By Nick Metzger
The acclaimed composer Ellen Fullman began her work with the Long String
Instrument (LSI) over 30 years ago in her Brooklyn studio. For our readers
unfamiliar with her work, the Long String Instrument is a 56-string
installation that Fullman uses to explore the acoustics of large resonant
spaces. Per Fullman's website, the instrument can be as short as 16 meters
but she prefers 20 meters or more (it's 26 meters on this recording).
Fullman plays the strings with rosined fingers, rubbing them lengthwise as
she walks the instrument's span inducing vibration in the same manner as a
bow. The instrument itself has its roots in antiquity, back to Pythagoras’
monochord and the study of the vibrating string itself. Alvin Lucier noted
as much about Fullman’s work with the LSI in his book Music 109: Notes on Experimental Music, “She (Fullman) said that
the activity of its composition had become her personal music school. It
led her to read and study as the information she sought got put to use in
very practical ways, and that the piece is a microcosm of the history of
music.” The sound of the LSI is somewhat relatable to that of a tanpura or
shruti in that it produces a continuous harmonic bourdon; however the sound
of the LSI is more complex. What's very interesting is the instruments’
gradual shifts in timbre due to the changes in overtones produced based on
where the strings are being contacted at any given instant, and the
acoustic relationship of the instrument to the space in which it's
installed. It's a full, ancient sound that seems almost sentient. In
addition to her numerous compositions for the LSI, Fullman also likes to
engage in collaborative improvisations with like-minded artists.
On the new release from John Chandler's 1703 Skivbolaget label, The Air
Around Her, Fullman is joined by the brilliant cellist Okkyung Lee,
herself an acclaimed composer and a longtime favorite of the Collective.
Just last year Lee released an
exceptional album
of improvisations recorded inside the Emanuel Vigeland Mausoleum in Oslo,
Norway, which she filled to capacity with the dense and physical energy of
her playing. On this recording the two artists met up in Stockholm for the
First Edition Festival for Other Music on February 20, 2016. The LSI was
installed within the Kronobageriet, the oldest surviving industrial
building in Stockholm. It has been used over the centuries for arms and
firewood storage, but the main faculty for the past 300 years has been
baking bread for the Swedish military. The cover of the record features
artwork by Bill Nace, whose distinct visual signature has adorned several
terrific records as of late.
The Air Around Her is divided into two side-long parts, each with its own
specific character. The first part swells from nothing finding Fullman’s
thick drone of overtones taking the foreground as Lee, using a wide arco
here, blissfully traverses the gorgeous soundscape with her dynamic
glissandos and squeaking and/or groaning accents. There are passages where
Lee begins at a lower pitch than the LSI and then will swoop up into
unison, or vise-versa, to stunning effect. Lee is a deft improviser and
doesn’t ever compete with Fullman for space, realizing the futility of such
an enterprise. To use a metaphor, it’s as if Fullman conjures a vast ocean
of sound from her instrument and Lee is the lively penguin, darting
playfully and jubilantly in and about her currents. The second part again
begins with swells of harmonics and overtones from Fullman, while Lee plays
runs of soft notes in pizzicato (this being the major change from the first
section). Fullman’s playing is more varied on this part, the shades of haze
she stirs up are more colorful and the drone is more dynamic in that there
are some discernable peaks and valleys towards the middle of the piece. Lee
picks her bow back up for the final quarter of the album, swooping through
and around the Fullman’s din, breaking the quiescence occasionally with her
forceful cuts of turbulence.
2 comments:
Here's some footage of the LSI:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HJHmsTk303Q
Great footage!
Here's another recent album of Fullman's, a completely different style altogether that shows the possibilities of improvising with the LSI:
https://focslemusic.com/album/pink-sea-thrift
Post a Comment
Please note that comments on posts do not appear immediately - unfortunately we must filter for spam and other idiocy.