Philharmonia/Shani review – fast-rising conductor shapes and steers Mahler’s monster | Classical music


Still in his early 30s, Lahav Shani has been chief conductor of the Rotterdam Philharmonic since 2018, and two years ago became music director of the Israel Philharmonic too. He’s one of the most upwardly mobile conductors around today. In the UK, however, he remains little known, even though he made his debut with the LSO in 2019 and, as this concert demonstrated, he has begun to forge a productive relationship with the Philharmonia, returning this time to conduct Mahler’s Sixth Symphony.

There’s a brisk directness to Shani’s baton-less approach, and the Philharmonia seem to respond to it superbly. His tempo for the opening Allegro was on the fast side, which may have generated superficial excitement, but rather deprived the movement (which is marked “intense but pithy”) of some of the ominous weight that defines the symphony’s tragic journey. It also jarred with Shani’s decision to revert to Mahler’s original order for the central pair of movements, placing the Scherzo before the Andante. The sense of that manic section reinforcing the tragic insistence of the opening movement was diminished as a result, though it was followed by a wonderfully buoyant, rhapsodically shaped account of the Andante.

The huge finale of this symphony always presents the biggest interpretative challenges, and those were met head on and surmounted and the monstrous structure was steered towards its final catastrophe.

Before the symphony there had been a work contemporary with it, Sibelius’s Violin Concerto, in which Lisa Batiashvili was the soloist. Her performance was compelling from the very first bar as she launched the concerto with the most daring of pianissimos, which Shani and the orchestra perfectly matched. It set the tone for a reading that was full of elegance and subtlety. Batiashvili’s virtuosity was as exceptional as ever, but it was never flaunted for its own sake; as she demonstrated, there’s much more to this concerto than empty showmanship.

Left Me Standing In The Pouring Rain: Lewis Hiller remembers the pain so vividly on Quite the Show – Independent Music – New Music


https://open.spotify.com/track/5xMSJXrVilwXm9eVcvbFSM?si=ByvxQb_MSfyXsAf_A1ev8A&nd=1

Knowing that she has gone with a rather cold exit, Lewis Hiller decides to move on and only fly into a peaceful universe again on the excellent Quite the Show.

Lewis Hiller is a Portsmouth, UK-based indie singer-songwriter who is best known for his deep lyrics and the debut single And I’ll Tell You Again.

A written response and inspired from the former lover’s perspective. It captures the heartbreaking feelings of what it’s like to lose someone [to someone else].” ~ Lewis Hiller

Dynamic and thoroughly breathless at times, Lewis Hiller drops one of the best singles ever to get over a cruel ex who walked away like it was nothing. He sings with a special energy which transports us into a world of sadness, which is next to the door of freedom, too.

Quite the Show from Portsmouth, UK-based indie singer-songwriter Lewis Hiller is a breakup single to play loud if that crushing heartbreak gets too much sometimes. After dealing with a mysterious force that eventually broke his spirit into tiny fragments scattered all over the wet floor, this is a brave single of much substance.

Getting over that unexplainable special force is the key to being happy again.

Listen up to this top new single on Spotify. See more news on the IG.

Reviewed by Llewelyn Screen



Northern Ireland Country Music Awards 2023 – Photo 1 of 1


Are you looking the perfect gift to give to your family or friends this Christmas?

Or maybe you just want something to look forward to after the festive season.

Well, why not secure your place at the biggest country music event of the year – The Northern Ireland Country Music Awards 2023 as voted by the public!

A host of favourite stars including ]current leading artists Derek Ryan, Robert Mizzell, Lee Matthews, David James, Liam Kelly, Owen Mac, Patricia Maguire, Paul Kelly, John Rafferty & Shauna McStravock will be taking part.

There will also be new and upcoming stars like youngest performer, 14 year old Cailin Joe, direct from performing on RTE’s Late Late toy show, Country singer & Garth Brooks tribute Neil Hobson (BBC There’s no place like Tyrone) and the beautiful, talented Sinead Heaney (granddaughter of Susan McCann).

Of course the event would not be complete without the Queen of Country for 60 years, Philomena Begley. And there will be other legends including gentleman Billy McFarland who will be officially recognised for his unbelievable and huge contribution of 75 years in the industry.

The evening will be hosted by Industry Professional Professional Malcolm McDowell & Sky Tv’s Natasha Magee.

Also taking part are Special Co Hosts 1st Lady Susan McCann and the legendary Downtown presenter Big T who celebrates 50 years as our ambassador and leading radio presenter.

Tickets are only available online and are emailed directly to you after purchase.

Unreserved Cabaret Style Round Tables & Spacious Seating.

Doors open 7:30 Show Starts 8pm.

Tickets £25+ Booking Fee

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/445161519087



Music’s ‘Mona Lisa’ | Coeur d’Alene Press



Gary Edwards, for the first time later this month, will venture into New York City.

The Post Falls man has good reason.

He wrote the music for a musical comedy, “Stealing Mona Lisa,” which opens Dec. 22 at the Theater for the New City.

The 81-year-old Edwards plans to be there for opening night and the next night, as well.

It’s one part of an epic trip.

On Dec. 20, Edwards plans to attend the premiere of a Christmas cantata he composed in 1992 with Sandra Lewis-Pringle called “Night of A Miracle” at Chun University in Charlton, N.C.

It is, Edwards said, a big deal.

“It’s farther than I’ve ever gone before,” he said with a smile.

Which is pretty far.

Edwards has written eight musicals, three screenplays and 17 books and 14 music CDs including country, classical, rock, pop, jazz, gospel and two Spanish-inspired CDs. More than 50 of his video productions have been broadcast on CMTV Channel 14 in Comcast Cable in Spokane.

A colleague, Orland Sanchez, nicknamed him “Mr. Music Man.”

“It’s been a wonderful life including my quest to be a rock star and maybe some day I will achieve that goal,” he said.

While his main mark is in music, he has left his imprint in other areas, including arts and civil rights.

He was nominated three times for the Coeur d’Alene Mayor’s Awards in The Arts and once for the Governor’s Award in the Arts.

He was arrested in 1998 for refusing to surrender the stick for the picket sign he was carrying to protest an Aryan Nations parade in Coeur d’Alene. He later won the case in the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

“I got a new boat out of the deal,” Edwards said, laughing. “I gave it to a Gospel Mission when I got done with it.”

Stealing Mona Lisa is directed by Jack Ligenza. Edwards describes it as “a fantasy twist” to a version of a true story about the theft in the Louvre in the 1950s.

“I’ve seen videos of the rehearsals and it’s looking good,” Edwards said. “The choreography, the dancing, everything is coming together.

He hopes it could be the start of something big.

“Well, if it’s a big hit, yeah, I wouldn’t mind having a show on Broadway. That would be fun,” he said.

Edwards has been performing and writing music most of his life. Growing up, he recalled that his family was homeless for a time and lived in his uncle’s garage in Los Angeles.

It was then he found music. Or it found him.

“I’d sit and watch my dad writing music with a friend that knew how to write sheet music, and that was one of the strongest memories of my childhood was watching them create music together,” he said.

His father, Donald, sang an original song, with a relative on piano, on “The Gong Show” in the 1970s. He was gonged, which meant he was done.

“He was so discouraged, and he gave up,” Gary Edwards said. “I never gave up.”

Edwards, born in Spokane and raised in Coeur d’Alene, graduated from Coeur d’Alene High School in 1959. He attended two years at the University of Idaho and graduated from the Indiana University School of Music in 1964 with a minor in Spanish.

He taught public school music and played fifth bass in the Louisville Symphony for two years. He got involved in civil rights and joined the Peace Corps in 1965, where he served in Santiago, Chile.

He worked for years as a composer, videographer, editor and Spanish translator. He started a social services agency, retired around 2002 and served with nonprofits, including Fresh Start and Big Brothers/Big Sisters.

Through it all, Edwards was composing and playing music. He performed with rock bands to ensembles and symphonies. He was in the Desert Rose Band up until a few years ago, when it stopped performing due to COVID-19.

While having his music in “Stealing Mona Lisa” is a career highlight, Edwards is confident the best is yet to come.

“I’ve got my life’s work wrapped up in this last piece that I still haven’t gotten performed yet,” he said.

Edwards pulls out a book of story and music. It is his recently composed opera, “Qualchan & Whistalks.”

He says it’s his attempt to educate the nation of the true story of the conquest of the natives that Edwards didn’t learn about in school.

Here’s how he described it:

“Qualchan is in love with Whistalks but their romance is constantly interrupted by calls to battle the incursions of Euro-Americans and the U.S. Army, which is threatening the Yakamas’ 10,000-year history in North America, where they will lose their culture, their language, their art, their traditions and ultimately their lives.”

“This will be my last line of work summed up into one epic piece of music and story,” Edwards said.

At 81, Edwards lives in Post Falls with his wife of 46 years. A diet devoid of sugar and an exercise routine that includes a lot of walking keeps his mind sharp and body strong.

It enabled him to recover from a vehicle accident a year ago that left him in the hospital six weeks.

“My left leg is still bad. It doesn’t hurt, but it’s numb all day long,” said Edwards, who uses a cane. “I don’t walk so good anymore. That slowed me down a little bit.”

But not stopped.

Whatever he’s doing, music will be there.

“It’s like breathing. You can’t stop doing it,” he said. “It just comes naturally. It’s in the blood. I can’t not write.”

The reinvention of indie music, chapter one


As far as the national press cared, Chicago’s 1990s indie-rock scene revolved around Smashing Pumpkins, Liz Phair, and Urge Overkill. I won’t say anything one way or the other about the merit of those artists, but their success had the felicitous side effect of persuading major labels to slosh irresponsible amounts of money around the city—and local labels, producers, and musicians used that money to do much more interesting things. 

One of the local labels that arose in this environment was Kranky, founded in 1993 by Bruce Adams and Joel Leoschke. Like Drag City and Thrill Jockey, two of its best-known peers from that era, Kranky (styled “kranky” by the label) was uncompromising in its aesthetic choices—in fact, one of its early slogans was “What we want, when you need it.” Unlike those operations, though, Kranky stayed small. When the label matured in the late 90s, it was averaging just eight or nine releases per year—but its influence has long been hugely out of proportion with its size. 

In the pre-Internet era, when albums had to be physically shipped, Chicago remained an important hub of music-industry infrastructure even as its other industries withered. Adams worked for a suburban distributor called Kaleidoscope in the late 80s (it also employed Drag City founders Dan Koretzky and Dan Osborn), and a few years later he befriended Leoschke while they were colleagues at Cargo, a major distributor of indie labels. Musicians often worked at distributors, labels, venues, recording studios, publicity firms, or college radio stations, and even if they didn’t, they knew people who did. This helped trigger an explosion of grassroots collaborations, with noise-rock players rubbing elbows with folks operating in avant-garde jazz, electronic dance, psychedelia, ambient music, and more.

Adams and Leoschke contributed to this wildly fertile hybridization by opening a door from indie rock into an almost otherworldly space—one that rewards “concentration, stillness, and the abandonment of preexisting structures and conventions,” as Jordan Reyes put it in the Reader in 2018. “Kranky debuted with Prazision, a beautifully glacial album by Virginia drone-rock trio Labradford,” he wrote, “and since then it’s maintained a focus on meticulous, entrancing sounds, sometimes understated and ghostly . . . and sometimes towering and awe inspiring.”

Labradford’s 1993 album Prazision, the first Kranky release, has proved enduringly influential.

Kranky began working with its best-known artists in the late 90s: it released three albums by Minnesota trio Low before their move to Sub Pop, and it issued the CD version of the debut full-length by Montreal collective Godspeed You! Black Emperor, F♯ A♯ ∞, followed by Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven. But by then the label’s sonic territory—lush and caustic, serene and uneasy—had already been staked out by the likes of Labradford, Jessamine, Bowery Electric, and Stars of the Lid.

Bowery Electric helped define the Kranky sound with their 1995 debut album.

“At a certain point, an aesthetic started to congeal,” Adams told Reader critic Peter Margasak in a 1998 label profile. “I always think of it as the intersection where our tastes overlap with the economic possibilities of who we can work with.”

The label developed a distinctive personality too: austere, remote, and quietly, somewhat cryptically playful, with a sprinkling of what Margasak called “almost recreational negativity.” The title of Adams’s recent book about Kranky and its milieu, set mostly in the 90s and early 2000s, comes from another label slogan: You’re With Stupid: Kranky, Chicago, and the Reinvention of Indie Music.

Latter-day Kranky artists include Liz Harris’s project Grouper.

After Adams sold his share of Kranky to Leoschke in 2005, he ran a low-key imprint called Flingco Sound System for more than a decade. He now lives in Urbana. Leoschke is in Portland, Oregon, as is the Kranky warehouse. The label’s other staffer, Brian Foote, does management and promo work in Los Angeles. Kranky’s latter-day artists include Tim Hecker and Grouper. 

This excerpt from You’re With Stupid (published by the University of Texas Press) is drawn from two different spots in the book. It sets the stage for the launch of Kranky and describes the community of musicians that Adams and Leoschke helped shape with their stubbornly idiosyncratic ears and prescient vision. Philip Montoro


Bruce Adams cofounded the Kranky label in 1993 and sold his stake to Joel Leoschke, the other founder, in 2005. His book You’re With Stupid covers mostly the years 1991 till 2002. Credit: Photo of Bruce Adams by Annie F. Adams

From You’re With Stupid: Kranky, Chicago, and the Reinvention of Indie Music by Bruce Adams

The story of kranky is a Chicago story. In the early eighties, as a global music underground was developing, a network of wholesale music distributors, independent record labels, clubs, recording studios, college radio stations, and DIY publications established themselves in Chicago. The city had been a center of the recorded music business since 1913, when the Brunswick Company started making phonograph machines and pressing vinyl. Chicago had been home to jazz pioneers Jelly Roll Morton, King Oliver, and Louis Armstrong for a brief, impactful time. In the 1950s Chess Records was a force in the blues and R&B scenes. Alligator Records was an independent blues label started in 1971. But the founding of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (or AACM) in 1965 is what created the precedent and working model for independent organization and avant-garde music in the city that eventually was reflected in house music and underground rock. AACM’s self-reliance and the border-crossing devotion of related musicians who incorporated ancient African music into the creation of future-facing music put Chicago on the map of innovative and independent music centers.

It was possible to get cheap apartments to live in or practice space for your band or even a storefront to open a distributor or store. The hollowing of the city’s industrial base had left empty warehouses and business spaces that were ideal for multiple activities, especially for anyone willing to live near a highway, train line, or in a low-income or overlooked neighborhood. One point of origin for house music was an underground club called “The Warehouse.”

The people behind the bars or record store counters, or piling the boxes up in warehouses, were often musicians, or artists, or both. Well-stocked record stores and distributors brought records into the city, giving people opportunities to listen to and process music. The radio provided access to multiple college stations playing a dizzying variety of music. Rent was cheap enough that people didn’t need full-time jobs and could pursue their enthusiasms. David Sims of The Jesus Lizard moved to Chicago in 1989 and recalled in the free weekly the Chicago Reader in 2017 that the band’s landlord “raised the rent on the apartment five dollars a month every year. When we moved in it was $625 a month, and when I left 11 years later it was $675 a month.” My experience was similar.

Stars of the Lid released their magnum opus—a three-LP album—through Kranky in 2001.

If you were a music lover but not a musician, you could work for a music-related business or start your own. Self-published fanzines popped up, and people had workspaces where they could screen print posters and T-shirts for bands. The major labels and national media were located on the coasts, lessening the temptation for bands to angle for the attention of the star-maker machinery. The circuitous impact of all the above was meaningful in shaping how and why Chicago would become the fertile center of the American indie rock scene, and why it produced so much music that broke the stylistic molds of that scene. 

I moved to Chicago from Ann Arbor, Michigan, in the summer of 1987. I shared a house with a roommate from Michigan in a northside neighborhood called Bowmanville and started work in a suburb called Des Plaines, right by O’Hare. It was at a distributor called Kaleidoscope, run by the unforgettable Nick Hadjis, whom everybody called Nick the Greek. His brother Dmitri had a store in Athens and promoted shows for American bands like LA’s industrial/tribal/psychedelic outfit Savage Republic. Kaleidoscope was a common starting point for enterprising young music folks seeking to enter the grassroots music business within Chicago. People came in from downstate Illinois or Louisville, Kentucky, or Austin, Texas, and worked there before they went off into the city to work at the growing Wax Trax! and Touch & Go operations. Bands were starting their own labels to record and release their music, following the pattern established by the SST and Dischord labels. In those pre-Internet times, scenes grew up around successful bands who distributed their singles via touring the country, getting fanzine coverage, and garnering college radio airplay. The seven-inch single, LP, and tape cassette were the preferred formats for these bands and labels.

Kranky coreleased Godspeed You! Black Emperor’s debut album with the Constellation label.

Two guys named Dan (Koretzky and Osborn, respectively) who worked at Kaleidoscope had been impressed, and rightly so, by a self-released, self-titled album by the duo Royal Trux that Kaleidoscope stocked. A little later, I had a single called “Slay Tracks 1933:1969” self-released by the band Pavement firmly pressed into my hands by one or another Dan and was informed that only a thousand were pressed. I bought it that day. Dan Koretzky and Dan Osborn each worked at the distributor, had experience at Northwestern’s WNUR radio station, and were strategically placed to discover and make contact with new bands. They reached out to Royal Trux and Pavement, started a label called Drag City in 1988, and began releasing records in 1989. In a similar process, Joel Leoschke and I would start kranky after hearing the first single from an unknown ambient duo from Richmond called Labradford four years later. 

Low were one of Kranky’s other best-known signings.

In the economic sense and at the label level, independent or “indie” refers to a means of production and distribution. Independent labels operated outside the fiscal control of major labels and multinationals that owned them; the so-called “Big Six” of the Warner Music Group, EMI, Sony Music, BMG, PolyGram, and Universal that operated from 1988 to 1999. Indie labels arranged and paid for manufacturing themselves and were distributed at least in part by independent distributors like Chicago-based Cargo, or Mordam Records in San Francisco, who sourced records from hundreds of labels around the world and got them into record shops domestically.

The levels of economic independence labels exercised were on a spectrum. So, for example, hardcore punk records on the Washington, DC, Dischord label were manufactured by the British independent distributor Southern Records, which also provided European manufacturing and distribution for a consortium of mostly British labels. Although Chicago-based Touch & Go Records were also distributed by Southern in Europe, the label arranged and financed its own manufacturing. By necessity, most labels had to interact with multinationals, and those interactions also existed along a spectrum. The psych pop Creation label, home to My Bloody Valentine and Oasis, and grindcore pioneers Earache Records with Napalm Death and Godflesh started out as independents in England and were eventually manufactured and distributed in North America by Sony. RED, originally an independent distributor called Important, was eventually acquired by Sony. Virgin/EMI Records opened Caroline Records and Distribution in 1983 in New York. Touch & Go was distributed by both of these distributors.

On Kranky’s early roster, Jessamine stood out as one of the more rock-leaning acts.

Labels turned artists’ recordings and artwork into LPs, singles, cassettes, and compact discs. Parts were shepherded through the manufacturing process, and finished products were received and warehoused somewhere, be it someone’s closet, basement, or a wholesale distributor, and then scheduled for shipment to record stores and mail-order customers. Stores needed to know what was arriving when in order to predictably stock their shelves, and so release schedules had to be created, coordinated, and adhered to. Likewise, fanzines, the magazines created by dedicated fans/amateur writers, and radio stations had to be serviced with promotional or “play” copies of releases so that reviews were run and music was played on air when records arrived in stores or as close to that time as possible. If there was enough money available, advertising would accompany the release. Some labels had paid staff or volunteers who promoted records; others hired agencies. If bands were touring, stock had to be ready for them to sell on the road. And if a label wanted to export releases or had a European distributor, the schedule had to be aligned with the logistics of overseas shipping and sales. At any step in the process of releasing music—manufacturing, shipping, or distribution—a label could easily find itself doing business with a multinational. Complete self-sufficiency and independence for record labels was virtually impossible in practice. It’s fair to say that the greater the degree of economic independence a label possessed, the more aesthetic leeway it had to operate with.

There was something about the Chicago music scene that is harder to quantify, but definitely existed: an attitude of mutual support and aid. When I worked at Kaleidoscope, my coworkers were in bands like Eleventh Dream Day and the Jesus Lizard. At Cargo, many of the employees were in bands and would show up at each other’s shows to lend support. This was, to some extent, an inheritance from the early days of the hardcore punk rock circuit, when bands had to depend on each other to organize and pull off shows. I had seen the ethos in action when I roadied for Laughing Hyenas and saw how they coordinated with the Milwaukee band Die Kreuzen to perform together in weekend shows across the Midwest. This do-it-yourself, or DIY, approach worked for sound engineers like Steve Albini and John McEntire who had begun as musicians. As David Trumfio puts it, “Touring and meeting other people on a similar path was very important to keeping my focus. Being a musician is and was essential to being a successful engineer and/or producer in my opinion. You have to have that perspective to know how to relate to the people you’re recording.” As groups returned to Chicago from touring, they offered reciprocal aid to bands they played with in other cities. Tortoise provided space in their loft to Stereolab, and Carter Brown from Labradford sold equipment to Douglas McCombs from Tortoise. In Chicago, musicians performed and recorded together, crossing over genre boundaries to interact. Tom Windish summarizes it by saying, “It wasn’t like the Touch & Go people couldn’t be friends with the Drag City people or the Wax Trax! people couldn’t be friends with the Bloodshot people.” Brent Gutzeit, who came to Chicago from Kalamazoo, Michigan, in late 1995, describes the scene: “Everybody was jamming with each other. Jazz dudes playing alongside experimental/noise musicians, punk kids and no wave folks. Ken Vandermark was setting up improv and jazz shows at the Bop-Shop and Hot House. Michael Zerang set up shows at Lunar Cabaret. Fireside Bowl had punk shows as well as experimental stuff. Lounge Ax always had great rock shows. Empty Bottle used to have a lot of great shows. I set up jazz and experimental shows at Roby’s on Division. Then there was Fred Anderson’s Velvet Lounge down on the southside. There were underground venues like ODUM, Milk of Burgundy, and Magnatroid where the no wave and experimental bands would play. Even smaller independent cafés like the Nervous Center in Lincoln Square and Lula Cafe in Logan Square hosted experimental shows. There was no pressure to be a ‘rock star’ and nobody had big egos. There was a lot of crossover in band members, which influenced rock bands to venture into the outer peripheries of music, which provided musical growth in the ‘rock’ scene.”

Kranky has worked with a few Chicago projects, among them Robert A.A. Lowe’s Lichens.

Ken Vandermark breaks down the resources and people who made Chicago such an exciting city to be in: “A combination of creative factors fell into place in Chicago during the mid-’90s that was unique to any city I’ve seen before or since. A large number of innovative musicians, working in different genres, were living very close to each other. Key players had been developing their ideas for years, and many were roughly the same age—from their late twenties to early thirties. A number of adventurous music journalists, also in the same age group, were starting to get published in established Chicago periodicals. People who ran the venues who presented the cutting-edge music were of this generation too. Music listings for more avant-garde material were getting posted effectively online. All of this activity coalesced at the same time, without any one individual ‘controlling’ it. And there was an audience hungry to hear what would happen next, night after night.”

Bill Meyer sees this cooperative spirit from the independent scene of the mid-1990s in present-day Chicago: “I describe it as an act of collective will. This thing exists because it does not exist in this way, anywhere else in the world. What we have now are people who really want to get together. They will rehearse each other’s pieces and they will be in each other’s bands. They don’t resent each other’s successes. If you go to New York, there’s a lot of people doing things, but there’s also a lot more hierarchy involved. You don’t have that here. And I think that to some extent, the Touch & Go aesthetic imported over into the people who came after Ken Vandermark and were very attentive to that kind of thing.”

Kranky has been around long enough for its newer artists to be influenced by the label’s early output.

In Chicago, 1998 was a year of significant releases from Tortoise, Gastr del Sol, and the Touch & Go edition of the Dirty Three’s Ocean Songs. The latter was an Australian band made up of violinist Warren Ellis, drummer Jim White, and guitarist Mick Turner. Their fourth album was recorded in Chicago by Steve Albini and is one of the most accurately titled ever. Ocean Songs ebbs and flows with the trio’s interplay and became very popular with rock fans who may have been familiar with the Touch & Go label but were otherwise unenthusiastic about the new bands in Chicago. In performance, the Dirty Three were dynamic, with Ellis being particularly charismatic. White moved to the city and contributed to the Boxhead Ensemble and numerous recording sessions. Drag City released Gastr del Sol’s Camofleur, solo records from Grubbs, and a triple-LP/double-CD compilation of Stereolab tracks called Aluminum Tunes. Thrill Jockey were channeling the Tortoise TNT album through Touch & Go Distribution.

The Chicago scene was producing an incredible range of music. Lisa Bralts-Kelly observes that unlike earlier in the decade, when groups moved to Seattle to make it as grunge stars, “Nobody came to Chicago to sound like Smashing Pumpkins or Liz Phair.” And unlike centers of the “industry” like New York City and Los Angeles, prone to waves of hype that focused on a few bands, as occurred with the Strokes beginning in 2001, a multitude of Chicago bands could develop, connect with supportive labels, and build an audience.


Used with permission from the University of Texas Press, © 2022

Tõnis Kaumann – Ave Maria


For those of a Catholic persuasion, today is one of the days devoted to Mary in the liturgical calendar, so it’s as good a time as any to feature in my Advent Calendar a setting of Ave Maria by Estonian composer Tõnis Kaumann. A few years ago i explored Kaumann’s Ave maris stella, and described how it functioned in a permutational way, moving between different options to create a simple but ever-changing music. His Ave Maria, composed six years earlier in 2013, takes a similar approach.

The piece has six sections, A to F. Kaumann uses three portions of chant-like melody (having thoroughly checked my Liber Usualis, none of them appears to be a specific Gregorian chant), the first assigned to sections A, C, E and F, the second and third to sections B and D respectively.

Section A (“Ave Maria, gratia plena, Dominus tecum”) is the longest and most elaborate. Melody 1 is repeated multiple times, first by one voice, then two (the second voice singing a parallel / contrary motion version), then four (adding a G drone), after which the whole choir repeats this while soprano and alto soli improvise extensive melismas over the top. This continues for several minutes, occupying most of the work’s 6-minute duration, and grows to become intensely passionate. It’s a fascinating, powerful expansion, ending up a long way from the restrained sobriety of chant.

Tõnis Kaumann – Ave Maria, section A

The remaining sections pass by relatively quickly. Section B (“benedicta tu in mulieribus”) uses Melody 2 twice over a dronal chord. Section C (“et benedictus fructus ventris tui, Jesus”) returns to Melody 1, sung over a slightly lower register chord than previously, then reduced further to just two voices. Section D (“Sancta Maria, Mater Dei, ora pro nobis peccatoribus”) abruptly switches the tonality from G to D, presenting Melody 3 as a strong tutti climax, returning to G at the end. Section E (“nunc et in hora mortis nostrae”) uses most of Melody 1 as an echoing call and response between pairs of voices; the final phrase is saved for Section F, sung as a simple tutti “Amen”.

It’s a superbly effective harnessing of the principles and attitude of conventional chant, spiced up in that remarkable opening section. The cycling repetitions and dronal harmony keep the music grounded, yet i can’t help feeling the intensity of those wildly florid improvisations remains throughout what follows, flaring up somewhat in the ensuing climax, and persisting in the more sedate sections as a kind of implied breathlessness.

This performance of Ave Maria was given by Vox Clamantis conducted by Jaan-Eik Tulve.


Text

Ave Maria, gratia plena, Dominus tecum;
benedicta tu in mulieribus,
et benedictus fructus ventris tui, Jesus.
Sancta Maria, Mater Dei,
ora pro nobis peccatoribus,
nunc et in hora mortis nostrae. Amen.

Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee;
blessed art thou among women,
and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.
Holy Mary, Mother of God,
pray for us sinners,
now and at the hour of our death. Amen.


Programme note

Ave Maria is unique among my compositions, being the only one I first recorded while singing it myself and then transribed. This might just as well be one of my most performed pieces, because it fits well with the repertoire of Vox Clamantis and is therefore often in use.

—Tõnis Kaumann


What happened to Peter Cooper? Country musician and journalist dies aged 52


Well-known musician and journalist Peter Cooper recently passed away on Tuesday, December 6, at the age of 52. He died from complications from a head injury he sustained from an accident last week.

His family disclosed the news on social media, saying that he passed away in his sleep:

“We so appreciate the kind words and prayers you have offered over the past few days. Please know that they have provided Peter and us with much comfort. We will soon announce details about a celebration of life to take place in early 2023.”


Following the accident, Peter did not show any signs of improvement. The visitors, however, said that he was responding to the treatment he received.

Cooper’s friends can offer their donations instead of flowers to the Baker Cooper fund. The collected amount shall be sent to the Hall of Fame and Museum and help Cooper’s son pursue his education.


Peter Cooper pursued journalism before foraying into the world of music

Peter Cooper was initially worked in a Tennessee newspaper and later pursued a career in music (Image via jday15/Twitter)

Although Peter Cooper’s date of birth remains unknown, he was a native of South Carolina and finished his schooling in Washington, DC. He initially started his career as a journalist and later decided to pursue a career in the world of music.

Peter covered everything related to the music industry for the Tennessee newspaper until 2014. His writing style was praised by his seniors and colleagues. He later gained recognition for his work at the Country Music Hall of Fame and actively participated in their events while working in various departments.


As a musician, he collaborated with many artists and released albums like The Lloyd Green Album, The Master Sessions, and more. The albums received positive reviews from various publications and audiences. He became popular for working with Eric Brace on two albums.

Cooper received the Mission Door diploma from the Tom T. Hall School of Damn Good Songwriting. He joined the band of Todd Snider after leaving his job at a Tennessee newspaper, and the group performed on various occasions.

He had a short career as an author where he wrote a book, Johnny’s Cash & Charley’s Pride: Lasting Legends and Untold Adventures in Country Music. Bob Edwards described Cooper as a modern-day renaissance man.


His name was included in the list of 10 Most Interesting People by Nashville Arts & Entertainment Magazine. Peter Cooper performed in various places around the world with his band and as a solo artist. He also worked as a senior music writer at Nashville’s The Tennessean and was a senior lecturer at the Blair School of Music at Vanderbilt University.

Despite being a well-known personality, he did not have a Wikipedia page, due to which detailed information on his career is not available. Peter Cooper’s survivors include his ex-wife Charlotte, father Wiley Cooper, stepfather Al Smuzynski, stepmother Emily Cooper, brother Chris Cooper, sister-in-law Jessie Swigger, nephew Jack Cooper, and niece Madeline Cooper.




Icewear Vezzo & DJ Drama Link Up For ‘Paint the City’ Project


DJ Drama isn’t letting up.

Heating up the streets on projects with the likes of Jeezy, Snoop Dogg, and Dave East, Drama is keeping his foot on the competition’s necks with yet another Gangsta Grillz drop – this time, teaming up with Detroit’s very own Icewear Vezzo.

Vezzo, fresh off completing his Rich Off Pints trilogy in July, is back at the DopeHouse with the release of his new project, Paint the City. A 15-track affair, led by “One Time” with Jeezy, there’s also features from Future, 2 Chainz, Kodak Black, Peezy, and GT.

Press play and be sure to add Paint the City wherever you get music.

Icewear Vezzo & DJ Drama Link Up For ‘Paint the City’ Project was last modified: December 8th, 2022 by Shake



Country music singer Sara Evans to perform live in Topeka, here’s when


TOPEKA (KSNT) – Country music singer and songwriter Sara Evans is set to perform in the capital city later this month at the Stormont Vail Events Center.

Evans will be visiting Topeka as part of her “Go Tell It On The Mountain” Christmas Tour. She will be at the events center on Dec. 18 at 7 p.m. Tickets start at $20.

Evans is recognized as the fifth most-played female artist at country radio in nearly the last two decades. She is known for songs such as, “No Place That Far,” “Suds In The Bucket,” “A Real Fine Place To State,” “Born To Fly” and “A Little Bit Stronger.”

To get your ticket and get more information, click here.

Ode to musicians: Brazilian multi-instrumentalist Ricardo Bacelar reveals composing music is akin to cooking – it’s all about experimentation!


Fortaleza, Brazil, December 5, 2022 — Premiered at the end of September on YouTube, Brazilian musician and composer Ricardo Bacelar’s documentary Immerse explores the intricacies of the production of his first fully immersive album entitled Congênito. The album was created in Bacelar’s own Jasmin Studio, one of the most advanced Dolby Atmos-certified residential facilities in the world. Working together with recording engineer Melk Dias and multiple-Grammy award winning mixing engineer Beto Neves, the documentary explores the creative and technical processes behind Bacelar’s work on the album and reveals some helpful tips on how they created the immersive tracks.

 

 

Creating and composing music has always been Bacelar’s greatest motivation and passion. From his early, when he used to listen to his paternal grandfather recording Rodas de Choro on his Philips tape recorder, to starting to play music instruments at the age of 14, then joining a band named Hanoi Hanoi when he was 18, Bacelar has always had a strong link with recording.

Now one of Brazil’s most renowned multi-instrumentalist and composers, Bacelar’s dream of being close to music the way he wants to be finally became a reality last year, when he built his own Jasmin Studio, designed by US acoustic design firm WSDG in with recording and mixing engineer, and immersive audio specialist, Daniel Reis, helping to select the right equipment.

The first album produced there is Congênito, a mix of pop, world, jazz, and fusion which Bacelar produced alongside Melk Dias, and sang, and played every instrument and which he wanted to record as a “truly human album”.

 

 

Beto Neves, an award-winning mix engineer, was also invited to mix on the album. Being a pioneer in immersive, surround sound in Brazil, Neves’s role was to help turn Congênito into a full-scale Dolby Atmos project. “The songs are filled with an array of rhythmic, harmonic and melodic possibilities. Maybe it’s one of, or even the first album in the world to be recorded as an immersive Dolby Atmos album, but with analogue processing,” he explains.

According to Neves, listening in Dolby Atmos is akin to HDR on a TV, where you can see even the small pockmarks on someone’s face. “It’s the same thing for audio in Dolby Atmos. You have resolution and space, not just the space between left and right, but 360 degrees of sound to add even more information and open up the possibility of painting this canvas and truly express the richness of the album’s sound in the recording,” he adds.

One of the tricks used when recording the Maracatu drums of Caetano Veloso’s song A tua presença morena, was to record some of them twice. “This creates the sensation of volume, of size,” reveals Bacelar.

 

 

“We wanted to give the impression of a percussion group playing, but as Ricardo is playing alone, we created the powerful sound of a huge amount of percussion. We add to this by using a Neumann KU 100 high up so that we can record the sound of the room. The explosion of the drum in the room and the multiple recordings achieves this sensation,” adds Melk.

“It’s like in cooking,” says Bacelar. “Sometimes need more seasoning or extra ingredients.”

Bacelar is never satisfied with his first recording, and says a composer should always have in mind that they have to know and look for what the song needs: “You can hear something that’s technically really good, everything’s perfect, but there’s something missing and you don’t know what it is. That something is always emotion. It’s what moves the listener. They can feel it and so can I.”

Click here to watch full documentary.

 

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About Jasmin Studio
Ricardo Bacelar is a composer, arranger and producer based in Brazil. His Jasmin Studio was designed by renowned studio architects WSDG and includes state of the art equipment including a Solid State Logic 48-channel Duality Delta SuperAnalogue recording console. It is equipped and certified for Dolby Atmos Music production and incorporates a facility-wide Dante network infrastructure.

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