Saturday, December 25, 2021

Playlist

Preface

"Everyone really knows that objectivity in the descriptive criticism of musical experience isn't even really a coherent idea, let alone a real possibility. So it's too bad that so much writing lusts strenuously to assert that kind of authority, so that it misses the real, available, and far superior opportunity to share creative images of those unique (and literally, but not metaphorically, unsharable) episodes of "secondary consciousness" (as Elliot Handleman calls it) we encounter in any immersed listening."

- Benjamin Boretz - "The Universe of One, And the Music of the Other"  

from "inside in . . . / . . . outside out" Open Space Publications, 2020

Texts

Live

December 18, 2021

Neal Kosály-Meyer

Finnegans Wake, Chapter 8 - James Joyce

Chapel Performance Space, Good Shepherd Center, Seattle

This was the first live public event I have attended since February of 2020, and it looks like it may be the last for some time to come yet. 

I'm glad we went and I got a good recording, but I didn't take try to take notes in the dark. 

The river chapter.

From Recent Arrivals

December 24, 2021

Sans Souci - Peggy Lee [from Lover]

travelogue fantasy song with good enough Latinish feel
would work well in a Bond film cabaret scene

Am I Blue - Ray Charles [from The Genius of Ray Charles]

with studio big band strings and Hollywood style backup singers
going full crooner

Discipline - Sun Ra [from Space is the Place]

it moves as though there were chord changes underneath
but I suspect some larger scale ingredients are thrown in the pot as it simmers

Recorded

December 19, 2021

String Quartet #3, Op. 30 - Arnold Schoenberg - LaSalle Quartet

1
the slower moving lines try to edge into the crowd in the street
we're all waiting now
the light has changed
we move with the crowd
as like a crowd we move
with our crowd
in our bones

2
in our homes
a quiet scene
so as not to be overheard
the crowd is all around

3
gossip spreads into the chattering crowd
the machines have driven us indoors
a city music
a city of small rooms

4
a danse macabre
crowd of bones
nobody can be comfortable

Liza (Take A) - Art Tatum [from Classic Early Solos]

the tune
under stress
has been taken apart and reassembled
slashed with notes
plastered with other tunes' bits
cranked really fast
16 fps at 24 fps

I'm a Soldier in the Army of the Lord - Rev. McGhee [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

the question arises
how is a white boy to understand this?

Warmin' Up a Riff - Charlie Parker [from The Complete Savoy & Dial Master Takes]

this is understood as straight-up intellectual
the parts that songs were made of
atomized further

Take a Little Walk With Me - Boyd Gilmore [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

no blues is or can be self-contained
they are social to their own kind

Mona - Bo Diddley [collected from Neal Kosály-Meyer's Bo and the Beat]

he sounds so young!

Spudnik (Surf Rider) - The Ventures [from Walk Don't Run]

cool spy rhythm
dresses well

Soul Man - Sam and Dave [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

great attention is paid to outward appearance
armor

Rock and Roll - Led Zeppelin [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

is he gonna get to the mashed potato
the 70s hearkening back to the 50s
Happy Days Crocodile Rock and all that
I was in middle and high school in the 70s
and suffered through several 50s Days
we were encouraged to dress up in 50s costume
thereby encouraging fashion sense
I resisted

December 20, 2021

Symphony #7 "A Sea Symphony" - Howard Hanson - Seattle Symphony, Gerard Schwarz

snide preamble: he missed an opportunity to call it "A Symphony at Sea" 

La Mer it ain't
from a spot firmly on shore
a dreary affair
obligatory storm scene in the 3rd act
Symphony at Sea
Snore on Shore

Ever - Flipper [from Generic]

laid out like an ad for a patent medicine
existential self-disgust played for a lark

December 21, 2021

Assembly Rechoired 14 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey [January 31, 1987]

I read from Kierkegaard
Karen plucks a kalimba
and discusses descants in the United Methodist Hymnal
it might be me plucking the kalimba 

the self is a relation which relates itself to it's own self
Karen sings some hymns
a derived constituted relation
if the human self had constituted itself
a question could have arisen
nervous self-deception laboring into a deeper despair

Low Beat Jingle - The Young Fresh Fellows [from It's Low Beat Time]

a trumpet plays a few notes
after a shaker and a bell then a trombone
lasts all of a few seconds
never the same twice

Banned Rehearsal 460 "Analog" - Pete Comley, Isaac E, Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Anna K, Neal Kosály-Meyer [August 2, 1997]

Pete was recording us on DAT (digital audio tape)
but this is my version
analog signal direct to magnetic tape cassette
we'll catch Pete's version soon 

Isaac fusses
almost a year old
we provide a constant low-level micro din
a guitar sneaks in under a softly blubbering brass
probably trombone
also sax 

to some extent we're on our best behavior
being digitally captured and all
on edge
held back
making sound
for the purpose of having that sound recorded
starts to get somewhere in the last 10 minutes or so
as we diminish into somnolential putters
finally able to focus
we scratch

{from my journal entry of March 28, 2005:

attempts made to emerge from a trombone
the audio equivalent
to the visuals
of the play
in which all are verbally polite
but expressive of the unbounded hostility
on a visual cue level
a gentle fast funmaker rhythm
quiets things down
trombone
low ominous
of what grew before
yet again
contextually now 

squalls explode
sharp attack entrances
quick to take offence
a recurring thematic low drone
from which emerges}

One Beat - Sleater-Kinney [from One Beat]

having fun
with the ah-ee
diphthong
and
the oh-öö töö 

not sure what the words are
the diphthong rhythm drowns them out

Consider the Birds 36 - Keith Eisenbrey [February 3, 2007]

this one is shy
its regularity is difficult to grasp

Tune for Bobbie - Elaine Barkin [from Open Space 46]

a tune of violin sounds
descends into our room of drums
achingly brief

I'll Shed A Tear Every Day - Your Mother Should Know [from Demos February 23, 2017]

I love the misbalance 

too much snare
not enough back up vocal
every part of the drums
is on a different plane
the guitar is tiny

December 22, 2021

O Mistris Myne, Fvb. 66 - William Byrd - Claudio Columbo [from The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book]

the sense of what counts as metrical balance
is significantly other
than in the 18th Century practice
our ears have become so accustomed to
and certainly
different than modern industrial practice
the whole phrase is full of significance
its parts are proportioned
rather than balanced as such

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

it floats
it is rooted

Sonata in G Major, Kk. 153 - Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

open ended balancing act
as soon as phrase balance was invented
it was subverted
it may have been devised as a tool for subversion

Concerto in D Major, Wq. 43/5 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklós Spányi

hot take
the orchestra intro and the first solo
do not need to be in the same affect 

here the orchestra begins with a slow movement from deep inside
the solo is having none of it
2 opens
the solo both shares and redirects the orchestra's trajectory
they turn each other
the movement's flow
a single tonal whole
it ends without a flashing applause sign

Mass in C Major, Op. 86 - Ludwig van Beethoven - London Symphony Orchestra, London Symphony Chorus, Colin Davis, Christiane Eda-Pierre, Patricia Payne, Robert Tear, Kurt Moll

Kyrie on a lifting scale
or within a lifting world
pressure is applied from below
a new plane
no matter the struggle 

I'm not overly enamored of the sound on this recording
the orchestra has little definition within its sound
and there is a certain sameness about the choral sounds
it's like the sound of the recording is acting out the Mass in C
it may be partly that the chorus and orchestra and space are too large for the piece
there is a lot of articulative detail that gets lost in there
a shame since this is really an interesting piece
if you could hear it

December 23, 2021

Mazurka in B minor, Op. 30 #2 - Frédéric Chopin - Vladimir Ashkenazy

a key expands its breadth without budging

Finnegans Wake Chapter 1 (start) - James Joyce - Neal Kosály-Meyer [recorded live at Gallery 1412, Seattle, on November 19, 2016]

this year (2016) he did 1 and 2 on the same evening
sir Tristram must be in the piano
the battle chapter
hurtle turtle
plethora of ululation
the corpse is outlaid
only a fadograph of a yestern sea
good rid hearing
mistletropes
a pretty nice kettle of fruit
make straight for Minos
really royally regally
Dooblong
Echoland
here now they are the fear of them annals of themselves
bloody wares
bloody wars
two sons at an hour were born to a goodman and his hag
blotty words
for Dublin
the copyist must have fled with his scroll
our ears
eyes of the darkness
euphonio saxo
a wrong story shortener
flick as flow flakes
stoop

Boll Weevil - Rabbit's Foot Williams [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

a song for addressing a force of nature
i.e. the Blues as a mode of prayer
this is really intense
as Otto the Repo Man says

Phonograph Blues - Robert Johnson [from The Complete Recordings]

repeatability
what evil have I done
a talk back 

"Beatrice, she got a phonograph / And it won't say a lonesome word"

You Got To Roll - David Honeyboy Edwards

just like a wagon wheel
articulation for us is not crucial
the greater power knows exactly what was said
you've got to get up Baby
by the light of the moon

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

carry't to the Captain
if he as's you
I'm gone
(cut off)

Begin The Beguine - Charlie Parker [from The Cole Porter Song Book]

improvise upon or around /
re-compose

what's Cole Porter still about it
are the particulars of certain sequences of melodic segments and chord changes

Reet Petite - Jackie Wilson [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

curious
was there a sudden change in the affordability of recording equipment
and of quality
after WWII
corresponding with an increased market
that is
was there an increase in the profitability of recorded songs
corresponding with the economic boom of the 50s
?

Blind Plowman - The Lake Washington Singers, Betty Eisenbrey, JoAnne Deacon [April 12, 1962]

secular (?) anthem
in the vein of mid-century triumphalist church music?
such a strange thing
grim comfort for the cold warriors?

Soul Kitchen - The Doors [from The Doors]

rock organ like
? and his Mysterians
still one place to go
secret alphabet
learn to forget what is said outright
what is sung above the organ's held tone
guitar brings it back down
to what is said
the clock says

Mother and Child Reunion - Paul Simon [from Paul Simon]

I remember early reviews of this
in which was bemoaned the loss of the high voice of Art
replaced by backup singers
But I think he was feeling hampered
by the lack of range afforded by the duet format

Jitterbug Waltz - Woody Shaw, Anthony Braxton, Muhan Richard Abrams, Cecil McBee, Victor Lewis [from The Iron Men]

DIY standard bearer
compose a recompose-able head

Sing Along! - Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [from A Cassette Player]

a short figure
repeated with some percussion
and an occasional low tone
toward the end the figure drops
and elides
successive notes
jingle bells desultory

In Session at the Tintinabulary

December 20, 2021

Banned Rehearsal 1041 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Ahava K, Anna K, Neal Kosály-Meyer

the last noise session of 2021

December 24, 2021

Two-Part Invention in F minor - Gavin Borchert

This one features a repeated note figure
that wanders around the pitch field
and a slowly orbiting, more melodic line

Intermezzo in E-flat Major, Op. 116 #6 - Johannes Brahms

I could play it better I suppose,
but I think I'm done,
having other fish to fry

Anybody's Fingerbook, 2x2 (transpositional) B A - Keith Eisenbrey

the 3rd of many 

2x2
refers to the size of the seed rotational array
(transpositional)
refers to the type of rotational array,
as opposed to (augmentational),
i.e. using addition as opposed to multiplication
B A
refers to unique paths through the array

Special Mention

My Dinner with Wallace

Much of my musical energy during the first year of the Pandemic went into producing this virtual recital of recent solo piano music by my long-time collaborator, Aaron Keyt, and by me. There are 9 reels total in the playlist, ranging from 10 to 20 minutes or so each, the whole stretching for just under 2 hours. I am quite pleased with the results, especially with how well I manage to illuminate the extraordinary "in-your-presence-alone" intimacy of Aaron's compositional voice.

Postscripts

::Consult the Oracle

time one has a spoilt I can't understand

it usual breakfast do you think it is

because I had perhaps that is how I

Reality Check::

more than one

monologue in the world

the ground wind sees


Saturday, December 18, 2021

Playlist

Preface

"What would happen to the institutions of music under the application of my thinking along these lines is - well, really - not my problem. What is my problem is the invention and propagation of the widest and most engaging variety of experiential adventures; in particular, the work of self development focuses me on that issue of making distinctions rather than judgments - especially in finding my own self-interest in expanding my experiential range into new (or even old) music which resists intuitivity. And as always, discovering modes of listening which transform - neoontologize, to put it colloquially - the identity of the music as it enters my consciousness. But more of that later."

- Benjamin Boretz - "The Universe of One, And the Music of the Other"  

from "inside in . . . / . . . outside out" Open Space Publications, 2020

Texts

From Recent Arrivals

December 17, 2021

Frankie and Johnnie - Morgana King [from Sings The Blues]

AND he done her wrong!
right through a hardwood swingin' door
this story teller is loving every salacious minute of it
only at the very end
is it
BUT he done her wrong
quoting Frankie
I never thought of this as a torch song but I'll take it

Strange Fruit - Nina Simone [from Pastel Blues]

describes
doesn't tell us what to think
shows us what there is to think about
it's all there
just listen

Jayne - Ornette Coleman, Don Cherry, Walter Norris, Don Payne, Billy Higgins [from Something Else!!!!]

end the phrase down
end the phrase up
end the phrase up to down
purpose
for the musicians to talk in their musician tongue
within a shared culture
of how music is
under negotiation

Recorded

December 12, 2021

Alman, Fvb. 63 - William Byrd - Claudio Columbo [from The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book]

decoratively artful
the free voices are for delight
but they don't push or pull the skeletal ground
they grace it
beautify it
sometimes distract from it
like the fancy curlicues of calligraphy

Die Wohltemperierte Klavier, Band I, Prelude and Fugue in G Major - Johann Sebastian Bach - Christiane Jaccottet

an integrated fully embodied system
the skeleton proceeds at a deeper level
 nearly unvoiced as such
it emerges by implication

Sonata in F Major, Kk. 150 - Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

sometimes direct small-frame repetition
dislocates us
if our prior location was a trajectory
such a repetition can change the initial coordinates
renew them
start fresh
turn
repeat

Kurze und Leichte Klavierstücke, "Poco Allegretto in E minor", Wq. 114/11 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklós Spányi

there is more music in there than could possibly fit
a heavy duty minute thirty-six

Mass in C Major, Op. 86 - Ludwig van Beethoven - Gächinger Kantorei, Helmut Rilling, Katherine van Kampen, Ingeborg Danz, Keith Lewis, Michel Brodard, Bach-Collegium Stuttgart

I sang tenor in a performance of this at the University of Washington in about 1980.
It's amazing how much of it is still familiar 

he crams the words in
how ever they need to go
to fit where he wants them
he isn't mickey mousing the sense of words
he's expressing the gist
by means of a series of disjunctions and figuration cross-references
it isn't always obvious
but it is solid by gum! 

the solo quartet on "passus":
such intricate play among the voices
to create a 4-headed singer beast
what is it like
to be one of those singers
as a social experience?

was this
at its time
ever performed as the ordinaries of an actual service?
or always as a concert mass 
[NB cursory research says "no"]

this is in no sunny C Major full of happy
 it is a C Major world of fervent voices
an expression of the mass from the point of view of the congregants
not from that of the celebrant

Scherzo in B-flat minor, Op. 31 - Frédéric Chopin - Vladimir Ashkenazy

a sullen echo of the Hammerklavier to open
followed by episodes in other castles
or successively enclosed walls
past which
this pleasant impassioned garden
here in the night
we might speak freely
within these walls
I am stalwart
a hero
I will forth to battle!!
within the heart of a patriot
 moods change
a portrait in many moods

Concerto in G minor, Op. 40 - Sergei Rachmaninoff - Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy, Sergei Rachmaninoff

borne on waves of feeling
our hero is troubled
this first movement is composed
so that the soloist can bathe in their own light
it really is all about them
 subtitle possibility: The Self-Mythologizing
how much of the literature is composed
with the intent that the performer becomes a character in its own theater
fond memories of Czarist sugarplums
they allow us
as the audience
to vicariously experience the experience of the soloist
soloist: celebrant (see above?)
It is a film of a piano concerto

December 13, 2021

Terraplane Blues - Robert Johnson [from The Complete Recordings]

making a poetic statement within a blues idiom
without needing to demonstrate that blues is an idiom
outside the instant poetic statement

Buster's Last Stand - Claude Thornhill, Gil Evans [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

goes hot

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

where the sun never shines
killed a mile and a half from here
a world of hurt and cold
where it blows

The Bird - Charlie Parker [from The Complete Verve Master Takes]

keeping up with it
is a whole person endeavor

Coal Creek March - Pete Steele [from The Art of Field Recording, Volume 1]

banjo picking
and kora or kalimba picking
the basic ideas of them are similar
as a finger activity

Omie Wise - Albert Hash [from The Art of Field Recording, Volume 1]

fiddle music
not shy about the open strings

When Something Is Wrong With My Baby - Sam and Dave [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

testimony and lesson
not far from the church door

Tumbling Dice - The Rolling Stones [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

the ostensible lead vocal is buried within the back-ups and the guitar choir

I'm So Bored With The U.S.A. - The Clash [from The Clash]

graffiti song 

I Put a Spell On You - Screamin' Jay Hawkins [from Frenzy]

jealous threat song
cabaret theater
focus on the character
charisma
of the singer

December 14, 2021

Gradus 10 (San Diego Series) - Neal Kosály-Meyer [January 20, 1987]

a stereo image heard in a room through loudspeakers
is still
clearly
an image of a sound
perhaps of a whole rounded sound
but even that whole rounded sound
is heard in the room
as arising from a particular area in the room
the room's acoustics modify that whole round sound
but they don't disappear into an immersive virtual reality of the whole round sound
one is never so deluded
as to imagine one could walk around it
as though one were within it
a fact but not a problem as such

confession
I am occasionally uncertain
especially in cases where the recording was made in the room in which I am listening
as to whether traffic noise is live or memorex
as the saying goes
[NB of course you can't tell with studio quality tape stock!
you're listening to a signal through head phones in both cases]
but usually there is no difficulty in distinguishing
between the image of the whole round sound
as loudspeakered
and the roundness the acoustics of the listening room
applies
that is
the effect the acoustics of the room have upon the loudspeakered stereo image

this is the last of the San Diego Series of Gradus
He picked the project back up in January of 2002
15 years plus one day later

Gesungene Zeit - Wolfgang Rihm - Chicago Symphony Orchestra, James Levine, Anne-Sophie Mutter

a sphere is rotating slowly
our camera view shifts
also slowly
if a narrative emerges
it does so piecemeal
flashes and fragments
the sphere continues to rotate
we are closer in now
we are an audience of mimes
reacting to an unfolding rotation

Two Pomes Play (midi) - Keith Eisenbrey

the original conscious impetus for my interest in 17-tone (mod 17) music
was curiosity
as to what music would be like
if the ground of its syntax were "other".

I spent much of the 90s working on a cantata based on stanzas from Byron's Childe Harold's Pilgrimage all in a loose 17-tone syntax

what I got out of it:
a certain comfort with the math involved
and some tunes
this clarinet bassoon duet
borrows one of my favorites (tunes that is)
and plays with it
far more successful than the cantata

Lonesome Day - Bruce Springsteen [from The Rising]

too much band
if there's a song in there
you'd never know it

Consider the Birds 35 - Keith Eisenbrey [February 3, 2007]

a delicate thread
destined for future tapestration

Why Baby - Freddie & The Screamers [from I Ain't Crazy]

another jealous man anthem
but spirited
the back and forth between the vocal and the lead guitar
makes it
old-fashioned honky tonk headbanger
for grownups acting like teens

Real Sick Maniac - Your Mother Should Know [demos of February 23, 2017]

the chord changes are for marking time only
one of Neal's stronger songs
is what it is
little fuss

Sellinger's Round, Fvb 64 -  William Byrd - Claudio Columbo [from The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book]

where are the genteel dances of yesteryear?
the workmanship shows

Die Wohltemperierte Klavier, Band I, Prelude and Fugue in E-flat minor - Johann Sebastian Bach - Sviatoslav Richter

the long thoughts of an architectural mind
was that a bird in the studio?
somebody's squeaky shoes?
some of these galleries go on far past seeing

Sonata in F Major, Kk. 151 - Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

we maintain
we descend
we continue
we finish
we find a strange place
we repeat 

 a real honey of a piece!

Concerto in C minor, Wq. 43/4 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Melante Amsterdam, Bob van Asperen

1
solo and orchestra rarely play together
and when they do
the solo is clearly in charge
ends as though a cadenza would ensue
but no:

2
time for some magic
a concerto is an exchange between equals

3
oops
the next movement came in all of a sudden
a movement need not be a complete thingy
there's the cadenza
brief

4
back to 1?
reprisals are had

December 15, 2021

Fantasia in C minor, Op. 80 - Ludwig van Beethoven - Gewandhausorchester Leipzig, Kurt Masur, Menahem Pressler, Chor des Mitteldeutschen Rundfunks, Susanne Scheinpflug, Kerstin Klein, Andrea Pitt, Albrecht Sac, Ekkehard Wagner, Reinhard Decker, Ger Frishmuth

by the time we're in the middle
nothing has been established
and we give up on it
ever being 

his manner of keyboard writing is heavy handed and clumsy
in comparison to any of the solo works

for display only
not be be taken musically

Nocturne in B Major, Op. 32 #1 - Frédéric Chopin - Claudio Arrau

tries mightily to hold to the key
but passion and fancy rebel
the human spirit can't abide in such a place
but must

I'm Comin' Virginia - Bix Biederbecke [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

got some slink going on in the bass progression
chord changes circle in place
they don't define a place from which to move or within which to shift

Frog Legs - a foxtrot - Columbia Saxophone Sextet [from Evans 78s]

these changes do cadence
but schematically
according to the dance steps

Sweet Lorraine - Frank Froeba [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

a steady bass allows gentle tickles

Too Many Blues - Bill Nettles [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

too many sweethearts and none of them mine
chromatic riff in the fiddle
echoed in the guitar
standing in for a kind of vocal portamento
(weepy per Allen)

River's Invitation - Percy Mayfield [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

intro instrumental hangs on the underside of a note
it's a thing
a note is how it finds itself

Alexander's Ragtime Band - Billy Eckstine and Sarah Vaughan [from The Irving Berlin Song Book]

moderned up nostalgic razzmatazz
of an advertisement for itself
precursor of Sgt. Pepper's
but without the archness 

Sarah and Billy go all out

Ride The Chariot - The Lake Washington Singers, Betty Eisenbrey, JoAnne Deacon [April 10, 1962]

white folks sure do love these old spirituals
though I think the latest term I heard was
Sacred Slave Song
I mistrust the predilection
nice soprano though!

Ups and Down - Paul Revere & The Raiders [from The Legend of Paul Revere]

sounds like the stones of that year
they had a knack
this best-of album works as a revue of the sounds of the times

You Could Have Been A Lady - April Wine [a Rescued Record]

the quick 4/4 beat aims at the last beat
all for the dance
shivery

Missa Hilarious - P.D.Q. Bach [from Portrait of P.D.Q. Bach]

railroaded by his own act
silly instruments and malaprops

Return before leaving - Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [from A Cassette Player December 1982]

eleven seconds of people saying "I hope Keith has"

I'm A Boinger - Billy and The Boingers [from Bootleg]

yes there was a single
probably on flexdisc with the cartoon book

Banned Rehearsal 302 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [August 23, 1992]

recorded sound played through loudspeakers
presupposes the relationship of provider and consumer
our past selves provided this sound
and I am consuming it now
nothing quite like magnetic tape distortion
it vibrates
small frame drum
bug guitar
small fipple flute
some rooting around sounds
radio static
and the joys of analog radio tuners
dour
grim
austere
stringent
sullen
Aaron lists words thesaurusifically
din
clangor
hurly burly
we found a pulsar
brainpan
forbidden run-through ambition megacosmos loo domiciliate

translated: Banned Rehearsal [inset] World Headquarters

my journal entry of March 13, 1995

December 16, 2021

crossing on the salmon - Mary Lee Roberts - University of California Santa Barbara Prisms New Music  Ensemble, Grace Mannion-Jacobson [from Open Space 9]

events are reduced in the wide open
we sing to hold ours

Gradus 4 - Neal Kosály-Meyer [February 12, 2002]

my journal entry was this doodle

Lessonpony
- The Tripwires [from Makes You Look Around]

celebration of a small work horse
commiseration song
ends with an off-the-shelf rhythmic sign-off

Rocks and Glass - Your Mother Should Know [recorded live at The High Dive, Seattle, on April 6, 2012]

|| Verse Verse Chorus Verse Verse-for-guitar Chorus Verse ||
bridgeless
heavy on the blame
verses end with the same line each time
yeehaw!

Gradient - Nat Evans [from Coyoteways]

there is no event under this sky
except the day
as it passes over the night
the rock beneath flexes with a slower flow

Fortune, Fvb 65 -  William Byrd - Claudio Columbo [from The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book]

at first the figurations keep time and sustain the sonority of a plain statement
then they engage in side quests
all the while amending time and subverting sonority

Die Wohltemperierte Klavier, Band I, Prelude and Fugue in F-sharp minor - Johann Sebastian Bach - Sviatoslav Richter

the prelude simply crowds all the other keys out
the fugue subject has long notes in it
giving space to the countersubjects' various motions

Sonata in G Major, Kk. 152 - Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

the thing about repeating
and he repeats many things
is that the repeating carries us forward
and clings to immediate memory
it prolongs now
backwards

Concerto in G Major, Wq. 43/5 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Melante Amsterdam, Bob van Asperen

orchestral tutti
clavecin solo
accompanied solo
(rare, sparely used)
I am not aware of any other body of keyboard concertos
that balance thusly
a deviously schematic mind

Concerto in C Major, Op. 56 - Ludwig van Beethoven - Gewandhausorchester Leipzig, Kurt Masur, Beaux Arts Trio

the orchestra mutters then emerges resplendent
tells us all about it
all that it can do
the trio takes a solo with solos
a concerto within a concerto
the solo trio has issues to work out amongst themselves
and each solo instrument
also
with the orchestra
the orchestra comes across as monolithic in response
first movement close begs for applause
in 2 the violin says I can do just fine all by myself
the piano preens
they do a pas de tre
if there is such a pas
they seem to have wandered into another movement
however
it is a mistake to think of distinct movements
as being the old-fashioned norm old-fashioned then
was CPE Bach and his dad
and they were inventors both
this is a romp
really wants that big applause at the end
stand up folks!

December 17, 2021

Sonata in A Major, Op. 35 - Friedrich Wilhelm Kalkbrenner - John Khouri

on a Broadwood fortepiano from 1813
not a lot of sustain which could explain much of the blizzards-of-notes figuration
also the notion that the keyboard was a new orchestra

he moves from splash to splash
without making waves of any appreciable size
not a profound thinker I'm thinking

I just finished reading through this Sonata this morning!

heavy use of the damper pedal as marked:
not the same effect as on a modern instrument at all

Nocturne in A-flat Major, Op. 32 #2 - Frédéric Chopin - Claudio Arrau

there is an interesting discussion being had
between the bass line and the middle voices
the figures intermediate
the cover is closed

In Session at the Tintinabulary

December 17, 2021

Two-Part Invention in E minor - Gavin Borchert [from 19 Two-Part Inventions]

I haven't edited this down yet. Once I have recordings of all 19 I'm happy with I'll try to balance them properly - I thought I was being consistent, but apparently I was mistaken
sigh

Anybody's Fingerbook, 2x2 (transpositional) (A) B - Keith Eisenbrey

My 2020 composition, second of many in the set
(8 2x2; 10 each of 3x3, 5x5, and 7x7)
conceived as a set of perverse finger exercises

Special Mention

My Dinner with Wallace

Much of my musical energy during the first year of the Pandemic went into producing this virtual recital of recent solo piano music by my long-time collaborator, Aaron Keyt, and by me. There are 9 reels total in the playlist, ranging from 10 to 20 minutes or so each, the whole stretching for just under 2 hours. I am quite pleased with the results, especially with how well I manage to illuminate the extraordinary "in-your-presence-alone" intimacy of Aaron's compositional voice.

Postscripts

::Consult the Oracle

industry whose involuntary promoter

is against her knobby 24 made

think Steinbeck hand scrawled turning up taped cash

Reality Check::

hung there from another mind

dyes gray violet

blows on the bass drum

Saturday, December 11, 2021

Playlist

Preface

"But it may be imagined, and I do imagine it, that the chaos of incommensurable and perhaps not even mutually intelligible musical ontologies that live invisibly (because they have no culturally defined conventional identities) in the cracks and below and even apart from the surfaces of "normalized" music actually embody the primal origins of the lust for music, the source of its creative power, of its capacity for penetration to the very personal souls and minds of its makers and receivers. Possibly it's why no one deeply involved in a musical practice seems to feel completely comfortable with anyone else's performance, composition, description, opinion: because the ontological imperative is to represent all performances, compositions, descriptions, opinions, theories, pedagogies, as candidates for definitive and authoritative - it's psychically imperative because the universe of one has never identified itself as the origin of the intuition of alienation, and thus ontological diversity, which I've claimed is inexorable, is experienced not as potential richness of experience but as a lethal threat to the secure, comfortable, institutionalizable reality provided by cultural convention."

- Benjamin Boretz - "The Universe of One, And the Music of the Other"  

from "inside in . . . / . . . outside out" Open Space Publications, 2020

Texts

Streaming

December 4, 2021

Star Anna 

Live from The Green Room

she put something extra on the guitar sound tonight
we image ourselves as those being damaged
kind of a new one
fine
haven't put it on yet
the falling sky
quite a fine song truly no joke
5 years 5 minutes
back to Bowie
let's not kid ourselves
the strumming hand is a dance theater on a guitar screen
a holy thing here around supper time
wherefrom from within the self does the voice arise?
pretty much new song
I know where to put my face
we're glad you're here too
she owns that Bowie cover
Moonage Daydream
moon dream
day age
space face
wishes were horses
|| strumming down on guitar is from low strings to high
strum down is power stroke
strum up is tender
|| a brand new song practically
saints
a voice is a template
and so are we valued for our specificity?
not the big cheese
we're just the hungry mice
paradise
live -ish
tone hole
totally brand new
not even finished yet probably
cigarettes and double gum
tip of my tongue
tastes like blood

From Recent Arrivals

Merce and Baby - George Lewis - Ensemble Dal Niente [from combined. speak.]

bird chatter back and forth
makes a virtual bigger bird
round out the parts
new episodes
where the last note of the phrase goes
new episodes
every minute or so
a different sort of party

A Five-Note Chord (seen from the porch of a curious mind) - Garrett Schumann - Latitude 49 [from Curious Minds]

it comes into view as the sun lights it

Partita in C for Piano and Small Orchestra - Harold Shapero - Boston Modern Orchestra Project, Gil Rose

not a Baroque partita in any recognizably tonal way
nor in spirit really
except that one wishes every such Baroque partita
was half as much fun to hang with
from some realm of cultural obsession common to Busoni I think
when tuneful
as it often is
the tunes play feinting games among deceptive trees
not malevolent
playful
the trees are in on the game
and the play
gnaws it right down to the bone

December 10, 2021

Take Pictures - Steve Layton [from Próxima Estación]

crickets or frogs and the greater chorus snoring
scanning in progress
periodic reports
dregs of broadcast voices washing in
stuck in the frog muck
the haints ain't pleased

You're The Top - Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga [from Love for Sale]

got the pizzazz and the personality to spare

Babydoll - Mariah Carey [from Butterfly]

there is commercial potential in telling men what they want to hear (I'll cop to being game) what to do with a voice

I Don't Wanna Be Kissed (By Anyone But You) - Miles Davis [from Miles Ahead]

tutti to clear the air
for further insightful commentary
lovely final chord

Recorded

December 5, 2021

Monsieurs Alman, Fvb. 61 - William Byrd - Claudio Columbo [from The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book]

at the cadences he does a little dance
which little dance is elaborated upon
like everything else
but in its own little closet

Die Wohltemperierte Klavier, Band 1, Prelude and Fugue in A-flat Major - Johann Sebastian Bach - Sviatoslav Richter

each voice has a figurational color at all times
and these are combined
to compose elaborately mixed figuration color textures

Sonata in A minor, Kk. 148 - Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

one could model a melody as a list of notes
notes with a structure of repetitions of all kinds
likewise one could model a structure of figures
figures with their own structures of repetitions of all kinds
might these distinct structures of repetition bear a relation to each other
such that we might call what Scarlatti does:
writing melodies of figurations

Kurze und Leichte Klavierstücke, "Allegretto in A Major", Wq. 114/9 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklós Spányi

also uses a little cadential curtsy in spots
especially the major structural cadences

Il mondo della luna, Act III - Franz Joseph Haydn - Orchestre de Chambre de Lausanne, Antal Dorati, Chœurs de la Radio Suisse Romande (chorus master: André Charlet), Domenico Trimarchi, Arleen Augér, Edith Mathis, Frederica von Stade, Lucia Valentini Terrani, Luigi Alva, Anthony Rolfe Johnson

featuring a lovely duet indeed!

December 7, 2021

Sonata in D minor, Op. 31 #2 "Tempest" - Ludwig van Beethoven - Stephen Kovacevich

1
story of the arpeggios and recitative
and story of the storm
in parallel
a sonata movement with its own literary conceit
S.K. makes the connection with the arpeggios clear to the opening of

2
identical touch care taken

3
gets into the Scarlatti hand over hand leaps
a figuration freak's movement

Etude in C minor, Op. 10 #12 "Revolutionary" - Frédéric Chopin - Cecile Licad

the chorale tune clarifies the torrent of notes
and the tumult of times

If I Had My Way - T.T. Rose and Gospel Singers [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

tells a punch accent story
with a piano pounding it out on the bag
and singers along for the ride

Everybody Loves My Baby - Miss Lee Morse and Her Bluegrass Boys [from Evans 78s]

this most emphatically does not come across like a bluegrass band
far more what?
jazz?

Well, Git It! - Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra

big band in its party glory
every solo is a way to dance

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

a figure from the guitar accompaniment
intrudes into the lyrics:
Lord Lord Lord

Dream Girl - Jesse Blevin [from Allen Lowe's Turn Me Loose White Man]

quintessential crooning
the sax player floated in with the guitar player
classy in an early suburban way

Death to Van Gogh's Ear - Allen Ginsberg [from Holy Soul Jelly Roll]

statements as facts
tripping from idea to idea
prophetic in its awful silliness
Van Gogh's ear on the currency

Night Train - James Brown [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

clenched
nearly gets away from them
heading North
a few points in between
up the East Coast

It Be's That Way Sometimes - Nina Simone [from Silk & Soul]

lots of bump to bounce her voice off of
no need to clench

54 45 (Was My Number) - Toots and the Maytails [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

bass drums
light percussion and vocals
guitar essentially doubling the bass
a keyboard at the end may have been there before
talks to the band like James Brown does

Dogs - Pink Floyd [from Animals]

points for style
as instruments are added
there goes Gilmore
not their first song to feature a dog howling
a song with adjunct parts
commentary annexes
room for spacing out
time to think

Say You Do - Janet Jackson [from Janet Jackson]

something back there makes a big old thunder boom
lots of ingredients before the star appears
big hype
some of that tight ass funk about it
ala JB
parts peel away
big ol' flabby thunderboom

Sonatina - Keith Eisenbrey - Keith Eisenbrey [January 19, 1987]

I was somewhat obsessed with letting things go on just a bit too long
but also sensitive to how one might escape the loop
it allows a peek into how the thinking is going
if you can tell an activity is going on
then changes within and upon that activity are plain
not a bad performance
though some notes are out of tune
and there are some slop-overs
but the gist of it is there
I still like about clavichord what I liked then
the extreme dynamic range
the aching clarity
the noisy clumsiness of its delicacy

Wake Up - Guthrie Clan and Guests [from Woody's 24 Grow Big Songs]

join the day kids
play with all your toys
and girls and boys

Banned Rehearsal 459 - Isaac E, Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer, Heidi S, Lynn W

Banned Rehearsal does its best to mystify out of town guests
that's a lot of folks in a small space
the expression of our cacophonous lives was cacophony
we calm down
bubble comfortably
the drum keeps on
but Isaac is fussy
{guests from CompuServe's MusicArts group, of which I was a part back in the day}

December 8, 2021

Sunday - David Bowie [from Heathen]

accumulating verse
accumulating tracks
composition is the smoothness
with which tracks and verse enter
so far
one internal articulation point
one final addition
then fade

Consider the Birds 42 - Keith Eisenbrey [February 3, 2007]

widely separated episodes of chatters

Daughter - Byron Au Yong [from Yija]

breathes with the singer

You Ruined It When You Hugged Me Back - Your Mother Should Know [demos of February 23, 2017]

there is a problem with heroes and emulation

Variatio, Fvb. 62 - William Byrd - Claudio Columbo [from The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book]

all and each aspect is measured and rational to the meter
thought:
the moment of any metrical node might be less than instant
as though with a complex sound a form of ordering is required
the precise beginning of any plucked sound is so granular
that factual precision may be impractical

Die Wohltemperierte Klavier, Band 1, Prelude and Fugue in F Major - Johann Sebastian Bach - Christiane Jacottet

there is a vast difference in the sense of what articulation does and means
between harpsichord and piano
it isn't just a timbre difference

Sonata in A minor, Kk. 149 - Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

if it's worth listening to
it's worth listening to upside down
and with squinty eyes
and with silly hats 

Kurze und Leichte Klavierstücke, "Andante in C Major", Wq. 114/10 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklós Spányi

at the cadences
time is kept by means of appropriately neutral figuration
a pause to breathe
short "easy" and extraordinarily elegant

Sonata in G Major, Op. 31 #1 - Ludwig van Beethoven - HJ Lim

intrusive thoughts hide within the figures
but they will out

Nocturne in C minor, Op. posth. (#20) - Frédéric Chopin - Claudio Arrau

internal fantasy brought back
but what of those opening preludial measures
strange plagals indeed

Finnegans Wake, Chapter 6 (end) - James Joyce - Neal Kosály-Meyer [from the streamed performance of November 21, 2020]

. . . my knowledge is fructose
a woman of no appearance
all her myriads of drifting minds in one
but the river tripped on her
I so silly to be flowing
the irony of the stars
the farce of dustiny
a period of pure lyricism
teaching his infant majesty how to make matters verse
the right woods by the road's order

December 9, 2021

The Shout - Art Tatum [from Classic Early Solos]

ok so that is a lot of notes in a hurry
but he announces the subject matter up front
quite simply and never veers

Tea For Two - Cassino Simpson [from Allen Lowe's That Devilin' Tune]

much a similar approach to Art Tatum's
but more dangerous and raw

Red Cross - Charlie Parker [from The Complete Savoy & Dial Master Takes]

in the head
if that is the correct term
the parts of the measures are clearly defined
rhythmically and registrally
honk honk
allowing us to get a clear sense of the phrases
before they are given the treatment
a malleable format
easy to keep one's place

Juke - Little Walter [collected from Neal Kosály-Meyer's Bo's Milieu]

as were the various blues formats
though in blues the conversation
is only loosely contained within the particular instance at hand

Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On - Jerry Lee Lewis [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

gives the dancing teens a thrill
even calls it
talking to said teens

Listen to the Lambs - The Lake Washington Singers, Betty Eisenbrey, JoAnne Deacon [April 10, 1962]

spiritual arrangement
good ol' four-part singing

Boris The Spider -The Who [from A Quick One]

going for the novelty market
otherwise pointless

Woman is the ------ of the World - John Lennon and Yoko Ono [from Some Time in New York City]

in slogan mode
instructive but thin
dressed up with a raucous band
more than flirts with false moral equivalence

Love You Till Tuesday - David Bowie [from Starting Point]

the voice and characterization are all there
just not much song to work with
nice boy was far too narrow
too cute for cute

After P*** T***! - Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [from A Cassette Player December 1982]

this sounds like the University of Washington Contemporary Group Improvisation Ensemble or an unofficial  subset
poorly recorded and/or transferred
synth sound squeezed out of a balloon
some clarinets and percussion

Vitrum nostrum gloriosum - Tielman Susato Krummhorn Gesellschaft, Georg Forster [from The Glory of the Krummhorn]

I think this is an amateur ensemble somehow connected to the recorder groups my Mom was in
{NB confirmed: I found a picture on-line and I recognize them}

Psalm 23 (meditation, responses) - Keith Eisenbrey - Keith Eisenbrey, Neal Kosály-Meyer [August 22, 1992]

this is the final version of that time
and was included on an early Banned Rehearsal cassette production
first Neal reads the whole Psalm
which is followed by my clavichord responses
much later
once I could edit digitally
I took the original tracks and intermingled them
more to my liking
that version was on Psalms, Songs and Sarabande
a limited issue CD
this piece might be worth another stab come to think of it
with better microphones and more careful tuning

In The Wrong Again - Uni V [a Rescued Record]

something about this is just off
the size
the clean production
the balance
all of the above
tries to be dramatic
the vocal is hiding in the back
good reason
lame in all but his own eyes

Gradus 3 - Neal Kosály-Meyer [February 4, 2002]

he says February 5 but I have marked it on the 4th
which was a Monday?
{NB: the 4th was a Monday, so I think that is correct, Gradus having been pretty consistently a Monday evening project}
starting over with the lowest A
quiet slow
listening toward space
the progression through the pitch classes is
so I am told
based on the theoretical harmonic series
bent to fill in a diatonic "Major" collection
and then to fill in the gaps for the full chromatic 12.
I wonder if an analysis of the actual harmonics of the actual lowest A on that piano
would have yielded the same series?
and moving from the Yamaha to the Chickering a few years later
would it have yielded a different series?
the moon tonight is a waxing crescent
Jupiter to the right
If the progression had been by circle of 7 (or 5) semitones
or by circle of single semitones
the maximization of interval content would have occurred with the addition of the sixth pitch class:
G-sharp for the circle of 7 semitones
(one semitone being the last interval class added)
or E (or D) for the circle of single semitones
(5 (or 7) semitones being the last interval class added)
(5 and 7 being equivalent because pitch classes have no up or down to them by definition and so being co-classified)
I was not yet making journal entries for these sessions
I'm not sure why not
I seem to have been only noting music from the recorded sequence and from live shows
I wonder when I changed tactics? 

Ain't Gonna Pine - Smokestack and the Foothill Fury [from Kitchen Recordings]

a traveling one-man-band for hillbilly blues
when we saw him he played his own drum kit
(as well as guitar)
with a foot and knee operated contraption
it sounds like that is what he's using here
full body music

What's Wanting For - Your Mother Should Know [recorded live at The High Dive, Seattle, April 6, 2012]

the guitar is too big for the song
too easy to hide behind
raffle and prizes!

Ryan and Dan - Wang Lu - Seattle Modern Orchestra, Julia Tai [from the streamed concert Dissolution, November 19, 2021]

emerging from intonation
a wide field
set with fearsome scribbles
and tender lines
electric guitar and saxophone I think
quite lovely

In Session at the Tintinabulary

December 6, 2021

Banned Telepath 79 Wallingford - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Neal Kosály-Meyer

Neal is in deep rehearsal for Chapter 8 of Finnegans Wake. Karen has a part to play upsetting the blue milk light so we attended his rehearsal and recorded part of it as a Telepath

Banned Telepath 79 Tintinabulary - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey

After supper we made one our selves

December 8, 2021

Banned Telepath 79 Southend Stuff - Steve Kennedy

Steve played some drums for us on Wednesday

Banned Rehearsal 1040 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Steve Kennedy, Neal Kosály-Meyer

and we put it all together

December 10, 2021

Two-Part Invention in C-sharp minor - Gavin Borchert - Keith Eisenbrey

Two-Part Invention in E-flat Major - Gavin Borchert - Keith Eisenbrey

The next two of Gavin's Inventions, recorded on clavichord

Anybody's Fingerbook, 2x2 (transpositional) A (A) - Keith Eisenbrey

My 2020 composition, first of many in the set
(8 2x2; 10 each of 3x3, 5x5, and 7x7)
conceived as a set of perverse finger exercises

Special Mention

My Dinner with Wallace

Much of my musical energy during the first year of the Pandemic went into producing this virtual recital of recent solo piano music by my long-time collaborator, Aaron Keyt, and by me. There are 9 reels total in the playlist, ranging from 10 to 20 minutes or so each, the whole stretching for just under 2 hours. I am quite pleased with the results, especially with how well I manage to illuminate the extraordinary "in-your-presence-alone" intimacy of Aaron's compositional voice.

Postscripts

::Consult the Oracle

crying the Kolya begin his neck the

policeman approached note his face genuine

sympathy Ivanovna took it and

Reality Check::

a bird flutters through the sun

the dragon

is language itself