By
Martin Schray
Founded in 1921 the Donaueschinger Musiktage is an annual festival for
contemporary music that takes place on the third weekend of October. It
consists exclusively of world premieres and is internationally regarded as
the oldest and most important festival for this kind of music. The first
concert 97 years ago featured the Quartet for two Violins, Viola and Violoncello, op. 16 by Paul
Hindemith. Subsequently, world premieres of works by Alban Berg, Arnold
Schönberg, Anton Webern, Karl-Heinz Stockhausen and Pierre Boulez took place
there (actually, almost every important composer for new music had a
program focus at the festival). In 1970 the Musiktage also opened up to new
forms of jazz, displaying works by Wolfgang Dauner and his composition for
five musicians, a choir, three amplifiers, six boxes, three reverberators,
three wireless and other microphones, two potentiometers, record players,
tape recorder, optical devices, and other various instruments, as well as
Albert von Schlippenbach's premiere of Globe Unity 70, Peter
Brötzmann’s Drunken in the Morning Sunrise, Manfred
Schoof's Ode for Free-Jazz-Ensemble and Sun Ra’s Black Forest.
In 1996 the management of the SWR broadcasting
station informed the other organisers that they will have to reduce
their financial commitment by 50 per cent from 1998 on and that the aim was to
turn the festival into a biennale. However, a worldwide unique international
wave of protest forced them to come up with a new financing
concept which included public and private sponsors. Nevertheless, especially
the new jazz section has had to cut back its expenses, only two program
items could be maintained. Since 2013 Julia Neupert has been in charge of
this part of the festival. Among others she organised Mazen Kerbaj's ARIHA
Trumpet Ensemble and Lotte Anker’s Electric and Acoustic Habitat. In 2016
Okkyung Lee’s Cheol-Kkot-Sae (Steel.Flower.Bird) was on the program.
Okkyung Lee’s idea was to bring together all her musical influences,
beginning with the music of her childhood. "As a child in Korea my formal
musical training was largely based on the European Classical tradition and
its ideal sense of beauty. It never occurred tome how absurd it was that I
was never asked to study Korean traditional music", she says in the liner
notes. Later she listened to a lot of pop music and other stuff but when
she was studying in Boston she realised that she was
singing Korean traditional songs whenever she was alone. She wondered
whether she was connected to these melodies because of her Korean heritage
and if these melodies were in her musical DNA. So it seemed
almost logical that her project for the Musiktage had her
examine her Korean roots in order to combine them with noise and improvised
music. According to Cecil Taylor’s famous quote that the composition begins
with the selection of the players she chose an all-star band which included
herself on cello, Song-hee Kwon (vocals), Jae-hyo Chang (Korean traditional
percussion), Ches Smith (drums and percussion), John Butcher (saxophones),
John Edwards (bass) and Lasse Marhaug (electronics).
Cheol-Kkot-Sae
is a long form piece with a coda, but actually it can be divided into several
parts, which are introduced by solos. At first Song-hee Kwon begins with
traditional Pansori singing. She is accompanied by Lee's cello however, the
piece is soon 'disturbed' by noise parts. Marhaug’s electronics sound as if
he was tearing up the sheet music, while gradually the other instruments
are added timidly to the whole (except for the saxophone). Lee's cello is
like a humming insect flying through the music of the others.
In the following there are several fixed points that structure the
composition: Edwards' bass repeating a small riff, a brutal noise attack by
Marhaug, drums/percussion solos by Jae-hyo Chang and Smith, as well
as little melodies by Lee and Kwon. In the first part the traditional Pansori
vocals become more and more intense, merging with the improvised cello,
bass and saxophone parts, but in between there’s always room for tender
passages, for example John Butcher's almost classical saxophone solo. On
the one hand the music is an orgy of scraping, scratching, rattling,
rumbling. The roaring volume and tempo of the playing, the rhythmic
contrasts and the different sound colours make the composition so exciting
and forceful. On the other hand there are quieter parts as well, when the
electronics beep, hum and hiss, before the vocals creep in very dominantly.
It's as if Lee's musical past always shines through. Natural sounds and
tradition penetrate the modern influences again and again- this seems to be
another structural leitmotif of the music. Finally, Lee’s duo with Song-hee
Kwon sets the final point, the piece returns to the beginning.
Cheol-Kkot-Sae
is an outstanding combination of improvised and world music. It’s one of
the best albums in 2018.
The album is available as a CD. You can buy it here:
www.downtownmusicgallery.com
or from the label's website.
4 comments:
Thank you, Martin! Excellent, highly informative review. I've been spinning this at least once nearly every week since release; definitely a keeper from 2018.
I've been thinking of getting this for a while; this review got me to pull the trigger.
Really wonderful review, Martin. I absolutely love this album. Captain Hate, you won’t be disappointed.
Okkyung Lee doesn't release cd's very often, so it's always a wonderful experience to hear something new from her and this does not disappoint!
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