Carlos Santos is among the most active members of Lisbon’s very active improvising music community, witness his roles in Creative Sources Recordings. He is regularly responsible for recording, mixing and mastering the label’s Lisbon projects, has constant credits as designer and figures regularly in both label head Ernesto Rodrigues’ numerous orchestral projects and in many small groups as well, contributing imaginative work with computers and synthesizers. Santos comes wholly to the fore in these two recent recordings, both as performer and processor in the finished works. Lisbon must set a record for per capita improvising cellists, among them Miguel Mira, Ricardo Jacinto, Helena Espvall and sometimes Fred Lonberg-Holm. On these recordings, Santos is joined by Lisboan cellist Guilherme Rodrigues who lives in Germany and doesn’t actually play cello here, and Ulrich Mitzlaff, a German cellist who has long lived in Lisbon. Each performance becomes a kind of trans-spatial utopia, whether the musicians occupy different times and places or are creating together in the same room.
Guilherme Rodrigues and Carlos Santos - Uncommon Symmetries (Creative Sources Recordings, 2020)
The shruti box is one of the world’s great sounds, part of the hyper-resonant world of Indian music that speaks directly to eternity, the tamboura string drone, the resonant gourds of the principal string instruments, the nasal wail of the shehnai conjoined with circular breathing, all calling out towards infinity and all combining happily with the mechanized eternity of electronic drones. At the outset the sound appears to be shruti box alone, but other continuous sounds join in, some lower, some of greater density, some emphasizing the accordion-like voice, others with different sonic characters, suggesting an organ’s greater range, that last effect growing richer as the piece ensues. There are moments of silence and towards the end, bird voices appear, the natural world (or something very much like it) taking up residence amidst the merge of acoustic and digital sounds until the bird sounds alone persist. The cumulative effect is trans-spatial, worlds converging, combining and dissolving into one another in an act of singular transcendence.
I/O (Carlos Santos and Ulrich Mitzlaff) – Studies on Colour Field Modulation (Creative Sources Recordings, 2021)
The second piece, “Orange”, develops the remarkable synergy that concludes “Blue”, Mitzlaff initially creating an intense upper register pattern that activates the lower sympathetic resonance of the cello’s body. From there, Santos creates fields of droning resonant sound, picking up materials from the cello, expanding and supplementing them with his own battery of blips and whirrs and continuous sounds until the music is a rich field of strings and electronics, an electroacoustic trans-spatial orchestra seemingly hanging in a cathedral-like hyper-resonance, all interactions and meanings expanding exponentially.
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