Mostrando postagens com marcador Allison Sniffin. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Allison Sniffin. Mostrar todas as postagens

20.4.22

MEREDITH MONK : Mercy (2002) APE (image+.cue), lossless

Mercy is a music theater collaboration between Meredith Monk and visual artist Ann Hamilton, described as "a meditation on the human capacity to both extend and withhold compassion, kindness, empathy, and mercy." It's scored for six dancer/vocalists, two keyboards, percussion, violin, and theremin. Music and choreography are by Monk, with installations by Hamilton. Conception, development, and direction were shared. What's Mercy about? Who knows? This disc is the audio-only portion of the show with nary a liner note to sort things out a bit. Mercy represents a lovely evolution in Monk's work, with few surprises and departures within the unique and evocative genre she has created. The music is mostly very tonal in the traditional sense and lulling in a calmly minimalist way, though thoughtful and edgy, rarely letting one slip into comfortable inattention. Most of the singing is pure vocalise -- from lyrical singing and chanting to whispers and whoops -- trading the blatant sense of language for a gut experience that aims at something deeper and more atavistic than word setting may achieve. What good is all this without witnessing the stage setting by Hamilton and the remarkable dance and movement choreographed by Monk? Good enough to enjoy and merit total attention in the audio realm alone only, if one is a die-hard fan. There is simply no way to get a sense of Mercy without the visual element. The musical score to, say, Oklahoma! pretty much captures the entire sense of the show. But Mercy has sections called "doctor/patient," and "line 3 and prisoner," for example, which have almost no meaning stripped of the staging elements. That is the problem with getting Monk's theater works on audio-only discs; wait for the DVD of the entire production. by Gerald Brennan  

MEREDITH MONK

1-5    Mercy, opera for 6 voices, 2 keyboards, percussion, violin & theremin
6-7    Mercy, opera for 6 voices, 2 keyboards, percussion, violin & theremin
8-14   Mercy, opera for 6 voices, 2 keyboards, percussion, violin & theremin

All Credits

MEREDITH MONK : Impermanence (2008) APE (image+.cue), lossless

In her album Impermanence, Meredith Monk succeeds in creating pieces that fit her theme well and much of this music does indeed seem ephemeral, fleeting. These works are not casually or routinely constructed, though; their apparent simplicity masks a psychological and musical sophistication that's evident in the way their carefully placed details contribute to their surprising impact. The prevailing mood of the album is melancholy, but not passive sadness; even the songs that deal most explicitly with loss, such as Last Song (which opens the album) and Liminal, are punctuated with astonishing, defiant gestural outbursts that make it clear that Monk has no intention of going gentle into that good night. One of the strengths of the album is the variety of its pieces; Monk is never repeating herself or just recycling ideas. Pieces such as Particular Dance, for voices and mixed ensemble, are lively and full of unpredictable humor, and Maybe 1, for eight pianos, is a quirky, minimalist-inspired bagatelle. The textural variety of the pieces is also appealing; almost all of them use voices in one way or another, but the voice is often used instrumentally or as accompaniment to the instruments. Monk and her ensemble perform with great delicacy and sensitivity to each other; this is clearly a group of singers and instrumentalists that knows how to listen, and each member is constantly calibrating his or her contribution with the sounds of the others, as in the best chamber music performances. ECM's sound is immaculate. The album is a significant addition to Monk's discography and should be of strong interest to fans of new vocal music that pushes the envelope but is still accessible and engaging. by Stephen Eddins  
Tracklist :
1    Last Song 7'16
Voice, Piano – Meredith Monk
2    Maybe 1 2'03
Piano – Allison Sniffin, Bohdan Hilash, Ching Gonzalez, Ellen Fisher, John Hollenbeck, Katie Geissinger, Meredith Monk, Theo Bleckmann
3    Little Breath 1'43
Bass Clarinet – Bohdan Hilash
Bells [Elephant Bells] – John Hollenbeck
Voice – Allison Sniffin, Katie Geissinger, Meredith Monk, Theo Bleckmann

4    Liminal 10'56
Clarinet [B♭ Clarinet], Clarinet [A Clarinet], Bass Clarinet, Soprano Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone [Aulos] – Bohdan Hilash
Marimba, Vibraphone, Percussion, Bass Drum – John Hollenbeck
Piano, Violin – Allison Sniffin
Voice – Allison Sniffin, Katie Geissinger, Meredith Monk, Theo Bleckmann

5    Disequilibrium 2'26
Performer [Bicycle Wheel] – John Hollenbeck
Voice – Allison Sniffin, Ellen Fisher, Katie Geissinger, Meredith Monk, Silvie Jensen, Theo Bleckmann

6    Particular Dance 4'57
Ocarina [Double Ocarina], Flute [Balinese Flute], Reeds [Zaphoon], Performer [Punji] – Bohdan Hilash
Percussion [Metal And Wood Percussion], Cymbal, Bass Drum, Angklung [Anklung] – John Hollenbeck
Piano – Allison Sniffin
Voice – Ching Gonzalez, Ellen Fisher, Katie Geissinger, Meredith Monk, Sasha Bogdanowitsch, Silvie Jensen, Theo Bleckmann

7    Between Song 6'08
Bells [Chinese Temple Bells], Vibraphone – John Hollenbeck
Clarinet [B♭ Clarinet], Bass Clarinet – Bohdan Hilash
Piano – Allison Sniffin
Voice – Allison Sniffin, Katie Geissinger, Meredith Monk

8    Passage 1'55
Voice – Allison Sniffin, Ching Gonzalez, Ellen Fisher, Katie Geissinger, Sasha Bogdanowitsch, Silvie Jensen, Theo Bleckmann
9    Maybe 2 3'07
Bass Clarinet – Bohdan Hilash
Bass Drum – John Hollenbeck
Voice – Allison Sniffin, Ching Gonzalez, Ellen Fisher, Katie Geissinger, Meredith Monk, Theo Bleckmann

10    Skeleton Lines 4'19
Clarinet [B♭ Clarinet] – Bohdan Hilash
Marimba, Vibraphone, Percussion [Wooden Clackers] – John Hollenbeck
Piano – Allison Sniffin, Theo Bleckmann
Voice, Piano – Meredith Monk

11    Slow Dissolve 2'35
Bass Clarinet – Bohdan Hilash
Glockenspiel – John Hollenbeck
Violin – Allison Sniffin
Voice – The Ensemble

12    Totentanz 3'59
Clarinet [B♭ Clarinet], Bass Clarinet, Soprano Saxophone – Bohdan Hilash
Marimba, Vibraphone, Bass Drum, Percussion [Paddle Drums] – John Hollenbeck
Piano, Violin – Allison Sniffin
Voice – Meredith Monk, Theo Bleckmann

13    Sweep 1 1'28
Percussion [Paddle Drums] – John Hollenbeck
14    Rocking 5'17
Bass Clarinet – Bohdan Hilash
Marimba, Vibraphone – John Hollenbeck
Voice – The Ensemble

15    Sweep 2 1'24
Percussion [Ocean Drum] – Bohdan Hilash
Percussion, Bells [Chinese Temple Bells], Performer [Magnets] – John Hollenbeck
Voice – Allison Sniffin

16    Mieke's Melody #5 5'15
Piano – Allison Sniffin
Vibraphone – John Hollenbeck
Voice – The Ensemble


Ensemble – Meredith Monk & Vocal Ensemble
Percussion – John Hollenbeck
Piano, Violin – Allison Sniffin
Producer – Manfred Eicher
Voice – Allison Sniffin, Ching Gonzalez, Ellen Fisher, Katie Geissinger, Meredith Monk, Sasha Bogdanowitsch, Silvie Jensen, Theo Bleckmann
Woodwind [Woodwinds] – Bohdan Hilash

MEREDITH MONK : Memory Game (2020) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Meredith Monk's music, even more so than that of her fellow minimalists, has been embedded in dance and multimedia presentations tied to a specific place and time. But Memory Game suggests that her works, like those of Arvo Pärt, flourish in new arrangements and will survive separation from their original contexts. The album includes a variety of little-known, but thoroughly enjoyable Monk works, rearranged for voices (mostly) and small ensemble by members of the venerable New York avant-garde group Bang on a Can All-Stars. The arrangements emphasize the deadpan space travel-ethnography texts, as well as the wordless vocalizing. The bulk of the program is given over to a new version of Monk's 1983 work The Games, which was originally for 16 voices, synthesizer, keyboards, Flemish bagpipes, bagpipes, Chinese horn, and rauschpfeife. The simpler version here emphasizes the text in a way that the original doesn't, but it's not fundamentally different stuff, and it comes out well. The rest of the album contains shorter works that preserve and highlight Monk's collection of vocalizations, slides, and nonsense syllables. The "Waltz in 5s," which is exactly what it sounds like, was arranged by Monk herself, with Allison Sniffin, while Tokyo Cha Cha is the type of Monk piece writer Grego Applegate Edwards has likened to pop art. All of it is arresting and deceptively simple. The recording was made not for Monk's longtime home at ECM, but for the Cantaloupe label: it is beautifully engineered and often hypnotic. A real find for Monk fans that points to where her music will be in the public mind ten years hence. by James Manheim  
Tracklist :
1    Spaceship (1983)    4:18
2    Gamemaster's Song (1983) 5:12
Solo Vocal – Theo Bleckmann
3    Migration (1983) 7:37
Performer – Michael Cerveris
Words By – Ping Chong

4    Memory Song (1983) 6:44
Words By – Meredith Monk
5    Downfall (1983)    3:56
6    Waltz In 5s (1996) 3:54
Solo Vocal – Katie Geissinger
7    Tokyo Cha Cha (1983)    9:45
8    Totentanz (2006)    3:12
9    Double Fiesta (1986) 5:42
Words By – Meredith Monk
Credits :
Cello, Vocals – Ashley Bathgate
Choir – Meredith Monk And Vocal Ensemble
Composed By, Mixed By [Assisting], Liner Notes – Meredith Monk
Electric Bass, Acoustic Bass – Robert Black
Electric Guitar, Banjo, Vocals – Mark Stewart
Orchestra – Bang On A Can All-Stars
Percussion – David Cossin
Piano, Keyboards, Melodica – Vicky Chow
Saxophone, Clarinet – Ken Thomson
Vocals – Katie Geissinger, Meredith Monk, Theo Bleckmann
Vocals, Psaltery [Bowed] – Allison Sniffin

e.s.t. — Retrospective 'The Very Best Of e.s.t. (2009) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

"Retrospective - The Very Best Of e.s.t." is a retrospective of the unique work of e.s.t. and a tribute to the late mastermind Esb...