I heard Bill Frisell’s
Richter 858 Quartet perform
last night at the Vancouver Playhouse (Frisell, with Hank Roberts, cello, Jenny Scheinman, violin, and Eyvind Kang, viola). They
played two suites, composed specifically by Frisell for the group. The first
half of the concert offered Sign of Life,
a
recent (2010) piece that seems to me to sum up much of Frisell’s deep
enmeshment in Americana, with plenty of what sounded to me like overt gestures
to the folksy melodicism and harmonic richness of Aaron Copland. That’s not to
suggest that the music is merely derivative – the improvisational virtuosities
in play in this quartet give the music, even when it seems to be
through-composed, an immediacy and a vitality that never allow it to settle or
calcify. Rather, their music moves – in the sense of kinesis, yes, but also
with the emotional engagement that successive moments of aural intensity can
offer. Frisell’s music has a melancholy brilliance that seems to me to depend
on his, and his group’s, ability to accrete small surges of sound, and to carry
listeners with them. They tap into a shared ruthmos,
a flow. Even when he applies distortion effects to his guitar, or turns it up
to produce a metal-laden snarl, Frisell’s vertical, fractured notes still
incline toward this essential pulse, a give-and-take within the fabric of a
common time. I think I heard a version of this movement, as rhythm, in
occasional riffs from Hank Roberts, whose strummed cello seemed to blend the
textures of a Gambian kora and Kentucky bluegrass plucking: human time at play.
But what was most noticeable was how, amid all of what could have been serious
and pensive high-brow stuff, Frisell kept smiling, at his bandmates and to
himself. Despite the textures of pathos and wistfulness we were hearing, he
found – and I think we did too – a kind of common joy in this music. In an age
rife with cynicism, these sounds and songs still manage to affirm, and even
heal.
(blurry i-snapshot makes the quartet look made of light)
After the intermission, the group
played Richter 858, Frisell’s 2002
composition for this group. It’s based on his viewing of a set of paintings
– 858: 1-8 – by the German-born
artist Gerhard Richter, and images
of the paintings are projected and enlarged on a screen behind the group as
they play through the eight-part suite. As the music unfolds, the visuals
appear to work as a form of graphic score, as melodic lines and colours seem
keyed to the striations, smears and tonal palette of Richter’s non-objective
images. They’re not playing the paintings, but they feel as if they are, and
this too is an effect of rhythm, of a musical rhythmatizing of the gaze. I felt
my eye drawn across the projected swells of pigment by the quartet, as if the
music were trying to find its own through swathes of light. I’m not trying to
romanticize the experience too much, but, like Sign of Life, Richter 858
is fundamentally affirmative rather than ironic – it affirms, for me, the
potential, if fleeting, power of art to move us, to move.
For an encore, the quartet gave
us a version of what was at first for me an unplaceable but uncannily familiar
bebop tune. They staggered and looped the melody, played with it, to create a
fleet four-part canon: the quick, improvisational melody – along with
improvised counterpoint – skittering and weaving back through itself, upbeat,
joyful. I thought it was a Charlie Parker line, but when I got home – the tune
still in my head – I realized it was Tadd Dameron’s “Hot
House.” Jazz, American folk and long-haired legit idioms intersected with and
tugged at each other in this short coda to the concert, succinctly summing up
how this group approaches history, approaches its own timeliness: by singing
it, by making it sing.
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