All posts by matthewlorenzon

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About matthewlorenzon

I'm a Melbourne-based musicologist and music-writer interested in contemporary music, music theory and philosophy.

Concert guide: 14–20 August

A curated list of upcoming concerts. See also the Australian Music Centre concert calendar and the New Music Network concert series.

Thursday 15 August. The Totally Huge New Music Festival continues with the Percussion and Live Electronics concert at Hackett Hall at the West Australian Museum from 8pm. Masonik and Té perform at the festival club, The Bakery, from 10pm.

The Australian Art Orchestra present the second concert of their ElectroACOUSTIC AcousticELECTRO residency at Bennetts Lane Jazz Club, Vic, from 8:30pm. As part of the first Bennetts Lane residency under artistic director Peter Knight, the concert will feature an eclectic quintet drawn from improvisers from around Australia.

Five composers (Michael Bakrncev, Tilman Robinson, Lisa Illean, Anni Hui-Hsin Hsieh and Travis John respond to five spaces at the Melbourne Arts Centre with five-minute compositions in 5x5x5. Bring your headphones and smartphone and see the front desk for a map. Runs during opening hours until 18 August.

Friday 16 August. The International Computer Music Conference finale features WA’s new music ensemble Decibel and David Toop from 8pm at Hackett Hall, the West Australian Museum.

Saturday 17 August. The THNMF continues in Fremantle with Alvin Curran’s Maritime Rites at B Shed, Victoria Quay, at 3pm, then A Sonic Celebration with David Toop, Haco, Clocked out and Catherine Schieve at PSAS from 8pm. Back in Perth, the West Australian Symphony Orchestra perform their second Latitudes concert at 8pm, featuring works by Skipworth, Anderson, Muhly, Grime and Adès.

Students from the Queensland Conservatorium perform new works by Robert Davidson, Andrew Ford and Nicole Murphy alongside Takemitsu, von Bingen and Gabrieli at St John’s Cathedral, Brisbane, 8pm.

The Griffyn Ensemble perform earth-inspired music by Griffyn director Michael Sollis, Martin Wesley Smith, Cold Chisel, Juan Orrego-Salas, Ursula Mamlok, Henrik Strindberg, Jenny Hettne and Frederik Högberg. CSIRO Discovery Centre, Canberra, 7pm.

The Monash Art Ensemble perform works by George Lewis and Mary Finsterer at Monash University, Clayton, VIC, 7:30pm.

Sunday 18 August. Check out Alvin Curran’s BEAMS with massed ensemble at B Shed, Victoria Quay, Fremantle, from 3pm, as part of the THNMF.

Dale Hubbard‘s new CD/DVD A Sea of Faces will be launched in a concert setting at The Old Museum, Brisbane, at 7pm.

Tuesday 20 August. New works by Johanna Selleck will be performed by an all-star cast at the Melbourne Recital Centre from 6pm.

 

Concert guide: 7–13 August

A curated list of upcoming concerts. See also the Australian Music Centre concert calendar and the New Music Network concert series.

Thursday 8 August. Five composers (Michael Bakrncev, Tilman Robinson, Lisa Illean, Anni Hui-Hsin Hsieh and Travis John respond to five spaces at the Melbourne Arts Centre with five-minute compositions in 5x5x5. Bring your headphones and smartphone and see the front desk for a map. Runs during opening hours until 18 August.

The Tura Totally Huge New Music Festival (THNMF) launches at the Perth Museum, WA, at 6pm.

Friday 9 AugustTHNMF events include Haco and Barn Owl at The Bakery for the festival opening concert at 8pm.

Chronology Arts presents Vitality, a series of three collaborations between composers and choreographers at the Seymour Centre, NSW, at 7pm on 8, 9 and 10 August.

The Australian Art Orchestra present the second concert of their ElectroACOUSTIC AcousticELECTRO residency at Bennetts Lane Jazz Club, Vic, from 8:30pm. As part of the first Bennetts Lane residency under artistic director Peter Knight, the concert will feature an eclectic quintet drawn from improvisers from around Australia.

Italian pianist Antonietta Loffredo performs music for piano and toy piano about Antarctica composed by composers Paolo Longo, Gian Paolo Luppi, Stefano Procaccioli, Francesco Schweizer and Antonio Giacometti (Italy); Paul Smith, Diana Blom and Nathan Wilson (Australia); Chris Adams (New Zealand); Mercedes Zavala (Spain) and Sara Carvalho (Portugal) at Theme & Variations Showroom, Willoughby, NSW, from 6:30pm.

The Griffyn Ensemble perform earth-inspired music by Griffyn director Michael Sollis, Martin Wesley Smith, Cold Chisel, Juan Orrego-Salas, Ursula Mamlok, Henrik Strindberg, Jenny Hettne and Frederik Högberg. The Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne, VIC, 7:30pm. Repeat performance at the Discovery Science and Technology Centre, Bendigo, VIC, on Saturday 10 August at 4:30pm.

Saturday 10 August. THNMF events include Speak Percussion and Robin Fox performing the new work Transducer and Stockhausen’s Mikrophonie I at the WA Museum, 8pm.

Duo Deconet premiere new music from Latin American and Australian composers including Miguel Bernal Jimenez, Alejandro Corona, Carlos Salomon, Paul Dessene, Eddie Mora, Daniel Rojas, Margaret Brandman and Elena Kats-Chernin at Mosman Art Gallery and Community Centre, NSW, 6:30pm.

Sunday 11 August. THNMF events include Michael Kieran Harvey’s Psychosonata programme, the International Computer Music Conference keynote concert featuring Alvin Curran, Agostino Di Scipio, Warren Burt and Haco, and Club Huge featuring H+ and Chris Arnold.

Ali Fyffe and Matt Hinchliffe present The Modern Day Saxophone featuring works by Fuminori Tanada. JacobTV, Louis Andriessen, Giacinto Scelsi and Bruno Mantovani at The Gryphon Gallery at The University of Melbourne, 3pm. The concert will also be streamed live at http://www.themoderndaysaxophone.com.au

Topology perform Ten Hands, a continuous, one-hour work at Chapel off Chapel, Prahran, VIC, at 6:30pm.

Monday 12 August. THNMF events include Michael Kieran Harvey’s Piano and Live Electronics programme, the Perth Laptop Orchestra’s Guitar and Live Electronics performance and Club Huge featuring l.n0JaQ and Andrew Nonlinearcircuits.

Benjamin Martin performs Keith Humble’s Piano Sonata, amongst other works, at the Melbourne Recital Centre at 6pm.

Matthew Lutton and David Chisholm, The Bloody Chamber

Alison Whyte in The Bloody Chamber. Photo by Jeff Busby.
Alison Whyte in The Bloody Chamber. Photo by Jeff Busby.

The Bloody Chamber
By Angela Carter
Directed by Matthew Lutton
Music by David Chisholm
Performance text by Van Badham
The Malthouse Theatre
6 August, 2013

Entering the theatre one can just make out dark stains on the stage floor. Drop by drop a puddle of water forms between three monolithic black cubes. Occasionally a tone like struck metal rings out. The sounds rise and fade, accompanied by the dead percussion of wood.

Suddenly, with a rattle of chains, one of the cubes starts to rise. It stops just high enough to reveal the pedaling feet of three harpists, the source of the wooden sounds. The gong sounds (produced by putting Blu-Tac on the harp strings) increase in intensity as the harpists run their hands down their wire strings, producing harsh whispers like the falling blades of guillotines. Then, slowly, the smallest of the three boxes rises to show  two feet dripping with blood. The box continues to rise, carrying the gently twitching feet high above the pool of blood below.

We are inside Bluebeard’s castle where, according to the seventeenth-century version of the tale by Charles Perrault, a sadistic aristocrat has murdered a series of wives for disobeying his one proscription: Do not enter the forbidden room. Showing a propensity for divergent characterisations of violence, the story has since been rewritten many times, notably in Bartok’s 1911 opera and Angela Carter’s 1979 short story on which the Malthouse production is based.

The original cautionary tale assumes a male monopoly on violence for the punishment of woman’s supposed innate and sinful curiosity. Violent punishment is also meted out between men, as the young wife’s brothers save Bluebeard’s youngest wife, the protagonist of the story. Bartok’s interpretation plays down the cautionary tale to focus on the symbolic violence of Bluebeard’s capricious affections, his love of the idea of his wives over their reality. Bluebeard cannot truly admit the new wife into his shuttered castle, initially refusing to let her open the doors and let the light in. When she finally convinces him to do so, she finds the wives alive. The young wife is then similarly enshrined in jewelry and locked away. The castle is no longer a moral prison, but a cold, damp, dark psychological world.

Without forgetting punitive or symbolic violence, Carter elaborates the sexual violence inherent in the tale. An array of mirrors shatters the protagonist into twelve identical copies that are “impaled” in a honeymoon chamber decked with lilies, a symbol of death. In Lutton’s production the bedroom is hidden under the third cube and consists of only a carved four-poster bed. Alison Whyte shifts effortlessly between Bluebeard’s menace and the new wife’s fear, playing both parts with the help of a finely-tuned pitch-shift effect by sound designer Jethro Woodward.

Carter returns to the violence of punishment by having the young wife’s mother ride to the rescue, her skirts tucked around her waist, a backdrop of ocean spray “witness to her furious justice” as she shoots Bluebeard in the head. In Lutton’s production this moment is punctuated by a veritable rain of bullets upon the stage.

While punitive violence ultimately saves the day, the story’s happy ending is predicated on symbolic non-violence. Bluebeard is initially attracted to the new wife for her conservatoire training as a pianist. It is an “accomplishment,” a symbol by which Bluebeard identifies her, placing a Bechstein in the mirrored room. Carter then shows how music can function as something other than a sign of accomplishment, as a bridge between people and a fundamental part of one’s identity. The new wife is able to calm herself by playing Debussy and Bach. The piano also leads her to the blind piano tuner Jean-Yves, with whom she will open a music school after they are both liberated by her gunslinging mother.

The three harpists of Lutton’s production (Jacinta Dennett, Yinuo Mu and Jess Fotinos), representing the three dead wives, extend Carter’s musical theme. Since its feminisation in the late eighteenth century, the harp has inhabited a space of both convention and transgression. While the harp upset a woman’s deportment in the most suggestive ways, it also became the accomplishment par excellence for young women leading up to the French Revolution. As the instrument became larger, heavier and the strings tighter, its physical demands became greater and so women had to fight against a quantity that continued to claim that the instrument was unsuitable for feeble female hands. At times Chisholm’s music fills out the sparse set design, such as where the harpists sing drones over tremoli to evoke the monotonous train ride to the castle. Then, arriving to a dawn sky “scattered with rose-pink,” the harpists unleash a pointillistic flurry of notes. At other times the harpists superimpose the new wife’s alternative psychological world on the dark castle, playing whimsical, dissonant tunes as she traipses around the castle playing with her new riches. Finally, after supporting Whyte, the harpists assert their own identity, literally packing up their bags and leaving the stage. As Carter has said, her rewriting isn’t about men and women, but about “tigers and lambs,” a dynamic as relevant today as it was thirty years ago.

Brett Dean, The Last Days of Socrates

The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra conducted by Simone Young
The Last Days of Socrates
Music by Brett Dean
Libretto by Graeme Ellis
26 July

With the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra Chorus ranged at the back of Monash University’s Robert Blackwood Hall and a hefty complement of brass and a battery of unconventional percussion augmenting the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, it was evident that we were in for a work of epic proportions. Or shall we say tragic, as the immense forces were mounted against a lone Peter Coleman-Wright downstage as Socrates. Part courtroom drama and part soap opera, Dean’s secular oratorio depicting the trial and execution of Socrates provokes heartfelt association with the protagonist.

Dean reflects Socrates’ famously unattractive appearance and fatal questioning of every and all convention through an acerbic half-spoken style of singing. As the Athenian jury, the chorus sings in chant-like unison, summoning the protagonist with a thunderous “Socrates!” There are effective attempts to deviate from this static, though classically correct arrangement, with string sections, soloists and parts of the choir moving offstage and around the auditorium. Dean’s flair for orchestral colour also adds depth to the drama, with the orchestra superimposing uncertain, quivering strings lines with decisive, rhythmic tuned percussion and serene brass chorales. The addition of terracotta pots and pieces of metal—representing the coins that the jurors would throw into pots to cast their vote—helped lend the piece a unique sonic character.

Socrates finally breaks from his sprechstimme to perform his “swan song,” a touching and forlorn meditation on man’s irrational fear of death. The aria is another example of Dean’s capacity to drop solo lines of moving elegance into his larger structures. But this sentimentalisation of Socrates’ reason would never have stood up to peripatetic interrogation. In Plato’s Republic, written as a Socratic dialogue, modes encouraging sorrow and softness are banished from the city. While I am glad we sing with more than two of the ancient Greek modes today, the question lingers as to what music would befit the words of Socrates.

Soundstream Collective, Old Kings in Exile

Old Kings in Exile
Soundstream Collective
Melbourne Recital Centre
23 July, 2013

The Pierrot ensemble, comprised of cello, violin, clarinet, flute and piano with various additions, has been a mainstay of chamber music since its use in Arnold Schoenberg’s Pierrot Lunaire of 1912. As the Old Kings in Exile programme at the Melbourne Recital Centre demonstrated, Australian composers continue to explore the versatility of this ensemble to great effect. The Soundstream Collective dove fearlessly into the diverse range of instrumental colours demanded from the works by James Ledger, Brett Dean, Anthony Pateras and Richard Meale.

In Ledger’s Sextet, jazz harmonies and rhythms are transformed into abstract, almost mechanical gestures that are passed between the instruments in a kaleidoscope of musical configurations. The work forms part of a tendency to take pleasure in eclectic compositional dexterity and finesse.

Pateras’ Broken, Then Fixed, Then Broken is a completely different sort of composition. A pre-established group of sounds for piano, clarinet and cello are played in rhythms strung together by chance. The interest of the work lies in the sounds chosen: hard knocking sounds on the prepared piano, Bartok pizzicati on the cello and muted “toots” of the clarinet. As the piece progresses, this high-end sound spectrum shifts to include some richer tones plucked on the cello and gong-like sounds from the piano.

Works by Dean and Meale link contemporary Australian composition and its recent past. Incredible Floridas, premièred by Peter Maxwell Davies’ Fires of London in 1971, is an astonishing response to the poetry of Arthur Rimbaud, drawing less on his actual poetry than on his poetic world where beauty and horror lie side by side. In the first of six movements, long violin and clarinet notes conjure the colours of vowels described by Rimbaud: “A, noir, E, blanc, I, rouge … .” Chords spread across the range of the piano punctuate and modify the vowels like consonants. Gongs create swelling, receding, fluid forms between the two. Elsewhere Judith Hamann plays a haunting cello solo with maracas, before being surrounded by military rhythms from the percussion and angular phrases from the winds and piano. Given the unforgettable adventure of hearing the piece, It is surprising that this work is only performed in Australia about once a decade.

Dean’s Old Kings in Exile draws inspiration from the memoir of Austrian author Arno Geiger that details the challenges faced by his aging father. Dean dedicates the piece to his own parents in the leafy suburbs of Brisbane, from where he has also drawn inspiration from the calls of the Pied Butcherbird. There is an early-morning pathos to the two slow movements framing the central scherzo of the work. Groaning bass drums and a layer of flortando trills accompany a melancholic clarinet melody that rises neither quietly nor gracefully.

Both Dean and Meale display a gift for bringing out the  solo instrumental parts within the Pierrot ensemble. Meale claimed to have given up his modernist idiom because it struggled to express qualities like affection, love and tenderness. Indeed, in both Dean and Meale’s works we find sympathetic solo instruments struggling against a threatening ensemble. In Old Kings in Exile we also find moments of salvific unity achieved through juxtaposition, such as in the central scherzo where a frenetic passage shared by the flute and cello builds to a climax before cutting short, revealing misty piano chords melting into shimmering string trills.

The Voice Alone 3: Vocal Folds at Gertrude Contemporary Art Space

Vocal Folds
Gertrude Contemporary Art Space
22 June–20 July 2013
Performance: Jenny Barnes, Alice Hui-Sheng Chang and Carolyn Connors, 27 June

Rarely do the worlds of contemporary art and music come together in so detailed a discussion within their own media as in Vocal Folds at Gertrude Contemporary Art Space. Each artwork inhabits a corner of the contemporary conceptual map of the voice, at times conflicting with the show’s curatorial rationale and the series of musical performances associated with the exhibition.

Marcus Coates Dawn Chorus (video still) 2007 14/7 screen high definition video installation Commissioned and produced by Picture This, Bristol Funded by Wellcome Trust Courtesy of Kate MacGarry Gallery, London
Marcus Coates, Dawn Chorus (video still) 2007, 14/7 screen high definition video installation, Commissioned and produced by Picture This, Bristol, Funded by Wellcome Trust, Courtesy of Kate MacGarry Gallery, London

In Dawn Chorus by Marcus Coates, a forest of screens depicts individuals caught in the midst of their morning rituals. One is lying in bed, another in a bathtub, yet another paused in a stationary car. Their faces twitch and their mouths open and close rapidly as they emit high-pitched chirps and whistles. The sped-up videos of people imitating slowed-down birdcalls recreates the dawn chorus of birds, reinterpreting our most mundane moments as a social ritual that ties us to the animal life outside our windows. This simple technique also provides a comment on the relationship of music and the voice. The voice is musical not in its everyday mode, but when it strives to be something else, when it is removed from its everyday linguistic register and the fleshly sounds it is usually condemned to make. This is the essence of song, in particular the bel canto tradition of operatic singing, which has been lovingly described as “beautiful screaming.”

Manon de Boer one, two, many (video still) 2012 16mm film transferred to HD video Courtesy of Jan Mot Gallery, Brussels
Manon de Boer, one, two, many (video still) 2012, 16mm film transferred to HD video, Courtesy of Jan Mot Gallery, Brussels

In Manon de Boer’s one, two, many, three video works alternate on two screens, creating a spatial and rhythmic phase in the darkened front gallery. The work’s conceit is the relationship between the voice and the listener and the embodiedness of breath. It may also be read as a duplication of some shaky arguments about music’s coded and uncoded relationships with the human body. In one video, Michael Schmid performs an intensely-focused circular breathing solo on the flute. In another, an ensemble sing Giacinto Scelsi’s Tre Canto Popolari to a mobile audience. In the third, the artist recounts the experience of listening to the voice of Roland Barthes to a ceiling cornice. The artist’s words are an improvisation or a variation on Barthes’ “The Grain of the Voice” from 1977, itself a rhapsody on Julia Kristeva’s theory of the semiotic and the symbolic best expounded in relation to music in Revolution in Poetic Language. So the argument goes, language consists of libidinal urges originating in a pre-symbolic, unreified sphere (the “chora”), which are then given form through the limitations of the physical body and the symbolic forms of language. Kristeva’s distinction between the pre-symbolic “semiotic” and the “symbolic” is sometimes put into critical practice by finding traces of this pre-symbolic energy in the prosody of text or with appeal to seemingly-nonsignifying music. These traces, however, are always-already symbolic, caught up in the media and the symbolic networks we perceive them through. Nowhere is this more evident than in music. To Kristeva, music represents the semiotic to the symbolic of language, while to Barthes music itself is divided into the “pheno-song” of language and musical writing and the “geno-song” of a particular performer’s tone and interpretation of dynamics, tempo and articulation. Playing every classical music enthusiast’s favourite game, Barthes compares the technically perfect German baritone Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau with Charles Panzéra, whose idiosyncratic voice and performance style moves him more profoundly. If only singers hadn’t been discussing precisely these characteristics in a highly technical manner for thousands of years, Barthes might have been on to something. One need look no further than the first Vocal Folds concert by Jenny Barnes, Alice Hui-Sheng Chang and Carolyn Connors to find a group of performers who, apparently inverting the supposed division between the semiotic and the symbolic in music, have developed a unique culture of principally timbral vocal performance.

Jenny Barnes, Alice Hui-Sheng Chang and Carrolyn Connors. Photo by Elizabeth Bell
Jenny Barnes, Alice Hui-Sheng Chang and Carrolyn Connors. Photo by Elizabeth Bell

There is a simplicity and an intimacy to improvised vocal performance that made Gertrude Contemporary Arts Space feel more like a living room than a performance venue. The audience made themselves comfortable as Barnes found a central space in the room. At first a barely-audible twittering filled the gallery. Eyes shut, Barnes slowly raised a hand that convulsed along with a texture of rapid squeaks, fleeting bilabial stops (“m”, “n”) and unvoiced plosives (“p,” “b”). With utmost control, the pointillistic texture slowly opened out into a fuller-voiced ensemble of groans and glottal stops articulated with the back of the mouth and throat. The rapid change between these two families of sounds produces a polyphonic effect, as though there were two or three voices in the room. Then, in an incredible display of vocal stamina Barnes began to channel animal calls. A sound like a small dog’s bark ripped through the controlled vocal tapestry and a series of rapidly articulated high tones built to a chorus of birdsong. Only at the end of the performance did this rapid rhythmic improvisation become a full-bodied roar.

By contrast, Hui-Sheng Chang slowly modified the overtones of long, sustained pitches. Over half a minute or more, Hui-Sheng Cheng moved between humming, open, nasal and rasping timbres. Hui-Sheng Chang moved around the room, kneeling amongst the audience to experiment with the sound of her breathing and wandering off to shout in a distant room.

As a performer, mentor and teacher, Carolyn Connors continues to initiate students into the craft of vocal improvisation. Connors’ Gertrude St set reprised some of the material from her recent performance at James Rushford and Joe Talia’s Manhunter launch, but with a greater emphasis on the augmentation of the voice with found objects. The performance was a study in multitasking, as Connors struggled to keep an accordion bouncing on her knee, strike it with brushes, produce a tone through a book pursed between her lips and wrap her head in aluminium foil.

The literature around Vocal Folds is a good example of what Alain Badiou calls “democratic materialism,” the belief that there are only bodies and languages. Because curator Jacqueline Doughty wants to move away from the voice’s coded, symbolic functions (namely language and music) she appeals to the voice’s physicality in the “lungs, vocal chords, tongue and lips.” But what if music were not subsumed into linguistic function of the voice? Might music fit just as awkwardly with the voice’s embodiedness? Considering the relationship that singers and other musical practitioners maintain with the voice implies a third manner of articulation consisting of technique and musical-conceptual axes like pitch, duration and timbre.