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Sunday, 27 September 2020
Hong Chulki + Aaron Dilloway
Aaron Dilloway & C. Lavender - Secret Destroyed Instantly
Thursday, 24 September 2020
Duke Ellington - The Blanton-Webster Band
"Duke Ellington, I like to argue, ranks as America’s greatest all-around musician—composer, arranger, bandleader, accompanist, soloist and musical thinker. Who else did it all with such sit-up-and-notice style, originality and longevity?
"He and his band reached a new peak of musical expression when a refreshed roster first headed into the studio 80 years ago this week. Their recordings from 1940 to 1942, dubbed their 'Blanton-Webster' iteration, created one of the high points of American music.
"In 1940, Ellington began what some regard as his premier period. He had recently hired Jimmie Blanton, a 21-year-old who would revolutionize jazz bass playing, and Ben Webster, who brought the tenor saxophone to new prominence in the ensemble. They both sparked the Ellington Orchestra. 'Every time there was an addition to the band,' baritone saxophonist Harry Carney told jazz writer Stanley Dance, 'the new instrumentalist seemed to give Duke new ideas and something to draw from and add in his writing.'
"Another recent hire, arranger and composer Billy Strayhorn, began his ascent to becoming Ellington’s indispensable musical partner and an invaluable composer in his own right.
"The Ellington band with Blanton and Webster made its first recording on Feb. 14, 1940, but it took a few weeks to hit its stride. In March, Ellington began recording for RCA Victor, whose engineers captured the Ellington sound with resounding richness, fidelity and balance. Remarkably, the label allowed Ellington to choose most of his repertory.
"At its first recording session for Victor, the band laid down 'Jack the Bear,' a showcase for Blanton, who gave his instrument an expanded role and an outsize tone. A well-disguised 12-bar minor-key blues with an exotic, almost unearthly quality, 'Ko-Ko' fascinates with its drama, from its opening tom-toms to its final crescendo, each chorus building in intensity.
"In 'Concerto for Cootie,' Ellington, a master of contrast, provides bravura trumpeter Cootie Williams with three unlike themes for muted, open and growling trumpet, alternately poignant, sweet, bluesy, sorrowful and exultant.
"Alto saxophonist Johnny Hodges, unmatched as a player of warm, lyric, romantic melody, renders 'Warm Valley' ravishingly. Webster’s inspired solo on 'Cotton Tail' became one of his most famous and enduring. In that recording, Ellington opened a window to the future, laying the foundation for what would soon become known as bebop.
"First recorded in 1941, 'Take the 'A' Train,' a feature for trumpeter Ray Nance, marked Strayhorn’s breakthrough as a composer. After this compelling dance number became a big hit, Ellington adopted it as his orchestra’s signature tune.
"What accounted for the luminosity of this period?
"Ellington was seasoned, and so were nearly all of his players—some of the best in the world—with an average tenure of 10 years with him. Blanton and Webster brought increased rhythmic drive and instrumental virtuosity. Strayhorn introduced new harmonic choices. Ellington was energized by signing new management and booking, and by moving in with a beautiful new woman. And the band was invigorated by a recent concert tour of Europe. Cornetist Rex Stewart recalled in his autobiography, 'Boy Meets Horn,' that 'the band started hitting on all cylinders like a wonderful musical juggernaut.'
"During this time and throughout his career, Ellington, unlike most of his contemporaries, wrote most of the music played by his orchestra and composed exclusively for it. He was the supreme creator of music for that essential American institution, the jazz orchestra or big band. Developing his own harmonic language and tone colors, he was a wizard of experiment.
"'A musician’s sound is his soul, his total personality,' Ellington told Nat Hentoff. 'I hear that sound as I prepare to write.' Ellington composed not for the instrument, but for the man and soul behind the instrument. Not for first or second trumpet, but for Cootie Williams or Ray Nance, to tap the gifts of each. When Ellington hired a new musician, he’d quickly learn his strengths and weaknesses, and write to bring out his very best. He alchemized his players’ musical and emotional personalities into a unique new sound, which Strayhorn called 'the Ellington Effect.' Rarely if ever had anyone assembled 15 musicians with such singular soundprints and transformed them into a distinguished e pluribus unum.
"Webster and colleagues deeply admired Ellington, who led an ingenious instance of what the business writer Warren Bennis termed a 'great group'—one in which the leader helps the members find greatness in themselves. In Ellington’s case, the inspiration worked both ways—he inspired his players, and they inspired him. It’s a lesson for leaders in all fields.
Werewolf Jerusalem - The Nightmares
Tuesday, 22 September 2020
A Walk with Ivor Gurney
"With his experience at Gloucester, and later associations with Westminster and Salisbury Cathedrals and St. John's College, Cambridge, Howells would go on to write many works for choir and organ. In early 1941, during the Second World War, he composed a set of six anthems 'in time of war,' five of which were written on successive days. 'Like as the Hart' was composed in a single sitting on 8 January. Written in London, with air-raids a constant threat, whilst many men were engaged in fighting, and many were lost, the questioning cry of 'where is now thy God?' must have been close to the lips of many.
"Gurney wrote very little church music, and little of what he did write has survived. His motet for double choir, 'Since I believe in God the Father Almighty,' was written in June 1925, a couple of years before Gurney stopped composing. It is a deeply personal work that seems to look back to Gloucester Cathedral, with extended pauses written into the piece that allow the great acoustic of that building to sing fully. The reasons for Gurney's attraction to Robert Bridges's poem are obvious. It speaks of an ambivalent relationship with God. The speaker undoubtedly believes in God, but neither he nor anyone else can know or understand him, particularly as one who had 'crie[d] angrily out on God' in poems of the First World War and in his later life. Also, throughout his life, Gurney remained true in his pursuit of beauty. It could have been of Gurney that Bridges wrote of he 'whose spirit within [him...] loveth beauty'. In the final stanza, while the speaker is cherishing the freedom of belief, Gurney, in his 'hours of anguish and darkness', may have been cherishing an idea of a freedom both spiritual and physical; freedom from the mental hospital in which he spent the last fifteen years of his life, where he eventually resigned himself to his hopeless abandonment.
"In his freedom, Gurney was an inveterate walker. He perhaps knew Gloucestershire more intimately than any other in his day. He walked endlessly the county's meadows and hills, across the Severn plain westwards to May Hill, north towards Elgar's Malvern hills, and east into the Cotswolds. He walked with friends, talking of music and poetry, and alone, often reading, declaiming Shakespeare to unsuspecting cattle, and pausing to write ideas in his notebook. Gurney's connection with Gloucestershire, however, was not merely circumstantial or aesthetic. As Thomas Hardy observes in his novel 'The Woodlanders,' one who truly inhabits a place knows 'those invisible ones of days gone by': they know 'whose feet have traversed the fields,' 'whose hands planted the trees,' and the 'domestic dramas' that have been enacted in that place. In his late poem 'Gloucester Song,' Gurney writes, 'I walk the land my fathers knew, wide to distants blue / And summon all the tales unseen, the good earth lets them through.' Memory is an inherent part of his landscape, summoning up the Elizabethans, Danes and Romans. He felt that connection with the past in his veins also: upon seeing a Roman brooch, discovered in a field, he declared, 'how the centuries in my blood shouted and woke!'
"Part of Gurney's attraction to the Roman presence in Gloucestershire may have arisen from a shared experience of war in a foreign territory. Gurney's studies at the Royal College of Music were interrupted in 1915 by his volunteering for active service in the First World War. Whilst serving with the 2/5 Gloucestershire Battalion near Arras in June 1917, Gurney began a song setting of a poem by A.E. Housman, 'On Wenlock Edge,' which tells how little the human condition has changed: each generation must weather the storms of their age; 'Then 'twas the Roman, now 'tis I.' When writing 'A Walk with Ivor Gurney,' commissioned by Tenebrae in 2013, Judith Bingham identified something of that common circumstance: 'The Romans were foreign invaders here, and we don't feel the same sympathy for them as we do for the men in the trenches. And yet, on the tomb memorials found in Gloucestershire, one gets a sense of men stranded far from home, and of the gulf of time between them and us.' In 'A Walk with Ivor Gurney,' Bingham sets passages from several Gurney poems and intersperses them with inscriptions from some of those Roman memorials, evok[ing] the sense Gurney had of time and people of the past residing in the landscape. The mezzo-soprano solo is 'the spirit of that landscape,' while the male voices of the choir, always 'off-stage,' sing Roman tomb memorials of soldiers long dead.'
"With the coming of the war, the Royal College of Music — as other institutions — emptied of many of its students as they volunteered for active service. Hubert Parry, the director of the college, worried greatly for his students, and felt any losses very deeply. He tried, unsuccessfully, to dissuade Vaughan Williams from volunteering; and in April 1917 he wrote to Howells, 'Gurney's case I feel to be quite a special martyrdom. His mind is so full of thoughts and feelings far removed from crude barbarities that it seems almost monstrous. But war is monstrous and we have to take it as far as we can from the collective point of view.'
"It was only whilst serving in France that Gurney began to write poetry in earnest, serving his apprenticeship in the trenches and behind the lines. It was more difficult to write music, but he did compose a handful of songs. Amongst these, In Flanders — a setting of a poem by his boyhood friend Will Harvey — is an expression of homesickness, composed in January 1917. By a Bierside sets a poem that first appeared within John Masefield's play, 'The Tragedy of Pompey the Great' (1910), where it is spoken by four centurions, lamenting the death of a young Roman soldier. It was written in August 1916, whilst lying on a damp sandbag in a disused trench mortar emplacement. Gurney wrote at some length on the song, which begins as 'a rhapsody on beauty, full of grief but not bitter, until the unreason of death closes the thought of loveliness, that Death unmakes. Then the heart grows bitter with the weight of grief and revelation of the impermanence of things [...] But, anger being futile, the mind turns to the old strangeness of the soul's wandering apart from the body, and to what tremendous mysteries! And the dimly apprehended sense of such before us all overpowers the singer, who is lost in the glory of the adventure of Death.' In another letter, he wrote that he imagined 'some poet-priest pronouncing an oration over the dead body of some young Greek hero.' This description, and that of the soul 'wandering apart from the body', recall Elgar's 'Dream of Gerontius,' and particularly the Priest's parting declamation over the dying Gerontius — 'Proficiscere, anima Christiana' — which is echoed musically in Gurney's declamatory setting of the words 'It is most grand to die!' Both In Flanders and By a Bierside were orchestrated by Howells at the behest of Sir Charles Stanford, for performance at the Royal College of Music.
"In 1901, Ralph Vaughan Williams had begun making sketches for an opera based on Matthew Arnold's poem 'The Scholar Gypsy.' Over four decades later, when he returned to the idea in 1947, it became not an opera but a melodrama, for narrator, chorus and orchestra: 'An Oxford Elegy.' Adapted from two poems by Arnold, 'The Scholar Gypsy' and 'Thyrsis,' it recounts the story of a disillusioned Oxford scholar who, two centuries earlier, went to live with the gypsies, to discover their arts before returning to relate them to the world. Two centuries on, the scholar is still glimpsed in the countryside, wandering, still seeking the truth that he set out to find, and while the lonely elm tree still stands on the top of Ilsley Downs he shall wander yet. Vaughan Williams presents us with a rich, Samuel Palmer-like vision of an England-Eden; a vivid depiction of a midsummer idyll that is more a state of mind than a reality — perhaps the idyll where lies the wisdom that the Scholar was hoping to find in his wanderings; that he still seeks.
"Vaughan Williams's biographer, Michael Kennedy, has suggested that 'An Oxford Elegy' recalls and pays tribute to those friends who were lost in the wars, including Gurney, who survived the war but was effectively lost to the world a few years afterwards when he was committed. In the closing stanzas of the Elegy the speaker tells how 'thou art gone, and me thou leavest here / Sole in these fields,' and says of their shared journey and aspirations, 'the light we sought is shining still.' This pastoral invocation of the Elegy is something that Gurney would have related to, in both his poetry (particularly that poetry influenced by Edward Thomas) and his music. For Gurney, music — like his sense of the past — 'clung to,' and was 'exhaled' by, the landscape, while poetry 'fill[ed] up spaces in landscape and life with human interest and memory.' Gurney's 'Gloucestershire Rhapsody for orchestra' (1919-21) depicts a similarly enchanted pastoral idyll, wandering the landscape and seeking its truth, imbued also with that keen sense of the former inhabitants of that place.
"Vaughan Williams was fascinated by the idea of the wanderer and the 'journey' in his work, in pieces such as 'Songs of Travel' and 'A Sea Symphony.' In 1949 another project that had been in gestation for four decades was finally completed: an opera based on John Bunyan's 1678 allegory, 'The Pilgrim's Progress.' His association with this book began in 1906, when he was invited to provide incidental music for some scenes adapted from 'The Pilgrim's Progress,' to be staged at Reigate Priory. In this incidental music, a certain melody by Thomas Tallis was used as the basis for a movement for strings, which accompanied a tableau in which Christian arrives at, and passes through the wicket gate at the start of his journey. A few years later, this portion of the score was removed and developed into the 'Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis.' Between the writing of the incidental music in 1906 and the completion of the opera in 1949, there were further 'Pilgrim' works, including a one act 'pastoral episode' (1922) and 'music for a radio production' (1943). In 1941 he composed 'Valiant for Truth': a choral setting of a passage that tells of the passing of Mr. Valiant-for-Truth 'from this world, to that which is to come', crossing the river of death and being welcomed into the Celestial City.
"The programme concludes with Vaughan Williams's 1921 setting of psalm 90, combining both the original psalm and a metrical version by Isaac Watts, 'O God our help in ages past', sung to the hymn tune St. Anne. Whether in Roman times or the present, on the journey of life, even in the face of war or incarceration, faith has been a refuge; a source of strength and hope." (Philip Lancaster. From the liner notes.)