Saturday, February 24, 2024

Playlist

Preface

"'Mr. Allen,' said Mr. Pickwick, 'what is the matter, sir?'
'Never mind, sir!' replied Mr. Allen, with haughty defiance.
'What is it?' inquired Mr. Pickwick, looking at Bob Sawyer. 'Is he unwell?'
Before Bob could reply, Mr. Ben Allen seized Mr. Pickwick by the hand, and murmured, in sorrowful accents, 'My sister, my dear sir; my sister.'
'Oh, is that all!' said Mr. Pickwick. 'We shall easily arrange that matter, I hope. Your sister is safe and well, and I am here my dear sir, to - '
'Sorry to do anythin' as may cause an interruption to such wery pleasant proceedin's, as the king said wen he dissolved the Parliament,' interposed Mr. Weller, who had been peeping through the glass door; 'but there's another experiment here, sir. Here's a wenerable old lady a lyin' on the carpet waitin' for dissection, or galwinism, or some other rewivin' and scientific inwention.'
'I forgot,' exclaimed Mr. Ben Allen. 'It is my aunt.'
'Dear me,' said Mr. Pickwick. 'Poor lady! gently, Sam, gently.'
'Strange sitivation for one o' the family,' observed Sam Weller, hoisting the aunt into a chair. 'Now, depitty Sawbones, bring out the wollatilly.'"

Charles Dickens - from "The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club"

Texts

Recorded

February 17, 2024

Two Slants: Duty, Vita - Charles Ives - Dora Ohrenstein, Phillip Bush

stomps the end of Duty
lingers at the end of Vita

Serial Diatonicism - Carson "Carsonics" Farley - Keith Eisenbrey 

the thickest of the chords are a challenge to play clearly on clavichord
but I think I managed pretty well
the tempo shifts work (to my ear)
an interesting challenge

Her Gown Was of Vermillion Silk - Charles Ives - Paul Sperry, Irma Vallecillo

the text is in the past tense
the word painting is in the present tense

Punch Drunk Lovers - Steve Layton [from Lucky You]

offset sound plates
edges not trued up nor trimmed

Nature's Way - Charles Ives - Dora Ohrenstein, Phillip Bush

a comforting sentiment

Grimoire - Steve Layton [from Lucky You]

dark foreboding
Fafner proximity warning
it seems he may have smelled the blood of that Englishman after all
grumpiness level high

From 'The Incantation' - Charles Ives - Mary Ann Hart, Dennis Helmrich

etched filigree presents this text

Two Minds Inside - Steve Layton [from Lucky You]

playing an echo game on a schematic board

An Election - Charles Ives - Paul Sperry, Irma Vallecillo

comments overheard on the street

Persephone - Steve Layton [from Lucky You]

far below the bellows of beasts
a sequestered realm of stillness
and nanoincremental accretion
hollowing out the chambers above
to clog the chambers below

February 18, 2024

At Sea - Charles Ives - William Sharp, Steven Blier

a fragment song or aphoristic
extends beyond its horizon

Go Go Dynamo - Steve Layton [from Lucky You]

for dancing
turn the groove this way and that
the hips the feet the shoulders the hat
reset the rhythm ball
move where the moves now fall
aerobic and fun
you'll grin a ton

Flag Song - Charles Ives - Paul Sperry, Irma Vallecillo

Country and God and Manly Determination
square jaws and ready fists

Gold In a Gray Land - Steve Layton [from Lucky You]

pebbles in a pool of many dimensions
each with its surface and depths
each pebble descends true
through its discovered pool

Far From My Heavenly Home - Charles Ives - Mary Ann Hart, Dennis Helmrich

a prayer

First Autumn Day - Steve Layton [from Lucky You]

the hemisphere of the biosphere
begins its necessaries to survive the long dark
winds and current shift
life pulls back into itself

The Last Reader - Charles Ives - Dora Ohrenstein, Phillip Bush

that scarce remembered lay
there's the schoolbook cadence
and there's the oh so modern waft of scent

Deah - Steve Layton [from Lucky You]

shaman
calling a power out
reaching toward it to speak to it

The Greatest Man - Charles Ives - Paul Sperry, Irma Vallecillo

cute

Baila - Steve Layton [from Lucky You]

I'm being acquired point by point
(oh gee he's up to my knee)
one two three four
increments of engulfment

The Housatonic at Stockbridge - Charles Ives - Mary Ann Hart, Dennis Helmrich

the use of "at" or "on" in geographic place names or descriptions
an East coast thing? 
I think here we would say "in" or "near" Stockbridge

When I Was a Child I Lived By the River - Steve Layton [from Lucky You]

menacing but placatable
if properly feared

Resolution - Charles Ives - Dora Ohrenstein, Phillip Bush

a quotation pulled from its surrounds

Lucky You - Steve Layton [from Lucky You]

a happy walking hum
with which we say
ta ta to Mr. Layton
'til we pick him up again in the next cycle
and now lucky me
a marathon of Ives songs

Two Little Flowers; Evening; Immortality; Yellow Leaves; Ann Street; Peaks; The White Gulls; 1, 2, 3; Majority; Remembrance; The One Way; The Rainbow (So May It Be!); The Side Show; A Sea Dirge; In the Mornin - Charles Ives - Dora Ohrenstein, Philip Bush; Mary Ann Hart, Dennis Helmrich; Paul Sperry, Irma Vallecillo; William Sharp, Steven Blier

thrice repeated clauses
plangence
plainness
ding dong bell
what are art songs for?
to give singers a music more suitable to an intimate space than is allowed in opera
and to sing in different tenses and characters
than would generally come up on the dramatic stage
interesting
these seem to benefit from not being isolated from their own kind
several of them together lifts each individually
they are all and each
not the all and all
but rather
a part written in stones
ragtime photographs of moments
the music of a time
the color if its time
point at the map
name the streets
to his credit he doesn't obscure the affectual dissonances of the poem

February 19, 2024

Ich Grolle Nicht; Widmung; We Melodien; There Is a Lane; Elégie; Evidence; Berceuse; Rough Wind; South Wind; No More; On Judge's Walk; A Night Thought; Song of the Dead; Where the Eagle; Tolerance; The Love Song of Har Dyal; Omens and Oracles; Those Evening Bells; Frühlingslied; ein Ton; Marie; Song; Memories; Waltz; Songs My Mother Taught Me; Son of a Gambolier - Charles Ives - Dora Ohrenstein, Philip Bush; Mary Ann Hart, Dennis Helmrich; Paul Sperry, Irma Vallecillo; William Sharp, Steven Blier

so
these can function effectively as Preludes do
in sets of the same
they set each other up and off
or
like variations
the mix of them more alive
than any one of them as an individual thought 

pre-19th Century it is my understanding
 that songs were written to be intersticed
as part of a longer musical event
 one might be included between movements of a symphony exempli gratia
the arrival of song cycles
was part of change in the social circumstances
in which music was shared music
became part of bourgeois home life
these offer a picture of domestic life 100 years ago
and of what was appropriate within its confines
texts that could be printed in a respectable periodical 

man's hearthstone
build my own 

for all Ives's reputation as a modernist
the vast majority of these are not so far out as to be modernistic
kazoos notwithstanding
surely that sort of thing was seen frequently on the vaudeville stage

the old dance ground

***************

{NB: And so we begin a new cycle, composed of those tracks I have indexed to years ending in "3" or "8".}

O Quam Mirabilis Est (Antiphona) - Hildegard Von Bingen - Sequentia, Barbara Thornton

voice illuminates space

Baci Soavi E Cari - Carlo Gesualdo - Delitiæ Musicæ, Marco Longhini

voice confers with voice
long lined phrases

A Suite of Dances - Anonymous - David di Fiore [from The Grand Organ of the Castle Church of St. Catherine in Kremnica]

David played these for us many times at services over the years
I remember that his voicing on them evolved over time
experimenting with rhythm and color

Benedictus Deus noster - Peter Phillips - Royal Holloway Choir, Rupert Gough, The English Cornett and Sackbut Ensemble

voice populates space
full of glory

February 20, 2024

Historia der Auferstehung Jesu Christ, Op. 3 - Heinrich Schütz - Capella Augustana

ornate reading
even setting the title
do I have the same trouble with word-painting here?
not so much
it seems to be more in the nature of a sensitive declamation
than in a clever
look-at-what-I-did there
the music amplifies
they are gesticulations in the character of the declaimer
part of their person and demeanor
I think our choir did at least a part of this many years ago
perhaps even under Chuck Peterson
back when we were ambitious

Schoenberg was not the first to set the voice of divinity in multiple parts
including the voice of Mary

this is a setting of the Johannine resurrection story

Ich habe Lust abzuschieden, BWV 47 - Dieterich Buxtehude - Purcell Quartet, Suzie LeBlanc, Dame Emma Kirby, Clare Solomon

bass lines with lives of their own have business below and above

David et Jonathas, Act I - Marc-Antoine Charpentier - Pinchgut Opera, Antony Walker, Orchestra of the Antipodes, Dean Robinson, Paul McMahon, David Parkin, Andrei Laptev, Anna Fraser, David Greco, Cantillation, Anders J. Dahlin, Simon Lobelson, Richard Anderson,Sara Macliver, Ashley Giles

we wanted the stories to be enacted within our behold
it needed to be writ large
music in the service of making things larger than life
opens with royalty's conference with sorcery
which has power over the spirit of Samuel
interesting

sound effects!!
thunder and hooves! 

balance between the phrases of voice and the remarks of the orchestra
pay mind when they join forces
basso profundo divine authority figure
must be Samuel

this here is ceremonial and pomply
a chorus is an opportunity to reset
change the mind scene
metrical accelerants
big screen biblical epic

Liebster Jesu, wir sing hier, BWV 731 - Johann Sebastian Bach - Stanislav Surin

the increment between activation of the key
and the speaking of the pipes
varies with rank and pitch and space
blurring synchrony

Allemande de Laborieuse - François Couperin - Kenneth Gilbert

grace filters down from above
the fount and the echo box
clarification signals conclusion

Acis and Galatea, Act I - George Frideric Handel - Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz, Kawn Kotoski, David Gordon, Glenn Siebert, Jan Opalach, Seattle Symphony Chorale

this music goes about its business certifying the preparations
dusting the chandeliers 

tableauxers take their places

presented as though on too big a stage
if it's worth singing
it's worth repeating
the characters are picture book illustrations
trouble with the sheep
placid and pastoral
enjoy the picture book
and our conversations too
there're those happy happy happy wes
everybody's happy couple

Hipocondrie a 7 concertanti - Jan Dismas Zelenka - Camerata Bern, Alexander van Wijnkoop

the depictions of worry and miscertainty
following darker paths
an unstable affect
or
the affect is of an unstable sort

February 21, 2024

Noel 10 'Grand jeu et duo' - Louis-Claude Daquin - Marie-Claire Alain

celebratory dance with doubles and variations
music for a large space
we sit back and observe from our seats

Sonata in A Major, Wq. 65.10 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklós Spányi

sets up shop in one's head
a short study in chromatic progressions

Sonata in D Major, Kk.223 -  Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

no mind intrusion here
it intrigues
invites study

La Damanzy - Jacques Duphly - Christophe Rousset

rings on every finger
frills at every seam

Three Scottish Tunes - James Oswald - Nancy Hadden

early folk adaptations
a sprightly Greensleeves

Ah, tu non senti, from Ifigenia in Tauride (Tomasa Traetta) - Franz Joseph Haydn - Orchestre de Chambre de Laussanne, Antal Dorati

a number for another composer's opera
a dramatic recitative
orchestra plays
then the singer
et cetera
until late in the game
rhetorical structure employed for dramatic impact

Symphony in D Major, K45(45) - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Academy of Ancient Music, Jaap Schroeer, Christopher Hogwood

1
glittering
bursting with invention and contrast 

2
a methodical progression
wanders astray
but sticks to its procedures 

3
dancers line up
a dance is a structured conversation 

4
lively dinner conversation

Sonata in G Major - Johann Christian Bach - Bart van Oort

the top line melody is the hero of its own tale
fingery figures shaped for the hand

Sonata in A Major, Op. 10 #1 - Muzio Clementi - Howard Shelley

1
clarity and grace
post repeat
behind the scenes
pump the servants
pull the strings of society 

2
cobbled together
irregular
loves to find the dark corners of phrase endings
the three meter complicates itself 

3
spinning machinery
mechanical toy wonder
the era of the virtuoso has arrived

Sonata pour le Clavecin où le Forte-Piano in G Major, WoO, C.40 - Johann Ladislaus Dussek

1-A
a refined gentleman with genuine passions that erupt in his handsome breast so noble
1-B
a rough and noisy character with true tenderness in his broad chest 

2
let's see how they do at the dance among their fellows
or amid the chatter of an evening at dinner and cards
but wanders into dangerous territory

Concerto in B-flat Major, Op. 19 (#2) - Ludwig van Beethoven - Boston Symphonie Orchestra, Seiji Ozawa, Rudolf Serkin

1
use the most unlikely hinge
it will be unmistakable on its return
a fixed point
from which to survey the dance of motions in concord or in opposition
Ludwig muscles in on the virtuoso scene
is that Beethoven's cadenza? 

2
a phrase is an adventure full of plot points
big R Romantic
back when it was an intellectual posture 

3
rollicking fun at the local Bierhall
switches from looking back at the music
to simply playing it
ha! fooled ya!

Sonata in C Major - Johann Nepomuk Hummel - Constance Keene

1
the assertion is questioned
discussed in its presence
has a clever figuration game
irrepressible
hey
do you remember that assertion we were discussing 

2
ok let's take this thing apart shall we
but first we'll breakfast on the veranda
an important conversation being had
in which the assertion figures heavily 

3
a great twittering is heard in the domestic labyrinth
 perhaps the assertion solved itself
its commerce fulfilled
all settled

Sonata in G Minor, Op. 13 - Friederich Kalkbrenner - John Khouri

1
the stormy part of passion
he becomes a bit of a bore about it 


whew! now what?
forcing the music to get bigger
a constant pressure of espressivo utterance 

3 4
golly they all sure do start with a loud bang

February 22, 2024

Caprice in E Major, Op. 1 #1 - Niccolò Paganini - Salvatore Accardo

virtuosic flashpoint
next stop Liszt

Die Schöne Müllerin - Franz Schubert - Gerard Souzay, Dalton Baldwin

each page a poem
each poem an illustration
master of the passing shadow
or change in the weather
music
the stage setting props and drops
no hurry getting around to what might be a plot
wandering involves many scenes to be believable wandering
and there she is right on cue
stations of the mill a
sequence of rhymed soliloquies
piano part moves effortlessly between being a piece in its own right and clearly playing a supporting role to the voice
two roles
harmonic support and lyric foil
as in blues guitar playing
such as Mr. Johnson's
the pianist has an excellent touch 
microscopic attention to shades of affect
somebody got his dander up
gets dark indeed
shades of the Werther of Young Sorrows

Gran Capriccio in C minor - Carl Czerny - Martin Jones

a caprice follows thought
playing registers off each other
the keyboard is a puppet stage
this one shows melodramas nightly
matinees on weekends
and a post melodrama fugue for the aficionados

Introduction and Bolero in A minor, Op. 19 - Frédéric Chopin - Garrick Ohlsson

a tour through the measures
singling out particularly significant pitch places

for northern Europeans
did the Bolero as a dance type
appeal
because of its sultry
fantasy inciting
Spanish origins?

Les nuits d'ete - Louis-Hector Berlioz - Orchestre de Paris, Daniel Barenboim, Kiri Te Kanawa

loves his scenery
lusts after the opera stage
a magician with his orchestra
or
instrument is a sound to be applied where needed
these scenes are not static
things happen in them

O Weh des Scheidens - Clara Schumann - Dorothea Craxton, Hedayet Djeddikar

private communication
direct address
mixtape

Ouverture-Manfred - Robert Schumann, Boston Symphony Orchestra - Wilhelm Furwängler

there it is right there
forever slipping from our grasp
and here comes that astonishing
name that tune
final chord

Variations on a Hungarian Song - Johannes Brahms, Julius Katchen

for piano two-fists
the fists dream of one day becoming real hands
fully intertwinable 

try to force their way in
through fierce counterpoint

Richard III, Op. 11 - Bedřich Smetana - Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, Václav Neumann

early appearance of tune-bird
cinema spectacular
royal ceremony
pomp and costumes
horse chases in the dead of night
thrills and chills
all our favorite bits
complete with kettle drums to make it all kingly
a bit of a trip

Rhapsodie espagnole - Franz Liszt - Stephen Hough

laying the whole keyboard wizard thing on pretty thick
now down to business
these puppets are big and scary
but wear rhinestone shoes
and a sparkly jacket
and there are candelabras 

modulation by tossing the threads into the air
and finding where they fall to

Fatum, Op. 77 - Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky - National Symphony Orchestra of Washington, D.C., Antal Dorati

a scarlet thread
invisible if not suspected
doing its work
high and low
in court and field
and town and village
forces are gathering
there's gonna be a blow-up
he's telegraphing it big-time
pull back
to the furtive opening
find our happy place
nope sorry
Mr. Stomp is here to stomp

In Session at The Tintinabulary

February 18, 2024

Hingham - Keith Eisenbrey

February 19, 2024

Gradus 392 - Neal Kosály-Meyer

an energized location in space
a grouping thereof
is an attitude of that space

a fulcrum in the earbrain
between
being a part of a vertical (momentary) sonority
and being part of an horizontal (sequential) figure 

occupy the fulcrum 

a preponderance of root position triadic harmonies
skews the balance toward the momentary (vertical) sonorities
as a primary consideration 

more transparent texture
skews it toward the sequential (horizontal)
separates the voices 

reverberation space and pitch space
reverberation space
is an artifact of physical objects in physical space
pitch space
is a virtual space arising out of perception of aspects of a sonic environment 

at the fulcrum the dimensions shift easily one to the other

February 23, 2024

Psalm 119 - Aaron Keyt

Ein wahrer Glaube Gotts Zorn stillt - Aaron Keyt

Postscripts

Drops

Keith Eisenbrey 13: Music as Film (part 2) 2008 - 2009

Volume 13 completes my Music as Film project, in which I built up textures from snippets of sound. "Zither Film" is just that process and nothing else. "Improvising a Framework for Composition so as to Compose My Thoughts about Improvisation" uses layers from the earlier "Lids Film" in conjunction with texts both original and found. "Torch Song" is all about its found texts. It may not properly belong in the project's remit but it tagged along anyway. It certainly doesn't belong anywhere else. 

Volumes 1 through 12 are available at keitheisenbrey.bandcamp.com

All are free for download.

Skaldmud's Doodle Gallery

listening journal doodles from 2020







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