Listening List
Lou Reed - Set the Twilight Reeling
John Luther Adams - The Light that Fills the World
Woody Allen - Wild Man Blues
David Lang - Child
Stravinsky - Capriccio for Piano and Orchestra
Nat Evans |
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On December 21st Tom Peyton and DoTank presented Tom's Bell by Bell event at Make Music Winter in New York. The video above contains music from both yours truly as well as Tom. I was very excited to write a piece of music for this ensemble, and as you can see from the video, it seems as though the event was successful from the standpoint of turnout as well as the anticipated and welcome outside sounds. This last weekend seems to have been filled with moments of happy accidents with sounds mingling...potatoes frying in a skillet creating fifths slowly inverting upwards with John Luther Adams playing on the stereo, a band saw outside creating a happy drone beneath some Friedman string quartets, and Doug Laustsen played a field recording of my piece, Lament, being performed at MMW on his radio show and noted the sounds intermingling as well. Perhaps my ears are unusually attuned to noticing such things since my Sunset + Music events over the summer encouraged such things, but whatever the case, it's been a pleasant series of sonic events as of late. To hear Lament in its entirety being played at Bell by Bell as well as a few other composers works for this event, click here.
Listening List Lou Reed - Set the Twilight Reeling John Luther Adams - The Light that Fills the World Woody Allen - Wild Man Blues David Lang - Child Stravinsky - Capriccio for Piano and Orchestra _ Last week I finished writing a short piece for another project presented by DoTank in Brooklyn - an event that will be a part of the Make Music Winter festival on December 21st. The event, Bell by Bell, is a parade - a roving hand bell choir moving through the East Village - and it engages the neighborhood not only by creating music on the street, but by inviting people to participate as well. You can read more about it here. Writing the piece was an interesting challenge because I was constrained to exactly 5 notes within one octave - so it was an opportunity to consider and utilize the human aspects of the ensemble such as what the reaction time will be like with dozens of people following commands from conductor wielding a flag, how sound might bounce around amongst the Brownstones, if people’s arms are going become tired and thus some notes lose intensity in their ringing, the manufacturing irregularities of the bells, etc. I won’t be in New York for the event, but you should go have a listen or participate if you live nearby...besides myself there is also a piece on the program by SO Percussion’s Eric Beach.
In news of the Mycological sort, a farmer at the market was selling the largest oyster mushrooms I’ve ever seen. Usually at their biggest one finds them to be silver-dollar sized, but as you can from the picture this one is around ten inches wide! Being the Mycological paradise that the NW is, it’s not unusual to see a small farm or farmer occasionally selling mushrooms beyond their normal fare that they found on their property, but this exceptional. Also exceptional is that with the way the season has worked out there are still Chanterelles popping up in the woods...not cold enough yet to deter them from growing at the lower altitudes and lots of rain but only at favorable times. Listening list 12/4 Jefferson Friedman - SQ Christopher Roberts - Last Cicada Singing Wu Tang Clan - 36 chambers of Wu Allen Ginsberg - first blues Ravel - String Quartet Shabazz Palaces -Black Up Animal Collective - Strawberry Jam At long last, the Yellow Foot Chanterelle (left) has made an appearance here in Seattle. A week ago I went mushrooming for Chanterelles - slightly unusual for this time of year - usually they're either A. giant and soggy or B. it's become too cold and they've gone to sleep for the year - but it was so incredibly dry in late summer/early fall that their season was pushed back a bit and it hasn't been too rainy yet thus far. All in all it was a good haul (see below). However, this unusual season also meant that the Yellow Foot Chanterelles weren't out yet, yet last year in early November (the very end of usual Chanterelle season) they were out in droves. But...they must be out now as the foragers at the market had a soggy basketful. Wandering in the woods causes one to reexamine listening in our daily lives - the thick moss beds covering everything creating a completely different way of not only hearing sound, but interacting and moving through it and realizing one's own participation in the creation of sound. These ideas show up in my own work all the time - mainly in abstract ways - but recently I finished a piece for men's choir and percussion ensemble for Ken Pendergrass at SPU, and the work requires the percussionists to improvise at the end of the work using a tray full of natural objects they've collected to create the sound of moving through the woods. The singers are also required to play natural objects - rustling branches to create additional textures. Listening in new contexts seems to be happening all over - when I embarked upon the Sunset + Music tour over the summer I met a number of interesting people doing similar things, among them Tom Peyton. He and his group at DoTank do listening experiments like this one quite regularly. Technology has surely changed how we listen to music and media in general; hopefully positive contributions like that will be a counterbalance to the potential for sound to become less consequential in these strange times of fear and loathing. 11/21 listening list Talking Heads - Remain in Light Open Graves with Stuart Dempster - flight patterns Smog - dress sexy at my funeral Django Reinhardt - All Star Sessions F. Couperin - Harpsichord Suites Tom Baker - Hunger Django Reinhardt - Souvenirs |
Nat Evans
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