Feb
28
2010
0

Yehudi Wyner on the Creative Act

Chris Lydon’s interview this week on Radio Open Source is with composer Yehudi Wyner. It’s a fascinating hour spent with an American “classical” composer  – he spends time discussing his influences, the way he approaches composition  and deconstructs some of his works on the piano.


Image: Boston Globe

As with many 20th century American composers, Wyner is open to the influence of “popular” forms on his work – particularly gospel and jazz. But as Stravinksy and Ives did with ragtime and marching band tunes, Wyner’s compositions refract these sources through his own personal tonal lens.

Wyner has been writing music since since his childhood in the 1920s, so he’s learned a thing or two about how creativity happens. I particularly liked his description of the compositional act – and the responsibility that comes with inspiration:

When you stumble on these thickets of interesting material, you’re confronted with the most terrifying task of all, which is somehow living up  to it, continuing it, recognising not only that nugget is of value, but that nugget is of no meaning unless it’s in a proper context, unless it’s really enveloped in understanding and development.”

Wyner’s insight could apply to all creative acts – writing, painting, creating a business, raising a child. Most of us only experience very short and occasional moments of true inspiration. The real work of creativity is how we put context and create flow around these small original ideas.

I commend this conversation to you – the music is wonderful, the conversations surrounding it are enlightening, and Wyner’s critique of contemporary popular music is penetrating without being bigoted.

Oct
13
2009
0

Bill Evans Plays Monk

A short musical interlude. Icelandic pianist Sunna Gunnlaugs wrote a piece today marking the recent birthday of Thelonius Monk: interesting to read the perspectives of a contemporary jazz musician on her relationship to Monk’s music.

She also found some really nice video clips to illustrate her article. I particularly liked this one – the Bill Evans Trio playing Round Midnight in Sweden in 1970. It’s rare to see acoustic jazz of this era filmed in colour, and still in such good condition. Eddie Gomez is the bass player, Marty Morell is on drums.

For an insight into Monk’s life, music and idiosyncrancies, Leslie Gourse’s biography Straight No Chaser is highly recommended.

Aug
02
2008
0

En Etat de Jazz

Nikolai Kapustin – Scherzo: Allegro Assai from Sonata No.2 Op. 54
Performed by Marc-André Hamelin
From In A State of Jazz: Hyperion [Buy]

It happens almost every birthday – my aunt gives me a CD of music I’ve never heard of and I really really like it. This year it was a new album by Canadian pianist Marc-André Hamelin, playing solo piano music written by “classical” composers who were inspired by jazz.

The music on this album is remarkable because although it is all through-composed, it sounds very spontaneous and highly idiomatic. In Russian composer Nikolai Kapustin‘s Sonata No.2 there are passages that would fit easily into a Keith Jarrett solo performance or a 78rpm by Earl Hines.

Hamelin

This disc also contains six arrangements of Charles Trenet songs by the pianist Alexis Weissenberg, originally released as anonymous 45′s in 1950, and transcribed half a century later by Hamelin for this album. The arrangements catch the humour and bawdy double entendres of songs such as Vous oubliez votre cheval and Boum!… all delivered with a lightness of touch that few jazz players could achieve.

Finally, George Antheil‘s Jazz Sonata, clocking in at just 90 seconds sounds like Spike Jones and Stravinsky holding an orgy inside a Steinway – not only hilarious but a challenge for any virtuoso. Pure Joy.

Jun
16
2008
2

Esbjörn Svensson, 1964 – 2008

Esbjörn Svensson TrioTide of Trepidation (streamed from last.fm)

Esbjorn Svensson

Swedish pianist Esbjörn Svensson died on Saturday in a diving accident, aged 44. Up until his death he led one of the greatest European jazz bands of the Internet Age, E.S.T., the Esbjörn Svensson Trio.

E.S.T. combined an ECM-style nordic aesthetic with electronics and a knack for grooving, deeply musical performances that helped make albums like Seven Years of Falling among of the most beautiful and popular jazz records of the last ten years.

Ethan Ivanson from The Bad Plus (in many ways stateside fellow-travellers of E.S.T.) offers a personal tribute. Siggidóri took a few photos at the band’s Reykjavik gig in 2007, and there are a few free mp3 tracks available at last.fm.

Written by Richard in: Europe,Music,jazz | Tags: , , , ,
May
16
2005
5

Mark de Clive-Lowe: Before the Beats

Mark de Clive-Lowe – Naisei
From Vision: Tap Records TAP004 [OOP]

Mark de Clive-Lowe – Hinde Hinde
From Manifesto Auckland Jazz Sampler: Tap Records TAPSR001 [OOP]

Half Kiwi, half Japanese, Mark de Clive-Lowe today lives in London and is a well established part of the nu-jazz/broken beat scene, working with artists such as Kaidi Tatham (Bugz in the Attic), DJ Spinna, and Sa-Ra. If you want to hear what he sounds like in 2005, his new album Tide’s Arising is well worth a listen.

But prior to establishing a reputation for killer jazz-influenced club tunes, Mr de Clive-Lowe had a previous incarnation in Auckland in the 1990s as a rather well-rounded acoustic jazz pianist, and one of the genuine movers and shakers of the musical community. Wherever Mark was, stuff happened – gigs got organised, funding got secured, record labels got started, jam sessions congealed.

Here’s some recordings from that time: Naisei with Matt Penman (b) and Nick McBride (d), displaying the influence from Keith Jarrett’s earliest trio work with Paul Motian and Charlie Haden. And then we go a little African with Hinde Hinde: the trio is joined by Phil Slater (t), Carl Dewhurst (g) and Ghanaian musicians Kojo Owusu and Nii Tettey Tetteh on percussion.

Written by Richard in: Music,New Zealand,jazz | Tags: , , , ,

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