Saturday, November 9, 2024

Playlist

Preface

"Gunpowder Plot.

     'Tis good to remember
     The Fifth of November
Gunpowder, treason, and plot;
     There's abundance of reason
     To think of the treason,
Then why should it e'er be forgot?

     Our sympathies thrive
     By keeping alive
Such sweet little hatreds as these;
     And folks love each other
     As dear as a brother,
Whose throat they are ready to squeeze.

     I delight in the joys
     Of the vagabond boys
When they're burning Guy Vaux and the Pope;
     It the flame keeps alive,
     It makes bigotry thrive,
And gives it abundance of scope.

     'Tis a beautiful truth
      For the minds of our youth,
And will make 'em all Christians indeed;
      For the Church and the State
     Thus to teach 'em to hate
All those of a different creed.

     It is two hundred years
     Since our ancestors' fears
Were arous'd by this blood-thirsty fox;
     But often, since then,
     Our parliament men
Have been awfully blown up by Vaux.

     Now, they cannot deny
     They're afraid of their Guy;
And some of them earnestly hope,
     He may fancy a swing
     At the end of a string;
And they promise him plenty of rope."

from The Comic Almanack
an Ephemeris in Jest and Earnest, Containing Merry Tales, Humorous Poetry, Quips and Oddities, First Series, 1835-1843

Texts

Recorded

November 2, 2024

33 Variations on a Waltz by Diabelli, Op. 120 - Ludwig van Beethoven - Artur Schnabel

internal motions
come to life
right away
in the first variation 

notes
stack themselves slant
extend themselves
out
over chasms
perilous weight shifts 

what seems restful
is rattled off its foundation
forcing them
to fit 

regularity
regularly
gone astray 

pulling attention
down
into intimate spaces
voices
slip from alignment
as the ear
picks up
on a repetition in progress
the least aberration
activates
a new trajectory

November 3, 2024

6 Moments Musicaux: Allegro Vivace in F minor, Op. 94 #5 - Franz Schubert - Alfred Brendel

don't hurry to get on
but
once on
don't look back

6 Concert Studies on Caprices by Paganini: Vivace in G minor,  Op. 10 #3 - Robert Schumann - Florian Uhlig

does this make more
or less
sense
if
one can track the barlines
or
sense
is not something
that music can make? 

music rhymes
it does not reason
any reasons
music has
are rhymic
reasons

Mazurka in C Major, Op. 33 #3 - Frédéric Chopin - Vladimir Ashkenazy

a firm grip on propriety
clever remarks
crack open a window

Via Crucis: Station XII - Jesus stirbt am Kreuze - Franz Liszt - Nederlands Kamerkoor, Reinbert De Leeuw

hollowed out monophony
descending
into hollowed out sorrow
hollowed out comfort
in moments of sublimity
try singing chorales

Der Gärtner - Hugo Wolf - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Daniel Barenboim

does goosing the characterization
help the song?

Das Orgel-Büchlein, BV B 27: No. 9, in dir ist Freude (After J. S. Bach's BWV 615) - Ferruccio Busoni - Wolf Harden

imitative polyphony
resounds the chorale's parts

Etude in D-flat Major, Op. 42 #1 - Alexander Scriabin - Ruth Laredo

a being
of butterflies
and blooms

Preludes Book II: No.4, Les fees sont d'exquises danseuses - Claude Debussy - Walter Gieseking

cryptid exoticism

MacGaine's Kick - Percy Grainger - Percy Grainger [from Percy Grainger plays Percy Grainger]

my thoughts gravitate
toward the economic position
of this music
within its society

Pássaros Em Feste - Ernesto Nazareth - Marcelo Bratke

settles
for the adequate arrangement

Wayward Girl Blues - Lottie Kimbrough [from Really The Blues]

blues strophes
aim
to their rhetorical ends

Quatre Romances Sans Paroles, Romance I: Op. 129, #1 - Darius Milhaud - François Choveaux

how is this different from Nazareth?
it isn't an acceptably able arrangement
that gets out of the way
all the lines work together
to shape each other

Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man - Billie Holiday (with Teddy Wilson and His Orchestra) [from Lady Day: The Complete Billie Holiday on Columbia]

this music settles never
I note
that she clearly sings
"that"
not "dat"

Four Transcriptions from Emerson (mid 1930's): No. 1  (beg.) - Charles Ives [from Charles Ives plays Charles Ives]

murky harmonies
hidden under a blanket

Looking for a Woman - Roy Brown [from Turn Me Loose White Man]

the technology of sound recording
took a giant leap
during the war
(sonar research effort?)

Love My Baby - Little Junior's Blue Flames [from Sun Records Definitive Hits]

a lick
that is mum
about its beat
is shown
to fit in
quite nicely
become ordinary

There's a Moon Out Tonight - The Capris [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

life's all right
no blues here

I Saw Her Standing There - The Beatles [from Please Please Me]

I like the guitar solo

November 4, 2024

The Echoing Green (William Blake) - Allen Ginsberg [from Holy Soul, Jelly Roll]

exaggerated enunciation

Quadrant 4 - Billy Cobham [from Spectrum]

playing together
wicked fast
signifies
hypercompetence
as a display feature
male bonding

Everything Must Change - Nina Simone [from Baltimore]

long lines
articulate
opposing forces
and
their resultant energy states

Place For Us - Kool & The Gang [a Rescued Record]

cliché
pop anthem

November 5, 2024

Playalong 2 - Aaron Keyt [January 17, 1988]

the room this sound is in
is also host
to a more global
external
low hum
possibly
the heating unit
for the building 

such a constant sound
acts
as a surface
for the percussion to be played upon 

tip tap
crickle crickle
hum 

sing a song
in the playalong

utterance
exitrance

Concerto in G minor, BWV 1056 - Johann Sebastian Bach - Itzhak Perlman [from The Art of Itzhak Perlman]

a display concerto
is a display of prowess
wealth 

what lovely instruments
we afford for ourselves
life's finer things
for refined natures
be impressed
and suitably so

Banned Rehearsal 488 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Anna K, Aaron Keyt, Neal Kosály-Meyer [March 12, 1998]

we open
with something like
what might have become a beat
had we all
not drifted off
into our own tempo corners 

don't let steadiness fool you
drums
signify
the anchor
firm
but
the line
has gone lax 

else where 

household of sounds
lives here 

where else? 

the steady needling
of the small drum 

apply pressure
I confess
to academic credentials
with my full name
but without basis 

occluded lines
in turns dialogical
we drift slumberward
winking across
wavering back

{journal entry of March 14, 2006:

a throwback
sort of
lots of talking}

Toccata and Fugue - Michael Nicolella - Michael Nicolella [from Shard]

touch of tocattas
the art
of distinctions of weights
through the hand

Zither Film 7 - Keith Eisenbrey [January 19, 2008]

temporary continuities
appear
some quite persistent
they are missed
where they would have been
had they not ceased to persist
all at once

I made this file
with a purpose in mind for it
but
that was my purpose
not its

Nocturne - Craig Pepples - Yuji Takahashi [from Open Space 53]

a linked chain
links made apparent
a figure
in a pulse
has a first token
unique
in being
without predecessor
and
a last token
unique
in not going on
to a further token

Puppet Pieces - Kam Morrill - Keith Eisenbrey [recorded live  at the Chapel Performance Space, Good Shepherd Center, Seattle, February 24, 2018]

open unassumingly
without splash or flash

Loops from the Crypts of Chaos, Slow Speed Backwards Version - Pete Comley [from Paintronics 3]

should a music
not build itself
from its sounds' internal urgencies
upon what basis
then
do we assess its utterance? 

sounds
become stated facts
inarguable
and opaque
a storage room
of sounds
in piles
on shelves
ready for use

November 6, 2024

L'Incoronazaione di Poppea, Prologue and Act 1 - Claudio Monteverdi - Orfeo Orchestra, Sergio Vartolo

we make use of Gods
as a literary device
to personify
the impulses of drama
later
we would make them
all too human
as yet another literary device
we make use of royalty
as a literary device
to act
as puppets
of us
out there
where we can see them
and voice their thoughts 

the music
is a mechanism of a literary conceit
a drossless societal self portrait
we write ourselves large

the singing style in use
is actorly 0

low buzzies!
how lovely! 

harpsichord turns the pages
traces the lines
the orchestra
is the body
of the readers of the work 

costumed placards
the masks
from beneath which
the text emerges

Geistliche Chor-Music, Op. 11, SWV 369-397 (1648), Volume 2: XXI. Ich bin ein rechter Weinstock - Heinrich Schütz - Capella Augustana

a text
is proliferated
into architectures

Canzonetta in G Major, BuxWV 171 - Dieterich Buxtehude - Simone Stella

oh
you thought that was it did you?
we have one more for you

Cinquieme Ordre (la): L'Angelique. Rondeau. D'une legerete moderee - François Couperin - Kenneth Gilbert

flawless service

Keyboard Sonata in B-flat Major, Kk. 248 - Domenico Scarlatti - Pieter-Jan Belder

music
as an arcane skill

Keyboard Sonata in A Major, Wq. 65/37 - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach - Miklós Spányi

takes an appraising tour of the stage
gets to know his props
we are mid scene
before we have been aware
now it's time to clear the dishes for the evening

Keyboard Sonata in F Major, Hob. XVI:23 - Franz Joseph Haydn - Christine Schornsheim

improvisatory display of courtesy
competitive flattery

November 7, 2024

Sonata in A Major, K. 331 - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Peter Katin

1
gently played
a lullaby
as with
one might lull someone
to sleep
or ignorance
is a magic incantation

a lullaby
has been applied
and it has been lulled
also
the state of having been lulled
a lullaby
in the storm 

a day of play
presented
as a set of variations
on a lullaby 

2
and now
for a balancing act
with jugglers
and sad clowns
and droll clowns
and mustachio twirling clowns 

3
and then
of course
the foreign dance troupe
Wolfgang's Amazing Three Ring Circus
entertainment for all

Six melodies pour le piano, Op. 4 & Op. 5: VI. Andante Soave - Fanny Hensel - Béatrice Rauchs

pulls a melody out
from a slowly simmering figuration
it drops back into the pot

Whistling Rufus - Olly Oakley [from Turn Me Loose White Man]

this cook
uses saltier language
homespun garmentry

Le Sacre du printemps - Igor Stravinsky - London Symphony Orchestra, Bernard Haitink

nothing about how this music gathers itself together
is unextraordinary
quick cuts (cinematic)
multiple screens
multiply overlapped
nothing solid enough
to balance with 
I wonder
if the original choreography
was as utterly new? 

pattern play
of inner voices 

the timpani player(s) in this recording is(are) excellent!

String Quartet 2 - Zoltán Kodály - Kodály Quartet

the exotic
has begun to think about our language
in relation to its own tongue
but
in our language
of which language (our)

they
are also
of
its our
our our
too
in point of fact

something new
haunts the old mansions 

inhabitation  is encouraged
decoration beyhond utility
is discouraged 

have you ever studied your own handwriting?
what is it like?
how do you make your marks? 

I enjoy js and gs
I fill in gaps later
my i dotting
is irregular
t crossings
are rarely missing
ks rarely appear
connected to the next letter
though
sometimes
from the prior 

fs and zs
are also crossed regularly 

in general
I'm better about crossing
than I am
about dotting 

ns are a problem
ms and ws
cause me to lose count
of bumps 

vowel concatenation 
run together 

hs
ds
ps

Piano Sonata - Ruth Crawford Seeger - Jenny Lin

skeletal Scriabin
a ghostly
ghastly tale
dusty corners
in dimly cavernous halls
gloomy
with dark frames
of obscured figures 

rs and ns
are difficult to distinguish
sometimes
they are elided 

the forms
of es
are dependent
upon their surroundings 

ss are not joiners

I Must Have That Man - Annette Hanshaw [from Really The Blues]

the art of discussing troubles in public

Firebird - Spike Hughes [from That Devilin' Tune]

do such things as night clubs
with house orchestras
and dancing
exist anywhere
anymore?

Bachiana Brasileiras No. 3: Aria - Heitor Villa-Lobos - New York Chamber Symphony - Gerard Schwarz - Robert Bonfiglio

my notion
of what Villa-Lobos is
to me
as a composer
is colored
by the fact
of interactions I had
decades ago
on CompuServe
with a conductor
who rather belligerently maintained
that Villa-Lobos
was a superior composer
to such as might pen dissonant music
and
that this was proved
by the superior number of pages
in his New York Times Obituary
in comparison with those other dead guys' obituarious page counts

Tess' Torch Song - Ella Mae Morse [from That Devilin' Tune]

or
was the nightclub scene
a creature of Hollywood?
modern stand-in
for the fancy dress ball

Symphony #4 - David Diamond - Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz

orchestral music
of mid 20th Century Symphony patron acceptability
required
that all musical material
be made
quite plain to hear
wherever it appears
radical transformation
is frowned upon
these
are my tunes
they permeate everything
and won't go away
nor transmigrate
they keep on
being here
as
they are all there is 

a homogeneity to it
like unto that of Hovhannes 

these rhythms
are Exciting®
by definition

{journal entry of February 21, 2006:

settling into a warm bath
we are unsettled
to realize
it
is
an unending mirror image
of a warm bath
and
that
all these mirrored baths
are poured out
ecstatically
into a richly jeweled
and embroidered cave
of mirrored
warm baths 

sternly warmed
but still
a  bath 

warm once again
poured ecstatically out
in a warm kind of ecstasy
though
the lip
over which
we
are poured
is sharper
harder
moral feeling 

(now
some good old American muscle rhythms
happy worker/consumer music}

Old Grey Goose - Red Belcher & The Kentucky Ridgerun [from That Devilin' Tune]

high tail hootenanny
hokum
comic shtick

For Your Precious Love - Jerry Butler and The Impressions [collected from Dave Marsh's The Heart of Rock & Soul]

the thin line
between sincerity
and mockery

Times Five - Earle Brown

there was a fashion
for composing instrumental music
so that
it imitated
some of the odd effects
that electronic music
of the time
had come up with
so that
it would sound
suitably
up to the minute 

is it possible
to perform indeterminately derived music
indeterminately
or
is performing
exactly
the ultimate
determination
of the suggested potential? 

every score
is indeterminate
in relation
to its ultimate performances

you can put a sound
in a person's ear
but you can't make
what they hear 

the open-formness of Brown
(if that's what's at play here)
is more interesting
than the modernism of the sounds
he uses
which
from this distance
seem mostly
just
old-fashioned
as 60s as The Beatles

In Session at The Tintinabulary

November 3, 2024

Patmos - Keith Eisenbrey

Magnuson Park - Keith Eisenbrey

some froggy action in the Sunday afternoon wetlands

November 4, 2024

Banned Rehearsal 1112 - Karen Eisenbrey, Keith Eisenbrey, Aaron Keyt

Postscripts

Drops

recordings of my compositions (and more!) can be found at keitheisenbrey.bandcamp.com - free to download or stream

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