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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<br />

prominent role with Le Un. Overall his staccato tongue-slapping floats<br />

over lumbering group work then introduces a section characterized<br />

by throbbing bass lines from Victor Aubert and Blaise Chevalier and<br />

climaxes with a dual between violinist Sarah Colomb’s stretched spiccato<br />

and flutist Fanny Ménégoz’s peeping whistles. This dualism is<br />

used to striking effect on other tracks, especially when soloists pop<br />

out of concentrated orchestral motifs before integrating themselves<br />

back into the evolving themes. Confluences and L’Estaca suite’s final<br />

tracks illustrate this. The flutist’s traverse colouration; projected triplets<br />

from trumpeter Xavier Bornens; snorting and searing altissimo<br />

and vibrated split tones from saxophonists Arnaud Sacase (alto), Jean-<br />

François Petitjean (tenor) and Jon Vicuna (baritone); plus Wacrenier’s<br />

staccato vibes chiming and linear piano comping heard briefly but<br />

crucially. Personalizing the packed group improvisations, the narrative<br />

is loosened enough so that the shift to a happy dance rhythm makes<br />

the finale more freylekhs than free jazz. This same balance between<br />

freneticism and facility is expressed on Blooming In Tough Days, the<br />

extended finale of the Fraternity Suite. After exploring motifs encompassing<br />

folkloric harmonies by the three arco string players, gong-like<br />

resonations from the vibes and a touch of drone from concentrated<br />

timbres led by low-pitched piano notes, baritone sax honks and<br />

plucked bass thumps, the group settles into a groove. With portamento<br />

brass scoops, mellow violin glissandi and drummer Benoist<br />

Raffin’s press rolls, the suite and session exit with joyous vamps that<br />

are spirited, streetwise and sophisticated all at once.<br />

There are similar concepts from Vancouver’s Hard Rubber Orchestra<br />

(HRO) on Iguana (Hard Rubber DL hardrubber.com).The urbane<br />

arrangements by leader/trumpeter John Korsrud and others make<br />

it sound as if they’re being played by a larger group whereas the<br />

HRO is usually an octet. Always ready to emphasize the hard in the<br />

group’s name, the tracks often suggest<br />

how a metal band would sound playing all<br />

acoustic instruments. Instances of this are<br />

the extended Source Code, composed and<br />

featuring guitarist Harry Stafylakis and<br />

Korsrud’s Force Majeure. Built up from<br />

buzzy guitar and electric bass riffs and<br />

backbeat drumming from Eliot Doyle, the<br />

often agitated program still finds room for<br />

Mark Ferris’ Baroque-tinged mid-point violin sweeps before a polyphonic<br />

climax-crescendo with every instrument, especially the three<br />

hocketing and harmonized horns projecting at once. Based around a<br />

responsive and repeated chunky pattern by drummers Trent Otter and<br />

Kai Basanta, this background power pushes juddering and ascending<br />

chords from saxophonists Tom Keenlyside and Jon Bentley plus thickened<br />

brass portamento from Jim Hopson’s three low-pitched horns.<br />

Metal doesn’t replace melody however, since Korsrud’s From the Earth<br />

is a veritable piano concerto for Marianne Trudel. As her piano line<br />

evolves with Romantic overtones including waterfalls of notes and<br />

individual plinking, Mike Herriott adds to the Arcadian mood with<br />

overdubbed harmonized French horn, trombone, bass trombone and<br />

flugelhorn textures. Other tracks showcase everything from Vivian<br />

Houle’s alternating banshee-like or warbling vocalizing floating over<br />

electrified violin sweeps and paced by Ron Samworth’s guitar drones,<br />

to the stop-time title track that matches a Latin tinge with driving<br />

plunger brass and Samworth’s string slaps. Overall it appears the HRO<br />

has every part of the sound spectrum covered.<br />

A comparison of the sparse HRO personnel with the many players<br />

involved elsewhere shows how modern large ensemble writing and<br />

playing can take many forms if creativity is in the right hands.<br />

What we're listening to this month: New to the Listening Room<br />

50 Robert Paterson -<br />

String Quartets 1-3<br />

The Indianapolis Quartet<br />

51 Douze guitares à Paris<br />

Forestare, Pascal<br />

Germain-Berardi<br />

51 Beethoven: Complete<br />

Music for Piano and Cello<br />

Robert deMaine and Peter<br />

Takacs<br />

55 Virtuosa<br />

Infusion Baroque<br />

55 Lisztomania Vol. 2<br />

Hando Nahkur<br />

56 Mythes<br />

Ariane Brisson et Olivier<br />

Hébert-Bouchard<br />

56 Souvenirs D'Auguste<br />

Descarries<br />

Isabelle David<br />

57 Calques<br />

Quatuor Umlaut<br />

59 World Premiere Album:<br />

Carl Vine Complete Piano<br />

Sonatas<br />

Xiaoya Liu<br />

59 When Dark Sounds<br />

Collide<br />

Pathos Trio<br />

63 Dream Dancing<br />

Melissa Stylianou<br />

66 Shanties! LIVE<br />

La Nef & Chor Leoni<br />

67 three corners<br />

Hypnosis Negative<br />

Previously reviewed in<br />

Vol. 27 no. 8<br />

41 In the Brink<br />

Bergamot Quartet<br />

Read the reviews here, then visit<br />

thewholenote.com/listening<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong> - <strong>November</strong> 8, <strong>20</strong>22 | 69

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