
Bang on a Can Founders and Heros Michael Gordon, Julia Wolfe, David Lang
April 28, 2012
Alice Tully Hall@Lincoln Center
Bang on a Can: 25 Years
This was a night of celebration; a well-deserved full house at Tully Hall. We were welcomed by the Founders Michael Gordon, Julia Wolfe, and David Lang. I won’t be able to describe it all but will run through what was performed. The first set was Gamelan Galak Tika. Note the name as the ensemble was dressed in Battlestar Galactica attire. Evan Ziporyn, the composer of this piece, “The Fire” (1994), founded the Balinese group at MIT in 1993. It has 26 members including a keyboard, two electric guitars and one bass guitar. It was fascinating to hear and to watch--25 minutes of intricate sounds and rhythms. The program notes say “it attempts to address an equally essential part of the cross-cultural experience--that of juxtaposition, disorientation and creative misunderstanding.” The second set was performed by the Asphalt Orchestra founded in 2009. I first saw them at the BoaC Marathon. They are basically a sophisticated marching band created by the BoaC founders (“a radical new street band”) made up of 10 musicians: piccolo, soprano sax, alto sax, tenor sax, 2 trumpets, 2 trombones, sousaphone, and three drummers. Tonight was most impressive as they played one piece by Frank Zappa, “Zomby Woof” (1973-2009) and three pieces by Tatsuya Yoshida. He is a legendary Japanese drummer and composer of noise-progressive music. Asphalt Orchestra played all from memory as they careened around the stage in various ensemble, duo, trio, quartet configurations - highly choreographed by Mark DeChiazza and Susan Marshall. Yoshida joined the group on his drum set for the last, and my favorite piece, “Zwimbarrac Khafzavrapp (2012). It was loud but not chaotic.
Seth Colter Walls wrote this about Yoshida: http://bit.ly/IyCzbJ
The final set was performed by the wonderful Bang on a Can All Stars whose members are Ashley Bathgate, cello; Robert Black, bass; Evan Ziporyn, clarinets; Mark Stewart, guitar; Vicky Chow, piano; David Cossin, percussion. The six invited composers, Florent Ghys, Christian Marclay Mira Caliz, Tyondai Braxton, Evan Ziporyn and Nick Zammuto along with the three founders were asked “to go into the field of recorded sound and to find something old or to record something new, and to respond with their own music in dialogue with what they found. “Field Recordings” (2012) was the magnificent result. Julia Wolfe, “Reeling” used a clip of French Canadian singer Benoit Benoit where she connected her own history to his singing. As always, she creates magical music. Florent Ghys, “An Open Cage” utilized excerpts from Cage’s “Diary: How to improve the World (You will only make Matter worse.”) I loved this. I could so relate to his words, as did Florent. For instance, Cage amusingly says, “as a New York senior citizen I get public transportation half price except during rush hours if I can also go to movies half price if I do so in the afternoons if I take the subway I must buy 2 trips at once in opposite directions round trip with the bus I am free to go wherever I wish.”
Christian Marclay, “Fade to Slide” Christian Marclay used short fragments in rapid succession of Hollywood films asking the musicians to let images prompt reactions. Mira Calix recorded airport conversations including in the cockpit. Michael Gordon’s “Gene takes a Drink” was lovely - a video of a community garden and music to complement the posies. David Lang wrote “the whole idea of field recordings was dealing with memories . . .” He recalled a project he liked from the past where he made a track of people sharpening knives and scissors so he had that recreated for this night. David Cossin used various sized chains falling and swishing on a drum to create more cool metallic sounds. Evan Ziporyn’s “Wargasari” is a Balinese ritual song used for rites of passages. He uses the original recording of female vocalists made in 1928. The original is heard unaltered though Evan created effective pauses throughout. Tyondai Braxton’s “Casino Trem” was stellar. It reckoned with NYC’s first casino which he called “one of the saddest places on the planet.” (I thought that too when I was once in Las Vegas). The music actually had a beat and some of the instruments were effected and The All Stars got-down! I loved it. Vicky played synthesizer, there were delays on Evan’s clarinet, and Robert used effects which changed the sound of the bass completely. “Real Beauty Turns” by Nick Zammuto used a great video of women and hair care which he collected over the years at thrift shops. Big hair, hair spray. OMG, did we really do that back then? Shocking. It was amusing to see the past revisited.
Peter Matthew's Feast of Music review: http://bit.ly/JF53wF
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Bang on a Can Founders and Heros Michael Gordon, Julia Wolfe, David Lang
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Evan Ziporyn and Christine Southworth
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Gamelan Galak Tika
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Asphalt Orchestra
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Tatsuya Yoshida
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Asphalt Orchestra with Tatsuya
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Christian Marclay’s “Fade to Slide”
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“Real Beauty Turns” by Nick Zammuto
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The wonderful Bang on a Can All Stars
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Composers
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Peter Matthews (Feast of Music), Scott Johnson (composer)
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Tyler Eaton, Ayaka Ozaki (UCSD Music students)
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Party after the concert