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Bruce
Arnold-CD Reviews
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| Music of Webern |
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"Spooky Actions (John Gunther, flt, ts, cl; Bruce Arnold, g; Peter Herbert, b; Tony Moreno, d, perc) certainly isn't shy about setting themselves a challenge. On Music of Webern (Muse Eek 117), they dive right into the great composer's works (5 Movements for String Quartet (Opus 5)/ Five Canons. 26:57. No recording information given) to deliver a brief, slightly funked-up tour through two major Anton Webern compositions - "Five Movements for String Quartet" (Opus 5) and "5 Canons" - each of which is subdivided and interspersed with multiple improvised sections. Adapting music of this complexity, written for ensembles of highly different instrumentation, is not the easiest thing in the world to do. Luckily, these players (each of whom plays an equally important role here; there's no lead/support hierarchy) are up to task, capable not only of rendering the extremely exacting 12-tone scores but in contributing fine improvised passages which do not seem inconsistent with the compositions. As with the sources, the music here moves very quickly and is sometimes overloaded with information. There is a good range of texture and instrumental techniques - Gunther's flute and clarinet in particular blend well with Arnold's processed guitar and Herberts arco, while Moreno's drums are somewhat more conventional (he creates many excellent contrasting sections by restricting himself to this approach, cutting across the music or framing it in interesting ways). Unlike many projects with similar ambitions (though there are few brave enough to tackle Webern, Dave Douglas being the only other player who springs to mind), they navigate the transition between score and improvisation adroitly. A Fascinating experiment."
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"Whether you'll like Spooky Actions' Music of Webern depends greatly on whether you like Webern, so let's start there. Even before he converted to the serialism of his teacher Arnold Schoenberg, Anton Webern had taken eagerly to atonal composition. Webern wrote compressed pieces in which single notes stand out from thin textures and achieve great intensity, helped by an exacting approach to timbre. Webern never supplies an obvious logic to connect those single notes; listeners feel the gaps and build their own bridges. Listening to Webern is something like reading surrealist poetry: suggestive, enigmatic and often fascinating.
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"This is the debut album of a New York ensemble, named Spooky Actions, that features the work of Anton Webern, an early twentieth century composer of serialist, or atonal, music. Webern's work became prevailing and influential for its classical compositions in the 1950s and 1960s with his brief, evanescent works. Linked to Arnold Schoenberg and Alban Berg, Webern was the most radical of this modernist Viennese school of composers in that he strove for utmost purity and economy in the articulation of musical thought. Accordingly, Webern's music requires strict discipline to play its angular and difficult pieces. This also means that it is an intense, intellectual experience for the listener.
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"Guitarist Bruce ... has plumbed the goldfish bowl of Anton Weberns tiny works and found pearls."
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"Arranged by
guitarist Bruce Arnold, these ten compositions (and nine improvisations
derived from
them) present an intriguing and very original "jazz" take on the music of serialist composer Anton Webern. It may
not
swing, but it does mean something--and Arnold's inventive, processed
guitar
tones propel this Downtown New York improv meets European classical into
the
interest zone."
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"It's always a pleasure to receive CDs from totally unknown labels and even more unknown artists. Will it be a big surprise, something completely new and overwhelming, yes or no? On such moments, depending on the quality of the music, I often realize how many good musicians are around all over the world, and I feel dissatisfied because I'lI never be able to know and appreciate them all. This happened when two CD's from the label Muse Eek fell on the doormat, one by Spooky Actions, another by the duo Arnold and Keir Ourio. Let me reveal first a little from the background of the musicians involved here. Spooky Actions is a quartet: John Gunter (flute, saxophone, clarinet), Bruce Arnold (processed electric guitar), Peter Herbert (bass) and Tony Moreno (drums, percussion). They did their best in interpreting two compositions of Anton Webern, "5 Movements for string quartet opus 5" and "5 Canons". They play each movement and canon first note by note, followed by a compact improvisation inspired on it.
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"Spooky Actions is the name of an American jazz band, whose unique musical mixture is an added attraction to the Copenhagen Jazz festival's website, where it can be heard.
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