husk O'Hare [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

jazz as weaponized racial caricature
are we black
we'll be black right up in your face
and teach you to like it

Blessed Are the Poor - Luther Magby [from Allen Lowe's Really The Blues]

pump organ and spoons!
on washboard?

Lafayette - Bennie Moten - [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

opening piano chords are in a different character from the piece proper
like as in a cantor's gloria in excelsis deo in traditional masses
the dance floor spins and careers

Cumberland Mountains - Carson Robison Trio [from Evans 78s]

sentimentalize the home turf while on the road
having left a home
was
and is
a common trope
and reality
whistling!! in harmony!!

The Way You Look Tonight - Peggy Lee [from The Complete Recordings 1941 - 1947]

bell kit?
with soft mallets,
but might be a celeste or the upper reaches of a vibraphone 

text (we presume)
written from the 'male' point of view
she sells it
and thus it could be read as some other point of view entirely
humming harmony with the horns

Music for Orchestra - Irving Fine - Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra, Joel Spiegelman

wonderfully pleasant music
smarter than he seems to be at first
the parts all fit and move
to join the other parts
but in a mix of size
each just exactly the size it needs
no more
the Stravinksy influence is clear
but doesn't intrude
the sun shines here
and the evenings are soft and open


Even Wild Horses
- Harry Partch - Gate5 Ensemble

it seems almost simplistically gimcrack
but that's a synthetic illusion
these sounds
are the sounds of things
solid things
you can feel their weight and texture
in the sound they make
the things they are
were made exactly for that purpose 

French?
how did that language find its way to these sounds? 

myth in the real 

Toccata - Paul Creston - Seattle Symphony, Gerard Schwarz

this piece is designed to show off the orchestra
like a costume they can parade around in
made to order
first piece on a symphony concert
where the Rossini overture goes
before the concerto
but a mini-symphony all on its own
new material arrives
rather than arising from the present
the condensed Concerto for Orchestra
(oh its baleful influence!)

In Session at the Tintinabulary

September 20, 2021

Gradus 371 - Neal Kosály-Meyer

given --> a complex sonority:

(harmonically) (registrally):

Is the default scheme for comprehension hierarchical,
or is there
are there
(an)other path(s)?

do we (if we do)
construct the hierarchy from something more basic?
(we must)
(which means)
we could invent and choose. 

A movable center
(now, as it is)
includes all that has passed
exactly to the extent it matters
to the now that is

Query:
Neal plays "A" then plays "B"
both hang in there in resonant space
so that we hear the decays of both at once
During that time
when we are hearing both decays at once
do we continue to order them?
why? 
for how long? 

Listening experiment:
(start anywhere) 
pick a note
focus on its decay
and on how its decay hangs in there
as other notes and decays accumulate upon it
When it has gone
utterly
then do the same with the first sound following
that is melody 

repetitions of sounds
and alterations of sound-pairs
make this a very interesting compositional activity 

melody is a structure
composed by listeners
on the spot
extemporary

Postscripts

::Consult the Oracle

kind of shutters down for yesterday the

golden pestles and mortars fixed as signs

upon the sun-blind frames outside them

Reality Check::

the corridor

in tinted eyes

one day the osprey

Saturday, September 18, 2021

Playlist

Preface

"In the moment of each piece I am transported out of the universe of music, to an incommensurable non-relativistic absolute of  'this' - in which 'this' is, at this moment, for this moment only, what music is. 

objective analysis: what's there to strike/affect you however; experiential descriptions: an inner biography of a reception; aesthetic analysis: what's there in the sense of how it ontologizes in consciousness - in whatever terms capture the experiential sense it makes insofar as the person composing the analysis is concerned - and since the units of musical reception are single music-phenomena received by single people at single times, the person-specific mode of description is the musically most accurate, as far as I'm concerned. This sort of explains to me why most generalized descriptions of music, or objectified descriptions of single musics, seem not to be intuitively 'about' anything like music, or like any particular music."

- Benjamin Boretz - "to Dora Hanninen"  from "inside in . . . / . . . outside out" Open Space Publications, 2020

Texts

From Recent Arrivals

September 12, 2021

Embraceable You - Judy Garland [from The Complete Decca Masters]

sung with extensive, but perfectly controlled portamento
nothing that gets in the way of putting the song across the decades intact

That's The Way Love Goes - Janet Jackson [from Janet]

[NB This was the fourth track I attempted to random-pick from the album. The first three I chose were little snippets of sound inserted among the longer tracks. I began to wonder if there was anything on the album longer than 10 seconds.]

singing in a bed of rhythm and speech
a crowd of speak-in-turn

I Am Free - Mariah Carey [from Daydreams]

testimony
with gospel pipes
amply elaborated

Shades - Dawn Richard [from Newbreed]

additive rhythms
rooted in the bass
reconfigured with each vocal eruption
quick

September 17, 2021

String Trio, Op. 45 - Arnold Schoenberg - Rolf Schulte, Richard O'Neill, Fred Sherry

sizes of gestures
counterpoint with
number (count) of notes
with articulation echoes
with dynamic gestures 

his thinking is clear
simple to follow
even if it takes some thorny prose
to attempt to describe
some of what it is that is so clear within it

Strike Zones - Joan Tower - Albany Symphony, David Alan Miller, Evelyn Glennie

not as cheerfully playful as its Babbitt-worthy title would suggest
more of a grim nocturnal goblin mist about it 

I had the pleasure of meeting Ms. Tower ages ago at Bard.

Recorded

September 11, 2021

Crack Glass Eulogy - Stan Brakhage

dimming lights

Banned Rehearsal 450 - Isaac E, Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Anna K, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [April 5, 1997]

quieter weather
but incessant
and increasingly so
little moves
hold steady
stay put
fade gently

{{from my journal entry of November 29, 2004}}:

Aaron brings the clarinet again.
We hear lots of rattling around
and the piano
a strummingtheguitar/piano
above this dark warm buttery sound
a sax squawk
whose squawk is echoed
down into the warm buttery
by percussion
guitar
everybody shares it
tethering it to the collective
are those pulling against each other,
or toward each other? 

this mass doesn't move.
It doesn't roll.
perhaps it roils within itself.
But inert is its mass. 

- violin entrance could signal change.
The warm butter sharpens up a bit.
music on the move.
How is its moving?
not like a huge iron wheel.
more like an icebreaker in slow motion.
landed now
in a quieter, colder, emptier space. 

for awhile it hangs midair,
then fills in a space below it.
but not yet on the ground. 

[extremely strong, almost psychedelic ensemble playing throughout, by everybody] 

premium is placed on blend.
the sounds blend with each other
none stick out for long,
or create a line that is stronger as itself
than it is as a part of the whole.
Even Isaac's squalling.
private matters tend to diminuendo into the background. 

We resolve for awhile
into a fabulous scribbleguitar and piano duet
- with organ bass
and occasional outside comments by drums and stuff.
Really a far cry from warm and butter.
Exit to an outerspace virtual image terminal.
distant cold, and eternal. 

|| jangly low piano and drums.
We have come back to earth.
having seen.
Could go weak here, if this drumming drumming continues.
The question - once we have come back to earth
have we anything to say,
or should it just cut out there? 

does come,
briefly,
to a very quiet place.
Isaac is kind of noisy. 

We collectively compose a diminuendo, which isn't quite as interesting as that journey into the stars just completed. 

the apachees are encircling - The Weapon [a Rescued Record]

rhythm section demo
strictly instrumental
not sure what the Apachees have to do with it

Consider the Birds (Raw Footage) - Keith Eisenbrey [February 3, 2007]

As I recall, this is a bit of a then recent Banned Rehearsal that was on my hard drive when I started experimenting. I sliced out 10 minutes to use.
Trombone, or cornet or somebrass perhaps the alto,
xylophone, ocarina.
a light percussion contraption with a spring in it
and some rattling or shaking
a can drum
triangle
gong soft bong
a honk as might be by a duck with a cold in the nose

Nokturno 7 - Aleš Fridel - Lovorka Nemeš Dular [from Open Space 47]

piano figuration anchored to a shifting harmonic center
as might a conversation work itself along

Banned Telepath 54 Anchorage - Aaron Keyt [February 15, 2017]

synthesizer telegraph message

September 12, 2021

Pavana of My Lord Lumley, Fvb 41 - John Bull - Claudio Columbo [from The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book]

the meter expands at elaboration's behest they dance genteelly

Symphoniae Sacrae II, Op. 10 #19 "Der Herr ist meien Licht und mein Heil" - Heinrich Schütz - Capella Augustana

two male voices push each other into higher steps on the ladder
all quite diatonic until a sudden chromatic twist warps the cadence
the several segments are connected by a similar duet

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

I'm sorry she didn't take the repeats in the Prelude, they add to the sense that the piece has been about its business before you arrive and will do so after you leave 

the fugue is one of my favorites
how each entrance-sized segment is so clearly figured,
that one might think it's square,
but the sheer quantity of metrical implications at play is bewildering

Sonata in B-flat minor, Kk. 131 - Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

a stomping kick dance
might the binary schema of these sonatas
serve mostly just to help the sequentiality of it,
as it goes,
seem plausible,
that perhaps its fact
is less crucial to the form
as experience
than its effect is

La Xenophon and La Sybille - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklos Spanyi

sketch for an opera number?
I love these 18th Century bass lines
so unashamed to own their function. 

Perhaps a miniature diptych?
a vamp for a pantomime?

Sonata in E-flat Major, Hob. XVI:16 - Franz Joseph Haydn - Christine Schornsheim

what I said above about Scarlatti
applies here as well
yes Haydn invented all sorts of new ways to tightly bend (and bind) the structure together
but he also balanced that
with a wide figuration range
and a quick rhythm of its changes
it simply takes more twine
to hold plausibility
also without such care taken
his jokes won't make sense

Fantasia in D minor, K. 397 - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Lil Kraus

a lot of this would work real well on clavichord
not all of it though
very much a fortepiano piece
but certainly recalling the older figurations
this piece goes into a mood now and then
a mood to sweep away
yes
yes
that's the end

Sonata in G Major, Op. 47 #2 - Johann Ladislav Dussek - Zvi Meniker

a lively but essentially gentle imagination
he will never do anything to actually shock you
he was more into charm

Coriolan-Ouverture - Ludwig van Beethoven - Academy of Ancient Music - Christopher Hogwood

a terrifying story
thrills chills worry and dream
has there ever been a symphonic overture written for Titus?

Etude in F Major, Op. 10 #8 - Frédéric Chopin - Alfred Cortot (1942)

establishing the key is not the point of what these figures are doing
they're discussing things amongst themselves
the key is the carrier wave at most

Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C Major, BWV 564 - Johann Sebastian Bach / Feruccio Busoni - Wolf Harden

Busoni was a devotee of the cult of Bach
in reverence of the learned past
doing what Liszt had done for Beethoven
in his (Liszt's) transcriptions of the 7th Symphony (Beethoven's)
for instance
or Brahms for the violin Chaconne (Bach's)
stop here first
be warned
this is a fugue
you venture upon
who me?
adds voices at the bottom of the stack

Selection 11 of Selections from The Nutcracker - Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky - Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy 

harp is the storybook instrument in this milieu
fairy tale dynasty doomed to blood

September 13, 2021

Walz Medley - The Gregg Smith Singers [from The Great Sentimental Age]

none but
as anyone but
or any but
me
as in
she would not dance
with none but me
perfectly reasonable usage
but strikes me as poetic
(doggerelic?)
in the sense
that the choosing of it
was due to the syllable count

2 Poems, Op. 63 - Alexander Scriabin - Michael Ponti

a light passes across a terrain
in flood
with languid spent desire

Fuzzy Wuzzy Rag - W.C. Handy's Memphis Blues Band [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

a dance
to leave one breathless and flushed
earlier comments regarding binary form
could be applied to this as well
plausible coherence

Finnegans Wake, Chapter 1 (finish) - James Joyce - Neal Kosály-Meyer [recorded at Gallery 1412 on November 22, 2015]

face to face
vertical time unspooling
the imputed thread of plot
providing a plausible coherence
but thinner
than the repetitions of rhythm
the word games
the lists
and doublings
all the apparatus
of its sentence by sentence
phrase by phrase
coherence
3rd Set Piece:
the Prank Queen.
in imitation of narrative
invocations
Elegiad
tales told above a bier
reports from the living
applause
chat
out

September 14, 2021

Ornaments - Alexander Krein - Helen Lawrence, Jonathan Powell

wordless melody sung with piano
featuring a certain amount of portamento and other articulating embellishments
I wonder if this piece was intended as a show piece for student virtuosi
it would certainly take some serious breath control 

per Slonimsky,
Krein was heavily involved in Jewish theater
in the years after the revolution (1918)
often using "authentic" "Jewish" material.
believable
but I am an ignoramus on the question

Sally Gooden - W.M. Smith [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

dance hall standard?
any tavern
anywhere
in any America?
shave and a haircut six bits
piano taking care of business

Frankie and Johnny - Alabama Boys [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

the song so well known one hardly needs to speak the words
these guys are all over their guitar licks and fiddle licks

Lincoln Portrait - Aaron Copland - Seattle Symphony, Gerard Schwarz, James Earl Jones

set the controls for sanctify
it is stern and hard and wiry 

was this written at approximately the same time as Sandburg's bio
(yes, more or less)
the condensed version
for the war effort
in time of peril
we erect an elder saint
if everything is underlined
is anything 

thought control in action

Tone Painting (parts 1 and 2) - Dodo Marmarosa [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

solo piano
noisy recording
with some wobble 

moody
in glancing imitation
of what?
concert hall music?
or film noir soundtrack?
but more internally focused than movie music can allow itself to be 

I count 3 parts so far at least

String Quartet in B-flat Major, Op. 92 (#5) - Dmitri Shostakovich - Fitzwilliam String Quartet

breathing as best it can within strict confines
its key is a cover
he could probably get away with more in his quartets
because only musicians ever listen to them
everything turns bitter
we are being led inside
where memory is
we are prodded
time
soon
to leave
be sure to pick up your resolve and outrage at the door
sleep as well as you can

Blue Monday - Fats Domino [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

Monday is a mess
something almost punk about the plainness of it

Peasant Cantata - The Lake Washington Singers, Betty Eisenbrey [April 10, 1962]

not Bach
short canonic choruses a capella
has almost a Billings-ish vibe to it
neo-Billings?

Brown Eyed Girl - Van Morrison [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

hard
left right track assignment
bass and drums one side
guitar on other side
with everything else
vocal up the middle

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

featuring me
member of the chorus
being fed odd biblical history
asserting
for instance
that Daniel was a Christian Man
this is even stranger than I remember
just throw all the bible stories in
higgledypig
we'll stop to praise Daniel's sweetheart
with similes from Midwestern Americana

The Laughing Gnome - David Bowie [from Starting Point]

as dumb as it is
David gives it all he's got
can't quite do it with a straight face, just as well

Intermezzo I - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded at Bard Hall, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, November 2, 1982]

I have a picture of me dressed for this occasion
sharing a little concert with Dan Sedia,
for an audience of six.
Ben opined that
since they were all my friends
it wasn't really an audience.
I thought that
if a real audience consisted of people who were not my friends
that I didn't want one.
Ben quipped "Not to worry."
but as a composition
I was
in this
thinking about filling in intervals sequentially (horizontally)
and gradually,
step by step,
clearly influenced by ("...my chart shines high where the blue milks upset...")
at the time it had a poetical title
Long Way Noon
suggested by AW,
a fellow student the summer before with whom I was sharing an intense correspondence
a poem in single tones
except some dyads
notes at opposite ends of the keyboard
a flaw perhaps
played slowly
trying to crack melody's code
two lengths of notes on the pages
long and really long
as played
no two notes are the same length as any other

your blogger, November 2, 1982, Bard Hall
[NB the Reality Check portion of the postscripts of this blog are from Intermezzo V, which was largely based on edited lines from the above mentioned   correspondence]

Dig It a Hole - U-Men

vocal provides the message
guitar provides the Amen
and other support

September 15, 2021

Four6 - John Cage - Stu Dempster, Neal Kosály-Meyer, William O. Smith, Melissa Walsh [recorded at The Chapel Performance Space, Good Shepherd Center, Seattle, on May 25, 2012]

earbrain identifies sounds:
signal noise
"ahem,"
chair movement,
etc. 

some sound distinguishes itself in earbrain
by adding intent (implied) to identity:
harp sound made by (intended by) Melissa,
vocalization made by (intended by) Neal,
clarinet sound made by (intended by) Bill,
etc. 

In order to treat un-made-by sounds as music
in the same sense we treat made-by sounds as music
we must either
posit an intent and an intender to the un-made-by sounds
or remove intent from the made-by sounds.
Given that this would need to happen subconsciously |
inside earbrain
either accomplishment would require a spiritual discipline
with uncertain results
beneficial or malevolent. 

The paradoxes of Zen are often cited in this regard.
I find myself unwilling to consider walking that path.
I descended a different rabbit hole,
have my own problems and urgencies to work out. 

But the question remains,
how might I take this in,
if I have chosen not to follow the Zen path
and if Cage's intentions and motivations are therefore relatively opaque to me?
That is,
if the inherent paradox doesn't incandesce, for me? 

Perhaps by now they serve

for me
mostly to neutralize the impact of the music rather than clarify it?
In this case the recourse to Zen could be seen as less explanation than cop-out. 

(to my ears,
in this case,
the performers are listening to each other and responding to each other just as they would in any other music.
Their individual personalities just as clear
perhaps more so than in industrialized orchestra music,
but not a level unique to many another music) 

((and to be honest,
I would have a difficult time pointing at what it is I object to, exactly.
hence my befuddled verbosity))

Soup - The Keeners [a Rescued Record]

in the manner of a confession
formulaic delivery
generic rock riff in the back

Work / Architecture / Unity / And / The - Keith Eisenbrey - Keith Eisenbrey [March 12, 2021, take 2]

very little by way of breaks between bits
good experiment but (because) failed results
the bits would each benefit by some elbow room

A Beginning - Peter Fedofsky [from The City of Good Neighbors]

smooth overtracked tenor
with keys
lazily nice

my journal entry of February 20, 2012

Gradus 206
- Neal Kosály-Meyer [February 20, 2012]

in the age of A natural,
but also in the age of 2 rungs per session. 

For me,
Gradus is not about,
nor even peripherally concerned with
John Cage.
It is about Neal's earbrain.

to the extent it might be posited that Cage's concept of silence
(whatever it is)
permeates the conceptual substrate of Gradus,
I would counter that Neal's earbrain
has transmogrified that concept into his,
utterly. 

Cage's concept of silence was his alone.
Neal's concept,
likewise,
belongs to Neal alone.

Sinksmania - Camarones Orquestra Guitarristica [from Feeexta]

Karen and I heard this Brazilian band at The Kraken
in what may have been the last dive bar show we went to before the shutdown. 

I probably bought this on some Bandcamp Friday or other. 

loud instrumental
mostly guitars
a tight ensemble

September 16, 2021

Goe from My Window, Fvb 42 - John Mundy - Claudio Columbo [from The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book]

decorated manuscripts
in colorful and ornate calligraphy
the sound of the music
the sense of the music
the placid goingness of the music
all match the style of page
suitable for presentation to
and preservation by
16th Century nobles 

flowing with the pace of an elegant cranky

Symphoniae Sacrae II, Op. 10 #20 "Zweierlei bitte ich, Herr, von dir" - Heinrich Schütz - Capella Augustana

the control of pacing through meter is marvelous
modern mixed meter is an upstart 

devastating

Prelude and Fugue in B minor (Die Wohltemperierte Klavier, Band 1) - Johann Sebastian Bach - Sviatoslav Richter

thank you for taking the repeat
we need to live in his space before moving on
how it climbs and climbs and yes,
the 2nd repeat as well!
My hero!
again we need the time and repetition
to contemplate the/this tonality
before venturing into the aggregate-completing fugue,
with its chromatic climbing
the pacings of the sequences in the fugue episodes
match the pacings of the canon in the Prelude 

the view from these heights is humbling

Sonata in C Major, Kk. 132 - Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

shows his cards before his tricks
he still robbed you blind
even when and while he explains what he's doing 

This one has luscious dissonant chords that sink in solid.

La Sophie, Wq. 117/40 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklos Spanyi

understated misbalance
until the accents enter from the stage right
it doesn't fall apart
it unbinds itself
from its parts
its parts seize their own micro destinies

Divertimento in F Major "il maestro e lo scolare" Hob. XVIIa:1 - Franz Joseph Haydn - Christine Schornsheim, Andreas Staier

little dialogues
now repeat after me
alternating registers
bass treble
(4 hands clearly)
repeat that. young whippersnapper!
dueling banjos style
listen to the metronome and pitch pipe?

Symphony in D Major, K. 385 "Haffner" - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Columbia Symphony Orchestra, Bruno Walter

he treats counterpoint the way he treats operatic ensembles
everybody stays in character
in 2 the chug chug chug motive moves around the orchestra
comes back in all sort of unexpected places

Symphony in D Major, Op. 36 (#2) - Ludwig van Beethoven - Berliner Philharmonic, Herbert von Karajan

a bit smeared to get that big glow
it all seems to run together
gets along without particular propulsion
like a list of Beethoven Symphony parts
got together for a BeetSymCon
in too big a space

Etude in E-flat minor, Op. 10 #6 - Frédéric Chopin - Cecile Licad

this one misses its key terribly,
remembers it fondly
and regrets its absence,
grieves for it,
though it never was

Selection 12 of Selections from The Nutcracker - Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky - Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy

a quick number
for not one of the marquee dancers
just up and coming

Battle of San Juan Hill - Mike Bernard [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

not the first keyboard work to depict a battle by a long stretch,
William Byrd played this game through a whole suite.
this uses many of the same effects, if different tunes.
Definitely silent movie fodder
or perhaps campaign fodder.
It does sound like a bunch of tin Americans attacking cannonfire.
(T. Roosevelt sold himself as a hero of this battle,
and was running for President as a Bull Moose the year this song was made.)

Moonlight Blues - W.C. Handy [from Allen Lowe's Really The Blues]

the tune is squeezed from one note to the other
in lazy waltz time
just begging for the Max Fleischer liquid line treatment

September 17, 2021

She Walked Right Up and Took My Man Away - Lizzie Miles [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

another take on Frankie and Johnny?
Yup.
There's that rubber tired hack
names and events have been changed
but the structure of betrayal remains

Finnegans Wake, Chapter 6 (continued) - James Joyce - Neal Kosály-Meyer (recorded from Neal's live stream November 21, 2020)

a lightmare and a liberal education
a swallowship in full sail
answer
Finn Mccool
two
the felicitude of our orba
the soapstone of silvery speech
water quaffed
five
poor old Joe
gooseberries
what would the farseer see
ten
gossip
friend of vegetables
see if I'm self thought
underworld of nighties and naughties

In Session at the Tintinabulary

September 13, 2021

Banned Rehearsal 1034 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Neal Kosály-Meyer

Neal called in to the can set upon the xylophone while Karen and I puttered around the Tintinabulary.

Postscripts

::Consult the Oracle

the united states' mint and when I saw a

dark wood 17 the way was lost ah

how hard a thing to what my fear so bitter

Reality Check::

trace result

sand paper

stones

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 - Ferrucio 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