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Tag Archive: Stravinsky


Here I am again, arrogantly telling you what to think. Well, not exactly…
Let’s say these are my suggestions for holiday gifts (no need to give those to me, I already own them). Send me your suggestions, I love to discover new music.

5- Tool – 10 000 Days

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Tool – 10,000 Days

Tool has a style that is hard to pin down. The sound is heavy as hell, but never losing in clarity; the playing is challenging, but never indulgent; the songwriting has strong melodies, but never locked in an obvious verse, verse, chorus, verse way. Tool has learned something that I would hope most heavy bands would learn: quiet parts make the heavy ones sound heavier.

As a band, they keep the focus on everything that matters and take the spotlight away from the musicians’ personalities. A typical Tool concert has singer Maynard James Keenan in the back of the stage, besides the drum kit and guitarist Adam Jones barely does any solos, sparing us the usual unimaginative shredding.

Each new album is better than the last and always show a constant progression. 10 000 Days, the latest one, is the high point… but that may change soon.

Standout track: Jambi

4- Igor Stravinsky – Histoire du Soldat

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Igor Stravinsky – Histoire du Soldat

Everyone knows about Stravinsky’s Firebird Suite, Rite of Spring, but how many know about this gem? With a libretto written by C. F. Ramuz in 1918, A Soldier’s Tale was created as a theatrical piece to be “lue, jouée et dansée” (to be read, played, and danced).

The war raging at the time of production forced Stravinsky to orchestrate it for a small septet ensemble for pragmatic reasons, tailoring it to a touring theatre troupe. In my opinion, giving such importance to the storytelling elements makes Histoire du Soldat even more interesting.

Not wanting to repeat myself here, and to see clips of the piece, here’s a link to a previous blog post about it.

Standout track: La Marche Royale

3- King Crimson – Power to Believe

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King Crimson – Power to Believe

Powerful and intense, Power to Believe is Y2K Crimson at its best. If I remember correctly, Robert Fripp stated in an interview that for this offering, it’s the rhythm section that really wanted to reinvent itself and asked for space and attention. It worked.

Machine (that’s his name), the producer of the album was used to eclectic projects and is lack of “Prog creds” actually make his take on it unburdened by the history of the band. It’s punchy, taut production has a clarity and spacial depth that was missing in the previous album.

It’s the key offering from the last lineup and is worth listening if one is curious about the band’s evolution through the years.

Standout track: Level Five

2- Van Der Graaf Generator – Pawn Hearts

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Van Der Graaf Generator – Pawn Hearts

This album should come with a warning label: “This music can induce dizziness and vertigo”.

Originally consisting of only 3 pieces, this opus is primal scream therapy wrapped in complex arrangements. What makes this a top of the heap recording is a sense of a cohesive work of art even if some parts seem added up in random fashion. A piece like A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers could have sounded disjointed, its mix of soft, pastoral parts linking with heavy ones along with wild experimentation. Here it makes the pieces breathe, lower dynamics giving us small reprieves before a new onslaught.

The lineup is the classic one of Hugh Banton (keyboards); Peter Hammill (lead vocals, guitar, piano); drummer Guy Evans; and David Jackson (flute, saxophones). What makes this lineup original is the omission of a regular bass player. Banton usually plays the low frequency parts on bass pedals even if he overdubs a bit of bass guitar, probably as an afterthought. Add to that, a sax player who sometimes play two saxes at once through effects pedals and a powerful amplification.

Not for the faint of heart.

Standout track: Lemmings

1- King Crimson – Larks’ Tongues in Aspic

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King Crimson – Larks’ Tongues in Aspic

Notwithstanding the fact that I recently received the magnificent box set version (including a 5.1 remix version by Steven Wilson of Porcupine Tree fame), Larks’ Tongues stands as an all time favourite.

In light of the new remixes and outtake tracks, it becomes clear that the Jaimie Muir “wild card” role played a vital part. More than the dude asked to shut up and play that cowbell, Muir is the guy that gave a serious kick in the pants to that bunch of crusty proggers; he’s really taking this band into uncharted territory. A musical cold shower as Bruford stated.

Of course the writing is top notch and a great balance was struck between the improvs, the ballads and the heavy, riff laden, pieces.

Filmed for a TV show, The Rich Tapestry of Life (included in the box set) is an improvisational piece that draws a good picture of the King under re-construction. We witness the chaotic atmosphere under which a band with new vocabulary is born. Muir’s tenure with the band was, sadly, a short one as he left to become a tibetan monk.

Standout track: Larks’ Tongue in Aspic part II

 

Cheers,

Denis

The Soldier’s Tale –  Histoire du Soldat.
Man, I love this piece. Truly a “Desert Island Disc” for me.

A Soldier’s Tale is my favourite from Stravinsky and not because it was originally narrated and often turned into cartoon animation.

I don’t exactly remember how I came across this piece, but for a long time I thought it was meant as an instrumental. It’s later on that I heard the version narrated by Cocteau with Peter Ustinov as the Devil. On a side note, I would mention also Frank Zappa’s fast and furious (and funny) version of the Royal March section in his live set, Make A Jazz Noise Here.

Why post this here? Let’s just say it could be filed under “Specimen13 Obscure Influences”.

Enjoy

 

Good news for those lucky people around NYC. The Brothers Quay will be at the MoMA in 2012.
Needless to say that the Brothers Quay have been a huge influence on many artists (including me). I remember seeing the Street of Crocodiles on PBS in the 80′s and it hit me in a way I never thought would be possible. As a side note, the show was called Alive From Off Center and was presented by none other than Laurie Anderson. It’s also the first time I heard one of my favourite Stravinsky piece: The Flood. The short that went with it was really crude, by today’s standard, but the music was quite a surprise for someone who only knew The Rite of Spring (I was 24 at the time)
It’s a good time to remind people the Brothers Quay did NOT do any music videos for the band Tool. Those were a close, but… 

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The Street of Crocodiles by the Brothers Quay

From the press release:
This MoMA gallery exhibition and accompanying film retrospective will be the first presentation of the Quay Brothers’ work in all their fields of creative activity. Internationally renowned moving image artists and designers, the Quay Brothers were born outside Philadelphia and have worked from their London studio, Atelier Koninck, since the late 1970s. For over 30 years, they have been in the avant-garde of stop-motion puppet animation and live-action movie-making in the Eastern European tradition of filmmakers like Walerian Borowczyk and Jan Svankmajer and the Russian Yuri Norstein, and have championed a design aesthetic influenced by the graphic surrealism of Polish poster artists of the 1950s and 1960s. Beginning with their student films in 1971, the Quay Brothers have produced over 45 moving image works, including two features, music videos, dance films, documentaries, and signature personal works, including The Street of Crocodiles(1986), the Stille Nacht series (1988–2008), Institute Benjamenta(1995), and In Absentia (2000).
In addition to their better known films, this exhibition will include never-before-seen moving image works and graphic design, drawings, and calligraphy, presenting animated and live-action films alongside installations, objects, and works on paper.

Quay Brothers: On Deciphering the Pharmacist’s Prescription for Lip-Reading Puppets

August 12, 2012–January 7, 2013

MoMA | Quay Brothers: On Deciphering the Pharmacist’s Prescription for Lip-Reading Puppets.

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