Sep
22
2005
5

Dominion Centenary Concert Band

Today’s post is about a new musical project in Auckland – the Dominion Centenary Concert Band. The DCCB is a 7-piece ensemble of improvising musicians involved in the Vitamin S collective. (And yes, I play in it.)

DCCB’s instrumentation, stage appearance and repertoire is largely a tribute to New Zealand’s brass band tradition, and particularly the amateur community bands (Salvation Army, Women’s Temperance Union, Maori and Ratana bands) that abounded during New Zealand’s colonial period. The DCCB has specifically been established to mark the approaching centenary of New Zealand becoming a Dominion of the British Empire in 1907.

The format of DCCB performances revolves around “islands” of orchestrated composed pieces (drawn from multiple sources) connected by passages of free improvisation.

The 17 minute performance posted here was recorded at our inaugural concert, on June 16th 2005 at St Kevin’s Arcade on Karangahape Road, one of Auckland’s few remaining orginal shopping arcades. The composed fragments heard here are Hala Vuna, a traditional Tongan folk song; Ennio Morricone’s movie theme from My Name is Nobody [Update: I am reliably informed that this theme is in fact High Plains Drifter, by Dee Barton, not Morricone's spaghetti western melody] ; and Bonnisseau, a brass theme of French origin.

Dominion Centenary Concert Band – Performance #1 , June 16th 2005

The personnel on the recording are: John Bell (concert master, glockenspiel, tenor horn, whistles and percussion); Paul Winstanley (marching bass drum, percussion and guitar); Bruce Morley (drums and percussion); Jaekyung Kelly Choi (clarinet, recorder, fife, hojuk and bass clarinet); Richard Cotman (trumpet, flugelhorn, bugle and shofar); and Tim Sutton (bass trombone).

Our next gig is in Wellington on October 30th as part of the Wellington International Jazz Festival. I hope you enjoy the music, and I’d be interested in comments, whether positive, negative or bemused!

John Bell

Jul
31
2005
2

Julie Driscoll, Otis Redding and Loose Ends

One of the people talking more sense than most about “the digital music revolution” is Gerd Leonhard. His book The Future of Music is fairly well-written and offers a well- considered model of how the music biz is going work in the digital environment, and how artists, labels and multimedia conglomerates (Universal, SonyBMG etc…) can all make a living. Worth checking out…

Also worth checking out is the new Vitamin S website, the online home of improvised music in Auckland. Photos, gig guides, mailing lists and even our own theme song!

And for those who don’t know, the mp3 blog the naughahyde life is now operating under the moniker “a bigger splash“, so update your links brothers and sisters.

Julie Driscoll and the Brian Auger Trinity – Tramp
From A Kind of Love in 1967-1971: Raven RVCD189 [Buy]

Otis Redding – Tramp
From The Dock of the Bay The Definitive Collection: Atlantic 9548-31709-2 [Buy]

Julie Driscoll, definition of a retrobabe. She could sing too.

PS. Thanks to MKD for the Julie Driscoll/Brian Auger vinyl (the best dog-eared birthday present I got this year), and to Auntie Susan in the UK for the Otis Redding CD, (from many birthdays ago) which I am only now beginning to truly appreciate! Good things take time.

Oct
04
2004
0

Deep Throat


Photo: Heartonastick

Vitamin S tonight features Chirgilchin, the current champions of the Tuvan national throat singing competitions! They’re dropping in to Odeon on their way to Dunedin. This sounds unmissable.

(Update) Wow, what a joyful musical occasion. The trio was greeted by a PACKED Odeon Lounge, and performed a 30 minute set of some of the most extraordinary and perfectly conceived music I’ve ever heard. Anyone who hasn’t heard throat singing should google it and find some mp3 samples, or look up Chirgilchin on Amazon. The documentary Genghis Blues is of course at the root of popular awareness of this musical style in the West, and is well worth catching, and is a good introduction to the sound and landscape of Tuva.

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