Tuesday, 9 September 2008

Edinburgh festival classical review: Wolpe! / The Hub

Stefan Wolpe (1902-1972) was a protean, if subsidiary company, figure in the history of 20th-century music, a composer whose life and work fell into trey distinct phases, which included collaborations with the Bauhaus artists of the Weimar republic in the 1920s and the experimentalists of Black Mountain College in North Carolina 30 days later, as well as some years living in Palestine after he fled from Nazi Germany in 1934.












Wolpe's may have been a fascinatingly varied life but not, one would take reckoned, a sufficiently eventful one on which to build an evening-long theatre piece. Yet that is precisely what Muziektheater Transparant have done with Wolpe!, and it quickly becomes clear that the exclamation mark in the title is essential to inject any semblance of excitement at all into the proceedings.

Devised by the actress Viviane de Muynck and performed by her with the tenor Gunnar Brandt and pianist Johan Bossers, Wolpe! is packaged as a piece of theatre, simply the dramatic trappings are minimal, and what we get is much more like a lecture-recital of a distinctly amateurish and tedious kind, though it is hard to tax whether the feeling of something preferably provisional and approximate is stagily contrived or material. Performances of 13 of Wolpe's songs from the 1930s and 40s are interspersed with reminiscences of the composer's life during that menstruum, as substantially as with the seven-spot movements of his major piano work on Battle Piece, which was mostly composed during the second domain war.

It all lasts about 90 minutes, but a performance of G�tterd�mmerung flies by in comparison. The main problem is that Wolpe's songs of that Marxist, agitprop period are simply not very good - and certainly non a bandage on Hanns Eisler's or even Kurt Weill's - while the later music, after Wolpe had studied briefly with Anton Webern and adoptive 12-note technique, is unyielding and monochrome.

The narrative never explains to those wHO know little of Wolpe's career why the music changes so radically - I don't think Webern's name is mentioned, though, at one point, De Muynck does launch into a meter reading of Paul's First Letter to the Corinthians, for reasons that escaped me. By that point, however, faith and hope had long since evaporated, and charity was in pretty short supply, too.







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Saturday, 30 August 2008

Vessels, White Fields And Open Devices

Post tilt has come to be something of a tautological label of late. Once the preserve of cutting off edge acts of the Apostles whose mere existence and experimental voyages served as a refreshing antidote to the ill-scented retro-fetishism of Britpop, the label has oft been used as an apologize by any number of talentless no marks whose acquaintance with originality and creativity canful barely be registered on nodding terms.



All of which serves to make White Fields And Open Devices, the debut album from Leeds phoebe Vessels, a cause for celebration. Though the band occasionally sails a short too nearly to their influences � both Altered Beast and An Idle Brain And The Devil's Workshop ar less Battles and more a small skirmish � taken as whole, this collection is both thrilling and thought-provoking in equalise measure.



Vessels' high-speed collision of metal guitars, misrepresented dance beatniks and an aesthetic of confrontation becomes increasingly convincing as they methodically up the agitation quotient. Choosing Explosions In The Sky's knob-twiddler John Congleton to helm production duties was an inspired move and the re-recorded versions of early singles Two Words And A Gesture and Yuki bear testament to this as elsewhere, the sonic vortex that beats at the heart of Wave Those Arms, Airmen brings the whole experience to a cataclysmic and gloriously discordant conclusion.



Despite the intermittent hiccough � Vessels really should decide whether they require to be an instrumental or outspoken band and the evidence certainly suggests the one-time option � this boldness debut stands head and shoulders higher up the mediocre dross from their hometown that's vying for your attention.




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Wednesday, 20 August 2008

Download Chico Hamilton mp3






Chico Hamilton
   

Artist: Chico Hamilton: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Pop

   







Discography:


El Chico
   

 El Chico

   Year: 1965   

Tracks: 8






Chico Hamilton, a subtle and creative drummer, will belike incessantly be better known for the series of quintets that he light-emitting crystal rectifier during 1955-1965 and for his power as a gift gift scout than for his hunky-dory drumming. Hamilton first class honours level played drums patch in high school with the many ok young players (including Dexter Gordon, Illinois Jacquet, and Charles Mingus) wHO were in Los Angeles at the clock time. He made his recording debut with Slim Gaillard, was house drummer at Billy Berg's, toured with Lionel Hampton, and served in the military (1942-1946). In 1946, Hamilton worked briefly with Jimmy Mundy, Count Basie, and Lester Young (arranging with Young). He toured as Lena Horne's drummer (on and off during 1948-1955), and gained identification for his wreak with the original Gerry Mulligan piano-less quartette (1952-1953). In 1955, Hamilton put together his telephone number one v, a chamber nothingness grouping with the reeds of Buddy Collette, guitar player Jim Hall, bassist Carson Smith, and violoncellist Fred Katz. One of the last authoritative West Coast jazz bands, the Chico Hamilton Quintet was immediately popular and appeared in a memorable sequence in 1958's Jazz on a Summmer's Day and the Hollywood photographic film The Sweet Smell of Success. The staff office changed over the english by side few age (with Paul Horn and Eric Dolphy heard on reeds, violoncellist Nate Gersham, guitarists John Pisano and Dennis Budimir, and various bassists passage through the chemical grouping) simply it maintained its unusual intelligent. By 1961, Charles Lloyd was on tenor and fluting, Gabor Szabo was the unexampled guitar player, and ahead long the cello was dropped in favour of trombone (Garnett Brown and later George Bohanon), giving the numerical group an advanced-hard bop expressive vogue.


In 1966, Chico Hamilton started composing for commercials and the studios and he stony-broke up his quintuple. However, he continued preeminent several groups, playing music that ranged from the vanguard to fickle fusion and advanced hard bop. Such up-and-coming musicians as Larry Coryell (1966), Steve Potts (1967), Arthur Blythe, Steve Turre (on bass, amazingly), and Eric Person (wHO played in Hamilton's '90s group Euphoria) were among the jr. players he helped divulge. In 1989, Chico Hamilton had a recorded reunification with the original members of his 1955 quintet (with Pisano in Hall's place), and in the 1990s he made a number of records for Soul Note.





James Moody << mp3 music

Sunday, 10 August 2008

Transformers star considers rehab options

Shia LaBeouf is reportedly heading to rehab.



The Transformers star�- world Health Organization was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol after a car accident late last month�- is said to be considering a visit to a rehabilitation clinic to combat his alcohol addiction.


A source told US TV show Extra: "He is thinking about going to rehab. Judges like to see it."


However, a congresswoman for Shia - wHO required broad surgery on his left hand following the ram - refused to reassert or deny the rumours, adding: �Right now, we're focusing on Shia's hand.�


Shia was told last hebdomad he would not be charged over the motorcar accident as the other driver was at fault.


Los Angeles Sheriff's spokesperson Steve Whitmore explained: "The other car ran a redness light and, if not already, they will be cited.


"They will now be listed as Party One on the report, indicating they were at break."






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Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Leaked: Beck Sings Sad Songs Over Happy Beats

Courtesy of Interscope

Beck, Modern Guilt

Official Release Date: July 8

The Verdict: On 2006's The Information Beck made happy-sounding music with Nigel Godrich, the producer responsible for Sea Change and Mutations, his two saddest albums (results were predictably mixed). On Modern Guilt, he drops ten of the darkest songs he's ever written over surf-rock and go-go beats, courtesy of Danger Mouse, and fares a lot better. You've probably heard "Orphans," "Gamma Ray," and "Chemtrails," and they're pretty much the most upbeat tracks here. Elsewhere, Beck sounds miserable, moaning (melodically, as always) about various crises (spiritual, midlife, existential, etc.), but all songwriting is sharp and the drums are, predictably, awesome. It sounds like a great album and very possibly the worst-ever ad for Scientology.



Thursday, 19 June 2008

On track : Ditties lined up in sequins

The ever unpredictable Marc-Andre Hamelin takes a saunter on the sassy side in his new Hyperion album In a State of Jazz.Here is a pianist who can be guaranteed to put an unexpected punch into a Haydn Allegro and run from the clicking of castanets to the sultriest of siestas in Albeniz's Ib�ria; now the adventurous Canadian sets his sights and fingers on four composers who have been bitten by the jazz bug.You can find DVDs around town of Friedrich Gulda playing Mozart but Hamelin has settled on three of Gulda's so-called Exercises - witty boogies and ballads designed to loosen up classical fingers.The pianist's take on Gulda's highly energised Prelude and Fugue might set Bach's wig permanently off-kilter if its strains were to drift heavenwards.Hamelin rips into a wacky Jazz Sonata by George Antheil, the self-styled bad boy of music.It's a dizzying collage, seven decades before the cut-and-paste tactics of John Zorn.Then there is the case of the Russian Nikolai Kasputin, whose Sonata sounds as if Prokofiev had found himself a gig in a post-bop piano bar.




Hamelin is crisp and not afraid to swing, especially in the first movement's finger-tangling second theme which sounds like it could do with a good stride bass - except there is not a hand or even a finger to spare.Alex Weissenberg's 1982 Sonata comes across as a little more contrived than anything else on this disc, although Hamelin's virtuosity turns its atonal Charleston into a flurry of glittering sequins.Finally, Weissenberg's transcriptions of six songs by the French chansonnier Charles Trenet have been re-transcribed by Hamelin from Weissenberg's recordings. These are frothy charmers, not so far from classy Liberace, music for the boulevard cafe of your dreams. We can only hope there is enough material out there for Hamelin to consider a sequel.In the meantime, with Michael Houstoun's Inland in the charts proving there is an audience for our own piano composers, perhaps some enterprising pianist might record Jenny McLeod's two rock sonatas. They certainly deserve a merrier fate than languishing in the archives waiting for the attentions of an errant musicologist.* Marc-Andr� Hamelin: In a State of Jazz (Hyperion CDA 67656, through Ode Records)

Friday, 13 June 2008

Court now orders Spears psych exam

A judge has ruled that troubled pop star Britney Spears must be examined by a court-appointed psychiatrist to determine if she understands the legal proceedings involving her.
Reuters reports that Los Angeles Superior Court Commissioner Scott Gordon ordered on Monday that the psychiatrist file a report on the 26-year-old's mental condition by 13 February.
On 14 February it will be decided how much longer Spears' assets should remain under the temporary control of her father and his attorney.
Commissioner Gordon also said that a restraining order against Spears' self-styled manager and confidant, Sam Lutfi, forbids him from any form of contact with her.
Spears was taken to the UCLA Medical Center for a 72-hour psychiatric evaluation last week; her stay has now been extended to two weeks.