November 17, 2006 |
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Contest of Pleasures
The Albi Days
Potlatch P205
Just as members of the European Union are gradually adopting shared principals, so the members of Contest of Pleasures (COP) from different countries subordinate individual techniques to a group style. Comfortable utilizing the acoustics of a space, multiple mics and post-performance editing to shape and blend their reductionist improvisations, the three have produce a memorable aural soundscape here.
A step forward from COPs first CD in 2000, The Albi Days illuminates how French clarinetist Xavier Charles, German trumpeter Axel Dörner and tenor and British soprano saxophonist John Butcher use wave form modulations and extended techniques as a matter of course. Encompassing pressured staccato timbres plus elongated rumbles and slurs, the five layered, all-acoustic improvisations take on quasi-electronic timbres, especially when hissing flutters and video-game-like fusillade is heard. Very occasionally the three unite for triple counterpoint, three part harmony or startlingly in Dörners or Butchers case let loose with identifiable brassy grace notes or reedy tongue slaps.
Most of the time on these five vegetable-titled tracks however, the instruments are exfoliated sound sources manipulated so that pitches could come from anywhere or nowhere. Blocked valve techniques and pure air forced through the lead pipe characterize the trumpeters contribution along with steady mouthpiece osculation. As for the reedists, watery whistles, key percussion and snorted vibrato, plus out-and-out overblowing are just the beginning of their techniques.
Invariably not only is the note sounded, but so are its ancillary metallic reverberations. Creating their own versions of sequenced feedback with tremolo slurs, the trio also exposes digging-animal scratches, floor-to-ceiling echoing buzzes and the sound of a tennis ball being battered back-and-forth and stretched rubber hitting a solid surface.
Most dramatic are the passages that conclude Winter Squash where focused reed growls and blocked valve output build to shattering crescendo then shrivel into nearly inaudible heard tongue slaps and bell squeaks. Careful listening to the CDs gradually unrolling textures repeatedly reveals further unique sequences.
— Ken Waxman
Track Listing: 1. Les Oignons 2. Garden Cress 3. Winter Squash 4. Karfiol 5. Les Cornichons
Personnel: Axel Dörner (trumpet); Xavier Charles (clarinet) and John Butcher (tenor and soprano saxophones)