By Stuart Broomer
These are recent and distinguished bands united by the extent to which
they’re refined, defined and expanded by electronics, harbingers not of the
future but of the immediate present, multiplying and expanding through
degrees of transformation, each a legitimate heir to the kinds of informed
complexity pioneered by musical outsiders like John Benson Brooks and Sun Ra
and literary outsiders like Brion Gysin and William S. Burroughs.
Alexander Hawkins -- No Nation but Imagination (Intakt, 2026)
Pianist/composer Alexander Hawkins has already covered a broad musical
spectrum in his career, from
Togetherness Music for Sixteen Musicians
featuring Evan Parker to Carnival Celestial, his brilliant
reinvention of the piano trio with bassist Neil Charles and drummer Stephen
Davis. No Nation but Imagination may be his most striking work yet,
with a trans-Atlantic quintet that links Chicago-resident flutist Nicole
Mitchell and drummer Hamid Drake with British musicians Rhodri Davies, here
playing harp and electronics, and turntablist/sound artist Matthew Wright.
That’s not a predictable combination, and it immediately lives up to that
promise of the unlikely: it’s music that can find a groove, but it’s a
groove that hasn’t exactly happened before, suggestive in some ways of the
unpredictable musical culture of Intakt label-mates Elias Stemeseder and
Christian Lillinger and their Umbra series of recordings.
Liner note author Peter Margasak has traced the project’s complex lineage
and associations, beginning with Hawkins’ enthusiasm for the Mandingo Griot
Society, a band that Drake played in in the 1970s with Gambian kora master
Foday Musa Suso. Mitchell has played with a kora master more recently, the
Malian Ballaké Sissoko. Those associations with the harp-like kora triggered
the inclusion of harpist Rhodri Davies, who has also worked extensively with
electronics, also the arena of Matthew Wright. The resultant ensemble bears
a certain resemblance to Wright and Evan Parker’s Trance Map in its
integration of acoustic and electronic instruments and processing, the
result here a mix of live and studio recordings with further processing.
It’s music that has covered tremendous ground just coming into being, and
it’s fascinating how the most exotic of technological procedures admit of a
certain alien prettiness, a provocative banality, evident here from the
opening “Solo Way Far Gone”: mysterious electronic piano tinkling, at once
bearer and judge of the merely pretty, is here elevated by degrees of
mystery and alien artifice. The first real group track, “Resolution Each and
Every,” suggests that some 1950s exotica by Martin Denny (e.g., “Quiet
Village”) has been recovered by some distant and unknown civilization
(perhaps Kurt Vonnegut’s refined Tralfamadorians), then altered, expanded
and broadcast back to earth, with Mitchell’s flute assuming multiple
identities amidst the complex percussion and a certain general wobbling of
harp and synthesizer, with the music stretching far beyond the merely
exotic. So too does “Mirror No Border”, which bristles with Hawkins’
percussive piano flurries and Mitchell’s alternately piping and soaring
lines.
The more extended pieces create increasingly complex spaces. “Lullaby Much
Further” combines near silence with a dauntingly mysterious collection of
sounds and a complex web of connections, while “Hocket Fierce Peaceful”
achieves the contradictory character of its title by setting a flute of
almost unearthly tranquility amidst a maze of abstract and decorative
electronic keyboards.
Sofia Borges - Rieko Okuda - Peter Van Huffel -- Lagrangian Points
(4daRecord, 2026)
Equally mixed in its combinations of the acoustic and the electronic,
Lagrangian Points
differs significantly in being a documentary recording of a live performance
from Berlin’s Morphine Raum, all the electronic processing going on
simultaneously with the acoustic. Sofia Borges plays drums. percussion and
electronics; Rieko Okuda, piano, keyboards and electronics; Peter Van Huffel
alto and baritone saxophones and electronics.
According to the liner note “ Lagrangian Points are zones of
delicate balance where forces align and bodies can remain suspended. In that
sense, the trio forms a system of its own: each voice holds and is held by
the others, maintaining a moving equilibrium, with enough space left open
for the imagination to drift beyond its edges.” That particularly double
identity is linked to the presence of electronics employed by each trio
member, to the extent that instrumental identities can blur into one
another.
The opening “Ghost Currents” initially seems to emphasize Okuda’s electronic
keyboards and Borges’ percussion, but within moments the music’s distinctive
complexity is apparent, many of the sounds traceable to their acoustic
origins, but nonetheless operating in a transformative state, the three
elaborating waves of sound that might suggest a wholly electronic extension
of an improvising ensemble akin to Cecil Taylor’s trio with Andrew Cyrille
and Jimmy Lyons.
“Parallax” introduces a subtle world of discreet electronic distortions,
near-invocations of piano strings and metallic percussion all of these
combining to suggest alien transmissions from space as well as a distinctly
human music. Just as Alexander Hawkins’ electronic webs on
No Nation But Imagination
can make Nicole Mitchell’s flute seem alien, Van Huffel’s alto here might be
purely acoustic at times, yet his aptitude for abstraction is such that his
alto suggests something quite different, almost a harmonica, its voice
swimming in an electronic maze, until electronic alterations to the
saxophone draw it wholly into an intermediate zone floating between the
acoustic and the electronic.
With the final track, “Hypnopompia”, Van Huffel’s saxophone initially
provides an acoustic line in an alien soundscape, but as the surrounding
sound grows increasingly menacing (there is a suggestion of hybrid alien
predators), his sound gradually mutates, becoming closer and closer to the
world that surrounds him, achieved with a brilliant combination of acoustic
and electronic techniques. As Van Huffel moves further towards the
electronic, Borges briefly inhabits the acoustic role, but the ultimate
group movement will be almost wholly electronic.
These two remarkable recordings together articulate a new terrain,
reflective of an increasingly mediated world, one in which the likelihood of
deception conditions interpretation, one in which art and its appreciation
might increasingly stretch both creative and interpretive acts toward
surveillance.