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Volume 28 Issue 1 | September 20 - November 8, 2022

Our 28th season in print! “And Now, Back to Live Action”; a symphonic-sized listings section, compared to last season; clubs “On the move” ; FuturesStops Festival and Nuit Blanche; “Pianistic high-wire acts”; Season announcements include full-sized choral works like Mendelssohn’s Elijah; “Icons, innovators and renegades” pulling out all the stops.

Our 28th season in print! “And Now, Back to Live Action”; a symphonic-sized listings section, compared to last season; clubs “On the move” ; FuturesStops Festival and Nuit Blanche; “Pianistic high-wire acts”; Season announcements include full-sized choral works like Mendelssohn’s Elijah; “Icons, innovators and renegades” pulling out all the stops.

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slurping and squeezed clarion variations from Kassap who has a less

prominent role with Le Un. Overall his staccato tongue-slapping floats

over lumbering group work then introduces a section characterized

by throbbing bass lines from Victor Aubert and Blaise Chevalier and

climaxes with a dual between violinist Sarah Colomb’s stretched spiccato

and flutist Fanny Ménégoz’s peeping whistles. This dualism is

used to striking effect on other tracks, especially when soloists pop

out of concentrated orchestral motifs before integrating themselves

back into the evolving themes. Confluences and L’Estaca suite’s final

tracks illustrate this. The flutist’s traverse colouration; projected triplets

from trumpeter Xavier Bornens; snorting and searing altissimo

and vibrated split tones from saxophonists Arnaud Sacase (alto), Jean-

François Petitjean (tenor) and Jon Vicuna (baritone); plus Wacrenier’s

staccato vibes chiming and linear piano comping heard briefly but

crucially. Personalizing the packed group improvisations, the narrative

is loosened enough so that the shift to a happy dance rhythm makes

the finale more freylekhs than free jazz. This same balance between

freneticism and facility is expressed on Blooming In Tough Days, the

extended finale of the Fraternity Suite. After exploring motifs encompassing

folkloric harmonies by the three arco string players, gong-like

resonations from the vibes and a touch of drone from concentrated

timbres led by low-pitched piano notes, baritone sax honks and

plucked bass thumps, the group settles into a groove. With portamento

brass scoops, mellow violin glissandi and drummer Benoist

Raffin’s press rolls, the suite and session exit with joyous vamps that

are spirited, streetwise and sophisticated all at once.

There are similar concepts from Vancouver’s Hard Rubber Orchestra

(HRO) on Iguana (Hard Rubber DL hardrubber.com).The urbane

arrangements by leader/trumpeter John Korsrud and others make

it sound as if they’re being played by a larger group whereas the

HRO is usually an octet. Always ready to emphasize the hard in the

group’s name, the tracks often suggest

how a metal band would sound playing all

acoustic instruments. Instances of this are

the extended Source Code, composed and

featuring guitarist Harry Stafylakis and

Korsrud’s Force Majeure. Built up from

buzzy guitar and electric bass riffs and

backbeat drumming from Eliot Doyle, the

often agitated program still finds room for

Mark Ferris’ Baroque-tinged mid-point violin sweeps before a polyphonic

climax-crescendo with every instrument, especially the three

hocketing and harmonized horns projecting at once. Based around a

responsive and repeated chunky pattern by drummers Trent Otter and

Kai Basanta, this background power pushes juddering and ascending

chords from saxophonists Tom Keenlyside and Jon Bentley plus thickened

brass portamento from Jim Hopson’s three low-pitched horns.

Metal doesn’t replace melody however, since Korsrud’s From the Earth

is a veritable piano concerto for Marianne Trudel. As her piano line

evolves with Romantic overtones including waterfalls of notes and

individual plinking, Mike Herriott adds to the Arcadian mood with

overdubbed harmonized French horn, trombone, bass trombone and

flugelhorn textures. Other tracks showcase everything from Vivian

Houle’s alternating banshee-like or warbling vocalizing floating over

electrified violin sweeps and paced by Ron Samworth’s guitar drones,

to the stop-time title track that matches a Latin tinge with driving

plunger brass and Samworth’s string slaps. Overall it appears the HRO

has every part of the sound spectrum covered.

A comparison of the sparse HRO personnel with the many players

involved elsewhere shows how modern large ensemble writing and

playing can take many forms if creativity is in the right hands.

What we're listening to this month: New to the Listening Room

50 Robert Paterson -

String Quartets 1-3

The Indianapolis Quartet

51 Douze guitares à Paris

Forestare, Pascal

Germain-Berardi

51 Beethoven: Complete

Music for Piano and Cello

Robert deMaine and Peter

Takacs

55 Virtuosa

Infusion Baroque

55 Lisztomania Vol. 2

Hando Nahkur

56 Mythes

Ariane Brisson et Olivier

Hébert-Bouchard

56 Souvenirs D'Auguste

Descarries

Isabelle David

57 Calques

Quatuor Umlaut

59 World Premiere Album:

Carl Vine Complete Piano

Sonatas

Xiaoya Liu

59 When Dark Sounds

Collide

Pathos Trio

63 Dream Dancing

Melissa Stylianou

66 Shanties! LIVE

La Nef & Chor Leoni

67 three corners

Hypnosis Negative

Previously reviewed in

Vol. 27 no. 8

41 In the Brink

Bergamot Quartet

Read the reviews here, then visit

thewholenote.com/listening

thewholenote.com September 20 - November 8, 2022 | 69

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