Saturday, March 30, 2024

Playlist

Preface

"Mr. Bob Sawyer's Mode of Travelling"

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

Texts

Recorded

March 23, 2024

Semper Fidelis - John Philip Sousa - Philip Jones Ensemble, Elgar Howarth

crisply pressed scales

Mama's Black Baby Boy - Unique Quartet Fall [from Really The Blues]

soloist, answered
by chorus
as
a soloist might be answered
by a guitar

Symphony in D minor (#1) - Charles Ives - New Philharmonia Orchestra, Harold Farberman

in dutifully mock Dvorakian duds
fails to energize the workings out of figures
try as he might 

slow movement is a grand opera showcase for the female lead
played here by oboe 

drags itself up to a moment
that might have been a telling one
but the clumsy written out ornaments get in its way 

winding up for his big patriotic moment
to get the applause roaring
has to fill the time with something
so he noodles around

March 24, 2024

3 Preludes, Op. 35 - Alexander Scriabin - Michael Ponti

a bird
that never lights on stem or twig 

a forest pool
overgrown with shadows 

a crag
held firm in mountain's grasp

Passacaglia, Op. 1 - Anton Webern - London Symphony Orchestra, Pierre Boulez

a sequence of tones
in even spacing
a synthesis of pitch and time

we proceed with grim faces

Symphony in E-flat major (#2) - Franz Schmidt - Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Neeme Järvi

1
our spirits bubble and burble cheerily
frothy fountain
drums portend
lush vegetation
perfumed fronds
we come back around the bend
to burble and bubble once again
fortified in courage
but again
drums softly portend
our resolve is firm 

2
plain clothes
in common fabrics
and home-some patterns
as a base
from which to variationize
hearkening back
to music's more innocent decorative role 

social image of the era:
the glittering ballroom
a-swish with skirts
and elegantly monocled evening coats 

another
the lurking demimonde 

another
the over-furnished library

oh heck
let's back to the ball 

transformation after transformation
to find the exit 

3
in private quarters
to work out some mellifluous polyphonies
a glorious garden thereof
acres and acres
open above to the wilds and the mountains

shall we start again?
destiny beckons heroically 

oh triumph!
oh empire!

Ragtime - Igor Stravinsky - Noel Lee

tiny figures
tightly constricted motions
sardines
dancing in their cans

Ancient Dances and Airs for Lute - Ottorino Respighi - Philharmonica Hungarica, Antal Dorati

music
conscious of a history behind the current 

let us play some old music
on our new orchestral lute
why settle for a mere antique instrument
our lute
is amplified
and tricked out
with all manner of sounds

March 25, 2024

Z mrtveho domu, Act 2 - Leoš Janáček - Vienna Philharmonic, Charles Mackeras, Jiri Zahradnicek, Ivo Zidek, Vaclav Zitek, Dalibor, Jedlicka, Antonin Svorc, Jaroslava Janska, Vladimir Krejcik, Richard Novak, Beno Blachut, Zdenek Svehla, Eva Zigmundova, Zdenek Sousek, Jaroslav Sousek

the weave transforms the thread 

a grotesque parade

situations have tempos
into which sung words are fitted
change in tempo
is change in point of view 

the ongoing musical fabric
follows its own logic
the characters are borne along
in its flow's oppressive insistence

Dances of Galanta - Zoltán Kodály - Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz

as solo display dance
rather than
as social-dancing dance 

part of modernist music
was a yen to observe other musics
through its own lens
with a possibly acquisitional intent 

of course
sometimes that music entered the field
from within the life-experience of the composer person 

national pride showcase
a bit like An American in Paris
but this one actually goes

Overture to Colas Breugnon - Dmitri Kabalevsky - Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Fritz Reiner

a thrill ride
hooplah

April in My Heart - Billie Holiday (with Teddy Wilson and His Orchestra) [from The Complete Billie Holiday on Columbia]

the singer is the only soloist among the musicians
who isn't also part of the backup support

Chaconne for String Orchestra - Lockrem Johnson - uncredited

perhaps one or two players per part
I wonder what it would be like
with just one
(might not be practical in terms of various divisi passages?) 

I'm still too buried in my recent performance of this
(as a piano solo)
to really hear it
without simultaneously forming it with my mind-hands as it goes

The Bells - Billy Ward and The Dominoes [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

novelty song
a weeper
terminal regret

Summertime Blues - Eddie Cochran

minimal drumming
just slap bass and clapping to my ear
perhaps an occasional tambourine

March 26, 2024

Sally Go 'Round The Roses - The Jaynetts [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

although the topic seems clear
the details of how any one line
connects with the others
are not made plain
dark side of The Shirelles

I Heard It Through The Grapevine - Marvin Gaye [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

exquisite balance
in the recorded/engineered arrangement
lots going on
more than one would guess
from its transparence

Call Me (Come Back Home) - Al Green [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

another example
of the same fine school of arrangement and engineering
no showboating instrumentalists
they do their jobs and do them well

Running on Empty - Jackson Brown [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

drums and guitar
are more forward in the sound here
the artist's presented personal history
becomes part of the mythos
riding the showboat

Concerto a Quattro - Robert Starer - Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz, Bernard Shapiro, Christopher Sereque, Seth Krimsky, John Cerminaro

our soloists enter
one at a time
introducing themselves
to us
they may know each other
already
demonstrably musical
at every moment
post-modern commission fulfillment
wind quartet
(oboe clarinet bassoon horn)
strings and percussion

Banned Telepath 15 San Diego - Anna K, Neal Kosály-Meyer [January 1, 1988]

we join very little in progress
we make the most of it
dishes away
a synthy sound
a sound of low bits is outside
outside?
us?
watching a crow across the street
dishes and a guitar
song
A New Year Hello (from both of us)
a late Sudden Song
from back in the day
the guitar has a scratch worthy itch
another:
I Wish I Could Be In Seattle Tonight 

go to movie
buy me a book
go to the Space Needle
and take me a look
another year gone by
and I'm still here

Space Towers - Sun Ra [from Monorails & Satellites]

all the cross-rhythms scrape each other
as they shove themselves through
imperative propulsion
an image
through which
the cross-rhythms squeeze
metallically 

Furtive (from Minute Etudes, Book 1) - Emily Doolittle - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded February 8, 2023]

yeah
that's how that score goes in my head!

Sounding The Curve - Tom Baker [from Sounding The Curve]

same two pitches
same order
different durations
base of operations 

our firmest foot
derivations
become a new place
standing for the base
(in place of it)

Track 1 - Aaron Keyt [from 7(7)]

a zenic garden
in Absurdistan proper

Man Basiyo Saanwariyo - Sachin Jigar [from BollyGood Volume 1]

processed voice
so that
voice is comfy
in process
with everything else

I Dream a World - Connor J. Koppin - University Temple Chancel Choir, Chris Vincent, Dennis Haack, Laura Haack, Howard Wolvington [recorded live at University Temple United Methodist Church, Seattle, January 20, 2019]

American Sacred Pop Choral
appropriate
for any pastel church 

I'm not fond of the piece
but we're singing it quite well and sound pretty good

No Place To Go - Peter Nelson-King [recorded live at The Chapel Performance Space, Good Shepherd Center, Seattle, July 22, 2023]

insistently conflicting agendas
fierce knots
sudden electro-sparkle dust
striking
transients kept away
text unfortunately inaudible
as to intelligibility on my recording

O Virga Ac Diadema Purpurae Regis (De Sancta Maria, Sequentia) - Hildegard Von Bingen  - Sequentia, Barbara Thornton

around a constant
we measure the extents of our lines

Gelo Ha Madonna Il Seno - Carlo Gesualdo - Delitiæ Musicæ

pause for experience to take a breath
that's a pile of weird
to take in all in one go

March 28, 2024

Veni Sancte Spiritus - Peter Philips - The Choir of Royal Holiday, The English Cornett and Sackbut Ensemble, Robert Gough [from Cantiones Sacrae Octonis Vocibus]

the melodic shapes of plainchant
persist
into the melodic shapes
of baroque ornaments
and Chopinesque finger-flights
and Schenkerian prolongations
they are a basis of European-derived music in general 

the various systems of tonality
that have come and gone
are a record
of our negotiation
with those shapes
in dialogue
with the vertical sonorities
of multiply-voiced simultaneities

Also Hat Gott Die Welt Geliebt, SWV 380 - Heinrich Schütze - La Chapelle Royale, Phillipe Herreweghe

hat Gott
hot got
got hot
Gott hat

we are given time to be with the text
and with its words

Toccata in G Major, BuxWV 164 - Dieterich Buxtehude - Stella Simone

halting rhythms
as though coming apart

David et Jonathas, Act IV - 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

their big pledge scene
ritual enactment

La Tenebreuse - François Couperin - Kenneth Gilbert

colliding ornaments
brought in from all voices

Sinfonia in B minor, BWV 801 - Johann Sebastian Bach - Edith Picht Axenfeld

this one goes more lightly on clavichord
than (as here) on harpsichord

Noel sur les jeux d'anches - Louis-Claude Daquin - Marie-Claire Alain

presumably
composed as a little something special
for yuletide celebrations

Keyboard Sonata in G Major, Wq. 65/6 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklós Spányi

to repeat
to delight again
in each moment of it
on its paths
those
from start to hinge
and those
from hinge to end
deep in thought and puzzlement
then
an amusing game

La D'Héricoult - Jacques Duphly - Christophe Rousset

less clotted with colliding trills
than Couperin
enlightened 

less convoluted
than CPE Bach
untangled

Joseph est bien Marie - Claude Balbastre - Marie-Claire Alain

was the church's music of the era
generally more old-fashioned
than the court's music was?

Sonata in G Major, WoO. 14 - Muzio Clementi - Howard Shelley

notation
as a form of short hand

20 Variations in A Major - Franz Joseph Haydn - Christine Schornsheim

the theme itself
is a variation
upon an archetype theme
a binary-in-brief
I to V
I to V
[something else] to I
[something else] to I
sixteen bars is enough
its clockwork shows
at every moment
repeats for clarity's sake
transparence
as to the operating framework

Symphony in D Major (2nd Version), K300a(297) - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Academy of Ancient Music, Jaap Schroder, Christopher Hogwood

shopping oneself around
for employment
one needed something fresh and special
just for the occasion 

from the potential patron's point of view
the question might arise as
is this
what I want
to put myself forward
as having paid for?
could one trust
a voice such as that
enough
to hire them?
out in public?
with my name on it? 

fascination of
and distrust of
the creative voice

Rondo in A Major, G. 164 - Ludwig van Beethoven - Artur Schnabel 

a rondo works on the same principal
as sets of variations
but
the archetype is generally reduced even further
each part of it
is a plain-as-day version
it separates each new variation
with the model version of the archetype

Caprice in B minor, Op. 1 #2 - Niccolo Paganini - Salvatore Accardo

within a bowed figure
a polyphony appears
in a game
of quick-as-bats beat swapping

Symphony in C Major (#9) - Felix Mendelssohn - English Bach Festival Orchestra, William Boughton

one presumes
it will wander more toward C Major eventually 

adherence to the learned models
of polyphonic practice
no matter where it is
we may take them 

where Ludwig brawls
Felix beds 

the mother baroque
both teacher and sister are watching every note

no matter where he wanders
he will dig himself out somehow
it may be tedious at times
but he's full of clever tricks

Klavierstücke in E-flat minor, D946 #1 - Franz Schubert - Alfred Brendel

figurational variation is ironic commentary 

dire passion
coexists uneasily
with lyric reverie 

a troubled innocence

March 29, 2024

6 Concert Studies on Caprices by Paganini, Op. 10 - Robert Schumann - Peter Frankl

what begins as fingerflash
ends in sneaky polyphonic workings 

the landings of the melody
upon its internal articulation points
echo
into the basement
mercurial

In Session at The Tintinabulary

March 22, 2024

Banned Telepath 103 Magnuson - Jennifer Chung

March 24, 2024

New Sabbath - Keith Eisenbrey

March 25, 2024

Banned Telepath 103 Tintinabulary - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer

Banned Rehearsal 1097 - Jennifer Chung, Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer

March 26, 2024

379 Herr Gott, du Herrscher aller Welt - Aaron Keyt

385 In Gottes Namen fang ich an - Aaron Keyt

385a In Gottes Namen fang ich an (option 2) - Aaron Keyt

March 28, 2024

425 Jesu, Seelenfreund der Deinen - Aaron Keyt

433 Du Lebensbrot, Herr Jesu Christ - Aaron Keyt

Postscripts

Drops

Keith Eisenbrey 15: 2014

Early 2014 found me completing the first part of Études d'exécution imminent - the project that would keep me busy into 2021. Another was written for Ben Boretz, in celebration of his 80th. J was composed while thinking about the late J. K. Randall. The six movements of Another are Sphinxes, Scarabs, Pools, Potions (first batch), Potions (second batch), and Smoke, which movements can intermingle in performance and sometimes do, and so I include here three quite different versions for your enjoyment - two on clavichord and one live version on piano.

J and the second version of Another were recorded live at The Chapel Performance Space, The Good Shepherd Center, Seattle, in 2016; the other tracks were recorded at my home in 2015.

Prior volumes are available at keitheisenbrey.bandcamp.com

All are free for download.

Skaldmud's Doodle Gallery

listening journal doodles from 2021






Saturday, March 23, 2024

Playlist

Preface

"'At this very moment, the gentleman in sky-blue turning round, and seeing the young lady with her face uncovered, vented an exclamation of rage and jealousy; and, turning his weapon against her beautiful bosom, pointed a thrust at her heart, which caused my uncle to utter a cry of apprehension that made the building ring. The lady stepped lightly aside, and snatching the young man's sword from his hand, before he had recovered his balance, drove him to the wall, and running it through him, and the panelling, up to the very hilt, pinned him there, hard and fast. It was a splendid example. My uncle, with a loud shout of triumph, and a strength that was irresistible, made his adversary retreat in the same direction, and, plunging the old rapier into the very centre of a large red flower in the pattern of his waistcoat, nailed him beside his friend; there they both stood, gentlemen, jerking their arms and legs about, in agony, like toy-shop figures that are moved by a piece of packthread. My uncle always said, afterwards, that this was one of the surest means he knew of, for disposing of an enemy; but it was liable to one objection on the ground of expense, inasmuch as it involved the loss of a sword for every man disabled."

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

Texts

Live

March 16, 2024

Lockrem Johnson Centennial Celebration
The Chapel Performance Space, Good Shepherd Center, Seattle

Susan Payne Barnes, soprano
Keith Eisenbrey, piano
Peter Nelson-King, trumpet

Sonatina for Trumpet and Piano, Op. 35 (1950)
Chaconne for Piano, Op. 29 (1948)
Last 2 Songs, Op. 52 (1973)
2 Songs to a Child, Op. 27 (1948)
5th Sonata for piano, Op. 34 (1953)
24 Preludes for Piano, Op. 50 (1967)

Thank you Peter and Susan for your fabulous performances
and thank you Doug Rice for your tireless support!
More information, and possibly a video, of the concert are or will be available at www.LockremJohnsonEstate.com 

Recorded

March 17, 2024

Brother Louie - Stories [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

I had a friend in high school
who had a similar problem with his dad
when he
my friend
was dating a woman of Chinese ancestry
the idea of which
(the problem that he had his dad)
was
to me a personal flabbergast

Honesty - Billy Joel [from The Essential Billy Joel]

there's more than a hint of Elton John about this
and it's not just the bangy piano playing 

this bridge is a stinker
both musically and wordily

Intermezzo 3 - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded live at University Temple United Methodist Church, Seattle, March 17, 2007]

gentle bell sevenths
no pitch of which
can match pitch function
with another
of matching pitch 

performed 17 years ago today

In 'N' Out of Grace - Mudhoney [from Superfuzz Bigmuff]

performative transgression

Banned Rehearsal 317 - John E, Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Aaron Keyt [January 8, 1993]

language
and our psycho-auditory mechanism
grew up together 

part of that
involves our ability to recognize a human sound
of any kind
by virtue of its impetus
in a human
(we are clearly
in this sense
psychic)

from the same cradle
emerged our optimized ability
to distinguish between human language sounds
and human not-language sounds
again
a psychic ability 

so
among all sounds
we have
those that
first are
human-made sounds
and those that
are not

humans making sounds
that are like non-human-made sounds
are engaged in mimicry 

music sounds
perhaps
are those human-made sounds
that mimic aspects of language
and perhaps
another order of music
could be
a mimicry of mathematics
or of both language and mathematics 

language and music
share our psychic powers
since
after all
they are us 

lots of tape filling cymbal shine in this one
not a bad funmaker contribution either
Aaron sneezes
as he must have at Dempster's Abbey

funmaker intonation play with recorder tones
play with bell

play
(toddler words)
panno piano bammo bamjo planno 

Aaron shares home improvement words
and sneezes again

the Mystery Chord!
that was some hoot 

three ways to stop banging pipes
terminal screws
cold turkey
oven sweats
oven burns unproperly
refrigerator doesn't run
pilot doesn't stay lit
then I realized I was

March 18, 2024

Professor Bad Trip, Lesson I - Fausto Romitelli - Seattle Modern Orchestra, Julia Tai [streamed on November 19, 2021]

sounds of preparation
chat and tuning
tools etch a spinning surface
centered on a constant pitch
spark sounds leap off and fade to the floor
the surface spins
the tool etches a thin mark
finishing touches guided by delicate hands
it cools

Preludes 17 - 20 - Ken Benshoof - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded live at University Temple United Methodist Church, Seattle, February 24, 2018]

a group of melancholical moods
played pretty darned well I think

The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul (Track 1) - Douglas Adams

confession:
I'm not much of a fan of his writing
(but this was a gift so here it is)
which has a tediously smug voice
the first point of view character
is described as being a New Yorker
but uses brit locutions
("... she was cross")
and the narrator narrates her thinking
in a brit accent
geezers for geysers
and glass ears for glaciers
and
he relies on that tediously smug voice to amuse us
and be funny
it succeeds at neither 

both point of view characters
in this track
have the same voice
narrating their actions and thoughts

Puppet Pieces - Kam Morrill - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded live at University Temple United Methodist Church, Seattle, February 24, 2018]

these four brief pieces are lovely
and composed with care
and I play them well

Asu mo Zangai - Yuji Takahashi - Takashi Matsudair, Shinya Hashimoto [from Open Space 43]

the serpent discusses things with the voice
which reacts
and commiserates
and queries

Demolition - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded January 4, 2023]

2023 was a year
in which two nearby older non-adjacent houses
were torn down
to be replaced with construction sites
and eventually to become six condominium units
of which some are still for sale
there was noise associated with this process
and I recorded some of it
this was the first demolition's sounds
recorded from our driveway door
pitched sounds appear intermittently
which might have been me
but I don't think so
I kind of like what they
the pitched sounds
are doing
but it doesn't sound like me
to me
it might be something to do with the destructor's hydraulics
an airplane surveils loudly past
hearing these sounds through the signal and speakers
miniaturizes them
honey, I shrunk the world
one of the effects of wall-challenged recording?
fewer surfaces to rebound against
it dissipates so quickly
for it to be as loud as it was 

Nunc Aperuit Nobis - Hildebard Von Bingen - Sequentia, Barbara Thornton [from Canticles of Ecstasy]

centers on a pitch
but that pitch is not a spinning surface
it is a shining radiance

Come Esser Puo Ch'io Viva - Carlo Gesualdo - Delitiæ Musicæ, Marco Longhini

cadential tactic
bring all the voices together
to resolve in one moment's motions

Benedictus Dominus - Peter Philips - The Choir of Royal Holiday, Robert Gough, The English Cornett and Sackbut Ensemble [from Cantiones Sacrae Octonis Vocibus]

I followed a brass played tune into a cathedral
whose vaults and naves breathed words in solemn song

Er wird das Szepter von Juda, SWV 369 - Heinrich Schütz - La Chapelle Royale, Philippe Herreweghe, Agnes Mellon, Greta de Reyghere, Monique Zanetti, Howard Crook, Jean-Paul Fouchecourt, Herbe Lamy, Renau Machart, Peter Kooy, Peter Lika

emergent imitation
we apprehend it in its midst

Salve, Jesu, Patris gnate unigenite, BWV 94 - Dieterich Buxtehude - Purcell Quartet, Suzie LeBlanc, Dame Emma Kirby, Clare Solomon

for each number
a change of scenery and dress

David et Jonathas, Act III - 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

two low men's voices come to an agreement
and resolve into the mind of Saul
discontinuous strings leap into the ongoing continuo
somebody stomps off
there is a dance with tambourine

Concerto in A minor, BWV 593 - Antonia Vivaldi/Johann Sebastian Bach - Stanislav Surin 

if a composer liked a piece
and wanted to play it
they would take it
and amend it to suit
the flute stops
in the second movement
rough and pungent
honestly unrefined
almost as though
there was a strangeness about the mic setup
that didn't allow close sine tones to record evenly
a fibrillation
it might also
I suppose
be an artifact of the acoustics of the architectural space

March 19, 2024

Sinfonia a 8 concertanti - Jan Dismas Zelenka - Camerata Bern, Alexander van Wijnkoop

conceptually
does the play of figures amongst themselves
emerge prior to the Fuxian tonal structures they enhabit/elucidate?
or
are those said Fuxian motions
embedded in the figures
or
is there some synthesis involved? 

there may be other possibilities
and more well-formed queries 

are we even correct
in discriminating the one from the other?
what would it mean to be correct?
or to be incorrect?
if we are correct
it is a tactic to take the music apart
if we are in-correct
perhaps it is a tactic to enter into the process
by which the music arises
as we hear it going

Noel sur le flutes - Louis-Claude Daquin - Marie-Claire Alain

in this case we make an historical presumption
we presume
that the melody
(made of figures)
is the starting point
and that the fabric of this presentation
unfolds around it
and from it

Largo from Xerxes - George Frideric Handel - Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy [from Handel's Greatest Hits]

I don't know Handel's Xerxes
but I wonder if the violin solo in this recording
is a stand-in for a singer
it seems likely

Keyboard Sonata in E minor, Wq. 65.5 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklós Spányi

we hear a figure start twice
from different registers
and then proceed in different directions
the Fuxics here
are a negotiated motion
as is the meter
alive to the space
in which the sound clears
as the strings are damped
negotiations get aggressive in the third movement

Voluntary VIII in D minor - John Stanley - Stanislav Surin

by the book
nothing doing
that Handel wouldn't do
more likely less
a fugue subject that descends in stepped sequence
as does the rest of the piece

Ou s'en vont ces gais bergers? - Claude Balbastre - Marie-Claire Alain

the figures here serve the sound of the stops
orchestration play
pipes with personality

Symphony in f minor, "La passione" Hob. I:49 - Franz Joseph Haydn - Cantilena, Adrian Shepherd

the Passion
as in
The St. Matthew Passion
I think
just one that is silent
as to the words
unusually for a Haydn symphony
it opens with an Adagio (that isn't an introduction)
this trio of this menuet
isn't trying to be important
just pleasant
something uncertain
but exciting
seems about to happen

Symphony in G minor, K. 183 (#25) - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Symphony Orchestra of the Berlin Radio, Otto Klemperer

at a furious clip
sounds as though engineered for radio broadcast
but without the added obscurity
of having been recorded at the receiving end
what is it about the sound
that makes me think so
a sense of distance
or empty space
around the sound
as though
recorded from a spot in a hall
with no individual micing of instruments
a consistent seat in the hall

Sonata in B-flat Major, Op. 10 #3 - Muzio Clementi - Howard Shelley

poised on the edges of sparkling turns
my genteel is more genteel than your genteel
but so sweet and pure
wickedly tricky rhythmic games in the last movement
as though part of the figuration got stuck in another room
and has to bang on the door to be let out 

Sonata in D Major, Op. 10 #3 - Ludwig van Beethoven - Stephen Kovacevich

1
as figures follow on each other lickety split
a thread follows each moment through into the next 

2
midnight thoughts
for screwing one's eyebrows at
sleep may be troubled 

3
a bright and hopeful morning
quick calisthenics and a good crossword and coffee 

4
you busy?
tap at the door
the day busies itself in earnest
craftsmen craft
carters cart
servants serve

Sonata in C Major, D613/612 - Franz Schubert - Paul Badura-Skoda

reveals a human behind the music
as Beethoven does
also a complex one
as Beethoven was
but clearly a different fellow
differently troubled
different approaches to addressing the troubles
singing a pretty song will help
perhaps a nice dance
whistle a happy tune

Ouverture zu der Oper Euryanthe - Carl Maria von Weber - Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, Wilhelm Furtwangler

in the full flower
of the first Romantic generation
lovely small string ensemble bit

Polonaise in B-flat Major, Op. 71 #2 - Frédéric Chopin - Peter Katin

the bewildering variety of quantities of events in play
within ostensibly balanced phrasings
require us
to balance objects
that are likely to shift their weight around
they may be the same durations
if we count measures
but not as we experience them

Selections from Impromptus on a Theme by Clara Wieck, Op. 5 - Robert Schumann - Charles Rosen

how did we get here so quickly?
let's head back

March 20, 2024

Andante in G Major, Op. 3 #1 - Fanny Hensel - Beatrice Rauchs

all voices kept in line
outfacing serenity
doubts remain within
closely guarded

Character Etude in A Major, Op. 755 - Carl Czerny  - Martin Jones

his technical devices work on their own behalf
and for nothing else

La leggierezza - Franz Liszt - Claudio Arrau

whereas here we follow them
they are a part of the character
that appears at the end of the magic wand 

it isn't as technical devices that they live
but as characteristics of the way the melodies go

Was Weinst du Blumlein, Op. 23 #1  - Clara Schumann - Dorothea Craxton, Hedayet Djeddiker

wild intervals
lightly applied touches on piano
leapy vocal leaps
witty and clever

Serenade in D Major, Op. 11 - Johannes Brahms - Concertgebouworkest, Amsterdam; Bernard Haitink

this is how much fun his symphonies could have been
how much sunshine they might have had
so easy-going
allows a wandering mind
but welcomes it back at any moment
with something simple
and delectable
and marvelous
droll clowns
decorative

March 22, 2024

Concerto in G minor, Op. 22 - Camille Saint-Saëns - Royal Philharmonic Orchestra - Charles Dutoit, Pascal Roge

1
enter as a giant
sing a giant's lament
show a tender heart
melodic through-line 

2
a pleasant picnic
harmless enough
fun and games
company grins at vigorous ball play
the youngens will dance at bubble chasing 

3
uh oh
a stormy sudden gust blows the picnic all to pieces
we'll race the rain home
there stands the giant with arms akimbo

The Virtuoso Pianist - Charles-Louis Hanon - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded February 24, 2023]

I recorded this at the behest of Doug Rice
to compare to the Lockrem Johnson Jazz Hanon etude that he wrote for Jerome Gray's "Jazz Hanon" book
it discloses some clear weaknesses in my pianism
I guess I didn't practice enough Hanon back in the way back

Violin Concerto in A Minor (#1) - Karl Goldmark - Seattle Symphony, Gerard Schwarz, Nai-Yuan Hu

the rise of the professional concert soloist
as we know it today
in full swing here
concertos were their vehicle
becoming a necessary part of the standard concert line up
the big name draw
playing a big-name-drawn type of concerto
to pay the bills
give the talent a spotlight
dim the rest of the lights for a moment
breeds a cohort of aficionados
of instruments
of soloists
and of vehicles
(cars drivers and courses)
a composer might compose such a vehicle
upon request (commission)
or on spec (to shop around)
this one is a pleasant course
charming
harmless
quite marriageable
but plausibly forgettable

Sunrise (from Khovantschina) - Modest Mussorgsky

recorded (poorly) off the radio by me in the dim dark past
I still love it
I didn't catch the name of the orchestra or conductor

In Session at The Tintinabulary

March 17, 2024

Eglon (double) - Keith Eisenbrey

March 20, 2024

312 O Welt, ich muss dich lassen - Aaron Keyt

329 Alle Menschen müssen sterben - Aaron Keyt

March 21, 2024

366 Der Abend kommt, die Sonne sich verdekket - Aaron Keyt

402 O du fröhliche, o du selige - Aaron Keyt

Postscripts

Drops

Keith Eisenbrey 15: 2014

Early 2014 found me completing the first part of Études d'exécution imminent - the project that would keep me busy into 2021. Another was written for Ben Boretz, in celebration of his 80th. J was composed while thinking about the late J. K. Randall. The six movements of Another are Sphinxes, Scarabs, Pools, Potions (first batch), Potions (second batch), and Smoke, which movements can intermingle in performance and sometimes do, and so I include here three quite different versions for your enjoyment - two on clavichord and one live version on piano.

J and the second version of Another were recorded live at The Chapel Performance Space, The Good Shepherd Center, Seattle, in 2016; the other tracks were recorded at my home in 2015.

Prior volumes are available at www.keitheisenbrey.bandcamp.com

All are free for download.

Skaldmud's Doodle Gallery

listening journal doodles from 2021








Saturday, March 16, 2024

Playlist

Preface

"The Ghostly Passengers in the Ghost of a Mail"

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

Texts

Recorded

March 10, 2024

Symphony in D Major, K48(48) (#8) - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Academy of Ancient Music, Jaap Schroder, Christopher Hogwood

cadence is a tonal structure event
within an episode of figurations
an articulation
that often doesn't stop for itself
except at major divisions
or
it might stop at points
if it can clarify
the length of spans of figurations in play
so that
those spans of figurations
can play games 

second and third movements
each begin with phrases
marked by stopped cadences
fourth too
his rhetorical tool chest
becomes loaded
with phrase length options
as well as cadential options
lively at every moment

Sonata in C minor, Op. 17 #2 - Johann Christian Bach - Bart van Oort

I'm working on this piece
(on clavichord)
Bart plays a fortepiano
accomplishes some of the ornaments with nicely done tempo fluctuations
sensitive dynamics within phrases
not static
the point of the recapitulation
is to play the former material
with new details
and in different key relationships
not
to be the same
but
to be the same
differently

Sonata in E-flat Major, Op. 11 #1 - Muzio Clementi - Howard Shelley

figures are puppets
and interact as puppets in a stage
the plot need not concern us
if they are intent on their interactions 

tempting to attempt to listen to this
with the rapt attention of a young child
at puppetry 

can we listen with such wide-eyed innocence?
or has that ability been lost to us ?

Clementi seems to not be capable
of causing alarm
in such an innocent

Sonata in B-flat Major, Op. 24 - Johann Ladislaus Dussek - Taija Hakkila

Dussek's show
might delight such a one
less
leans heavily on innuendos
and flirty games 

to enter this post-repeat portion
is to enter a different world
winding halls and sudden encounters
perhaps in dreamland 

one needs a fondness for witty repartee 

a sequence of modulations in quick succession
is a journey through new spaces
we identify with the figures traveling through these spaces
not with the spaces

Sonata in E Major, Op. 14 #1 - Ludwig van Beethoven - Stephen Kovacevich

a personal favorite of mine
he plays the first movement gently 

do I identify with the figures here?
less so:
these figures are their tonality
they don't pass through it
if we do
say
in the post-repeat world
it's more like
we are worrying over things
in our minds
not passing through them 

a key is an aspect of a problem
the problem clarifies itself
with a cheerful stroll
on a nice day 

ends with a remarkable dissociation
of the parts of beats 

those beats
are each
in two places
at once

Variazioni in C Major, Op. 14 - Friederich Kuhlau - Loredana Brigandi

the goal is to use the most non-descript theme possible
in order to display
imagination
and skill
and cleverness
each variation is a different character

Sonata in F minor D625 505 (#11) - Franz Schubert - Paul Badura Skoda

back to figures as characters
but also
as the sung expressions of those characters

Schubert is what he sings 

a land of fancy
and of mysteries
and sorrows

Semiramide Overture - Gioachino Rossini - BBC Symphony Orchestra - Jascha Horenstein

an overture can introduce us
to the concept of character
that will be in play
within the opera proper 

singable
memorable
melodies
establish
that melody
is where it's at 

sudden bursts
promise us exciting drama
and dire pronouncements 

the music is part of the stagecraft
all sorts of characters
just imagine the craziness they are about to be in
pies will fly! 

an extensive overture
we are well into his world
by the time the curtains open

Polonaise in F minor, Op. 71 #3 - Frédéric Chopin - Peter Katin

we are now in a more expansive world
(because) we are on a smaller stage

Impromptus on a Theme by Clara Wieck, Op. 5 - Robert Schumann - Peter Frankl

the theme is a thought
about its opening school-book figure
the impromptus
are thoughts about a thought 

an impromptu
is a thought
from a hypothetical
or fanciful character

the characters that speak those thoughts
are lots of fun
somebody down there is shaking the ladder
but thoughts of another
give peaceful reverie
whistley hopes 

this impromptu is impersonating a fugue

March 11, 2024

Scherzo in D minor, Op. 10 - Clara Schumann - Susanne Grützmann

tripping over themselves
to stay in the same plot line

Incidental Music to A Midsummer Nights Dream, Op. 21/61 - Felix Mendelssohn - Symphonie-Orchester des Bayerischen, Rafael Kubelik, Edith Mathis, Ursula Boese, Bavarian Radio Chorus, Wolfgang Schubert

all is balance and lightness
even among the hee haw crowd 

when I was living in Red Hook
my walking would often pass a farm
at which a donkey resided
I was interested to note
that the sound it made
was more
haw hee
than is popularly promulgated 

overtures written
not for any specific production
but for some idealized version
in cultural consciousness 

direct repetition
is an easy balance enforcement 

but always entertaining
and marvelously orchestrated
doesn't get as bogged down
by Masterpiece Piety
as does Elijah 

the movement that rehashes
the hee haw material
from the overture
is not nearly as much fun as it was
the first time

Il lamento - Franz Liszt - Claudio Arrau

we are taken to the theater
upon whose stage
a lament is presented
we identify
with the character
who sings the lament
on the stage
created by the music
as the stage
so made 

vanishes behind the fervor

Allegro from the F.A.E. Sonata - Johannes Brahms - Yehudi Menuhin, Hephzibah Menuhin

composed like someone writing a solo with accompaniment
rather than
as a chamber piece for violin and piano

5 Gedichte für ein Frauenstimme (Wesendonck Lieder) - Richard Wagner - Philharmonia Orchestra, Otto Klemperer, Christa Ludwig

aching long lines
long aching lines
long lines aching 

arching long lines
lines arching long
lines long arching 

forestalling cadence
no holding still ever
striving further
the world looks different
from each further step
gazing hopelessly
out the dark window
poems
set in lines
in a drama 

for Wagner
there was no him
without a stage
and a big one at that 

veer off on four
that keeps it both still
and moving
for as long as feasible

March 12, 2024

Willie Has Gone to the War - Stephen Foster - Gregg Smith Singers

gentle parlor music
while the armies slaughter each other

Concerto in A minor - Edvard Grieg - Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz, Bella Davidovich

this has some lovely tunes in it
and proceeds with clarity
the keyboard writing
is perhaps a bit florid
modeled on Schumann's Concerto I suppose
but without the contrapuntal workings beneath it
the melodies sure do sing though

each step in his modulations
are presented in full
it is demonstrated
that no corners were cut
no untoward leaps were made 

music composed
as a sequence of themes
to hum on your way out 

the accompanimental figures
know their lots in life
and keep to them 

the flautist played their third movement solo beautifully 

a little trumpet fanfare
announces the big tune show-stopper

Symphony in E-flat Major, Op. 10 (#3) - Antonín Dvořák - London Symphony Orchestra, Istvan Kertesz

this opens so many times
I don't know where I am anymore 

every few bars
the subject changes
a movement
of strange on-goings 

the curtain opens
a village scene
morning 

our hero desponds

the path to hope
lies through the darker tonalities

less concerned with taking all the steps to get places
than Grieg 

points to
and is
then
at 

here comes our hero
in shiny white armor
possessor of a quiet family farm
in Idylicville 

imagine if he had ever found a librettist
with as crazy an imagination
and an audience that could keep up

E-flat
of course
we get a hint of Das Rheingold 

later at the ball
candelabras and intrigue and drama
unwinds onto the dance floor
words are exchanged
and glances
and cuts 

adventure and troubles
oh the suitors!
worthy and un-

Symphony in F minor, Op. 36 (#4) - Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky - Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz [from a broadcast of May 8, 1992]

I bothered to tape this off the radio
because I thought the live performance was pretty fine
the radio-compression weakens it near fatally
its size is diminished
no room to be big
no room to be small
it all fits snugly
into the confines
of the FM signal 

no situation
is safe from exposure 

the audience is allowed their cough
before all the pizzicattos let loose 

and the sudden FF
of the fourth movement
is reduced down to the size of a closet
a pity
because the conversational fortissimo
is half the fun

Nocturne (from 2 Canons) - Ethel Smyth - Liana Serbescu

a canon is a tactic
to connect moments
between voices
as they go by
and continue
to be going by
it bumps us out of time

March 13, 2024

Russian Easter Festival Overture - Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov - Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy

the subject remains intact
and in view
even out in the street 

a folio of illustrations
ends with a full-page spread

Vexations - Eric Satie - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded live at Jack Straw Cultural Center, Seattle, May 16, 2010]

My half-hour
of what may be the Seattle premiere
I was on early on a Sunday morning 

I haven't thought about it much since then
and I don't speak French
but my recollection is
that the indication to play it 840 times
was not a clear cut instruction
but an ambiguously suggestive possibility 

"Pour se jouer 840 fois de suite ce motif, il sera bon de se préparer au préalable, et dans le plus grand silence, par des immobilités sérieuses." 

true or not
I like the idea of couching performance
instructions as open-ended possibilities
or subjunctives 

the piece itself asks questions of itself
from every angle you care to observe from 

an unaskable question
after which
we went out for breakfast
I enjoyed the project
more than I feared I would

Das Klagende Lied - Gustav Mahler - Concertgebouworkest, Amsterdam; Bernard Haitink; Heather Harper; Norma Procter; Werner Hollweg; Netherlands Radio Chorus; Meindert Boekel

song cycle
embedded in a symphony
or in an oratorio
or all three
at once 

the song has little purchase
on the other parts of this music
in danger
of slipping off
into who knows what strange realm
we
are trapped in this music
as are those
who must be the characters
in the unfolding tale 

companion piece to Gurrelieder
another monstrosity  

the difficulty lies
in the fact
that
I have no plausibly appropriate category
for what this is
or might have been meant to be
and keep trying to make one thing
or another
out of it
but
it doesn't go like any of those things
really
it's a wholly unique mess 

I am forced to hope
that was the intent

March 14, 2024

Poeme tragique, Op. 34 - Alexander Scriabin - Michael Ponti

a moment of turning
a flash scene
a glance

Passacaglia, Op. 1 - Anton Webern - Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, Hans Swarowsky

Webern
as the ecstatic voluptuarian
digging into the heart of chromatic polyphony
wielding a scourge

Brouillards - Claude Debussy - Paul Jacobs

what might have been a melody
enters
atop the burbling
but only a few notes
outline
where it would have been

Poem for Flute and Orchestra - Charles Griffes - Eastman-Rochester Orchestra, Howard Hanson

what is poem about it?
high-toned literate voice
speaking in formal measures 

who knows
perhaps there is a particular poem as its model 

to transport us
to a mind
like that of poetry's

Farewell Blues - Isham Jones [from That Devilin' Tune]

staggering home
arms across shoulder
keeping everybody
in a loose jointed
vertical position 

we all sing
everybody's songs at once

Every Day of the Week Blues - Pink Anderson, Simmmie Dooley [from Really The Blues]

rather than have the guitar
provide the other
of the dialog
there is
another singer
in that function

Suite for Clarinet and Bassoon - Johanna Beyer - Jackie Glazier, Marissa Olegario

simultaneous lectures
come together at the hinges
or chokepoints
squeezing through the same moment
to continue on their independent journeys

Jim Jam Stomp - Joe Marsala [from That Devilin Tune]

almost
if not a quite
be-bop up-tempo and attitude
hot jazz
not the other kind

Divertimento for Small Orchestra (after Couperin) - Richard Strauss - New York Chamber Symphony, Gerard Schwarz

there was an urge
to enlarge
and re-color
the intimate musics
of earlier centuries 

is it just a desire
to share this music
with a larger audience
(amplification)?

or was there a discomfort
with its intimacy? 

or
simply
a performance
on the instrument of Strauss's
personal virtuosity
with extemporaneities unfolding 

an old man's diversion
while waiting out the war 

the last surviving denizen
of turn-of-the-century
German music culture
playing
with old French court music culture

Milk'em in the Morning Blues - Tennessee Ernie Ford [from Turn Me Loose White Man]

topical social music
for rural America
but
it probably isn't actually about dairy life
as such
I suspect innuendo
wink wink

Concerto pour Harp, Op. 323 - Darius Milhaud - Orchestre de L'opera de Lyon, Kent Nagano, Frederique Cambreling

calling on the rhetoric of a culture
can call unexpected accoutrements
here
calling on the Satie-esque
brings Satie's crowd with him
and his scent 

neo-classicism
begins to feed on itself

music as a place to be
a company to keep
rather than
a drama to undergo
or an ordeal to endure 

genteel social
effervescent
movement two bubblies 

and if neo-classical
is a music
in consideration of another music
then
what happens
when the music doing the considering
is the music under consideration?
surely strange toadstools
will appear
another life form
gets in on the action
of rot
and decay
then back to chipper chipper
back to life in business
rebuilding itself
four movements
four seasons
a time for each
no histrionics here
we are French
we'll tie it into a decorative knot
and we're done

Run Rudolph, Run - Chuck Berry [from The Best of Chuck Berry]

a careful poet
who restricted his forms
to a tight circle of rhythms 

cry sleep drink and wet
whizzin' like a saber jet

That's The Way Love Is - Bobby Bland [a Rescued Record]

with vintage surface noise
back when things were recorded all at once
everybody in the same room
where folks could hear each other 

dipthwhip

Lingua II: Maledetto - Kenneth Gaburo - Alan Johnson, Elinor Barron, Bruce Leibig, Sherry Dorn, Bonnie Mara Barnett, Robert MacDougall, Bruce Rittenbach

a new thought is heard from
out of left coast 

the turning of the screw 

everlasting wriggler
the Nile Delta
was irrigated by an endless 

what
||: meaning what? to what end? :|| 

acting on the short end of a lever
arousing my scent pouch to a fury
in canon 

the paleotecnical phase
horse-driven
Archimedean muggymuddled
the unified thread standard 

breathe-in
ex-spire 

a new screw is announced
obsolete screw warehouses
a dedicated man
not just the facts
but the sludge around them

all memorable

In Session at The Tintinabulary

March 10, 2024

Madrid - Keith Eisenbrey

March 11, 2024

Banned Rehearsal 1096 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Aaron Keyt

March 12, 2024

Was mein Gott will, das gscheh allzeit - Aaron Keyt

Von Gott will ich nicht lassen - Aaron Keyt

Postscripts

Drops

Keith Eisenbrey 15: 2014

Early 2014 found me completing the first part of Études d'exécution imminent - the project that would keep me busy into 2021. Another was written for Ben Boretz, in celebration of his 80th. J was composed while thinking about the late J. K. Randall. The six movements of Another are Sphinxes, Scarabs, Pools, Potions (first batch), Potions (second batch), and Smoke, which movements can intermingle in performance and sometimes do, and so I include here three quite different versions for your enjoyment - two on clavichord and one live version on piano.

J and the second version of Another were recorded live at The Chapel Performance Space, The Good Shepherd Center, Seattle, in 2016; the other tracks were recorded at my home in 2015.

Prior volumes are available at keitheisenbrey.bandcamp.com

All are free for download.

Skaldmud's Doodle Gallery

listening journal doodles from 2021