Tonight as part of the
Agosto Foundation’s vs. Interpretation
symposium and festival at the NOD arts space in Prague, we heard a freely
improvised performance by the trio of Pauline Oliveros (Roland V-accordion), Joëlle Léandre (double bass and voice) and George Lewis (laptop, trombone). This
morning, George Lewis gave a talk on the prehistory of improvisation studies,
making a case for approaching improvisation not as a study of criteria or
constraint but of what he called “conditions,” which seemed to me to be a call
to attend to the diversity of generative circumstances, and their intersection
in historically situated performances. He was arguing, gently, against defining
improvisation as such, and instead asking his audience to consider how
improvising might open up possibilities for self-aware creative practice. The
concert this evening was introduced by, I believe, Cynthia Plachá of the Agosto
Foundation, who reiterated something Joëlle Léandre had said at a workshop this
afternoon, that when you improvise “you must be prepared for the unprepared.”
Both of these assertions – around the conditional or situated sharing that
improvisation enacts, and around the paradoxical acuity involved in
improvisational practices – informed the trio’s collaborative music-making.
They
performed one 45-minute piece, recorded by Czech Radio for broadcast, which
apparently Pauline Oliveros had named “Play As You Go” ahead of time, although
there wasn’t any pre-planning. Joëlle Léandre's playing had a firmness of touch
and such a strikingly clear sense of line or trajectory, her tone consistently
full and resonant. Pauline Oliveros’s electronified accordion shifted between
foreground and background, often supplying aural textures that were by turns
cohesive and disruptive, simultaneously braiding into and fraying at the trio’s
combined sound-palette. George Lewis layered samples from his laptop, many of
them having a certain digital brightness that he subsequently often pulled and
muddied, electronic sheen mitigated by the more closely corporeal sounds of
breath and lip, particularly when he used his blue (!) trombone as both a
sampled sound source and as an unmodified instrument: his characteristic fierce
blatt, at the few moments when he did seem to dig into his horn, was instantly
recognizable. But this wasn’t a music of solos or singular voices so much as of
organic reciprocity and co-creation.
There
were some passing moments – when Joëlle Léandre started to sing lyrically about
the slightly oppressive heat in the performance space (“It’s hot, it’s hot . .
. “) or when Pauline Oliveros echoed a cough from the audience by jabbing her
right hand at the accordion’s lower keys – of humour and irony, suggesting how
all sonic resources, high and low, occasional and musically dense, could be
repurposed into interactive soundings. The music didn’t so much progress or
develop as trace its way through a loose series of temporarily sustained,
situated idioms – sometimes meditative, sometimes contrarian, sometimes
melodically assertive, sometimes coevally plural: layers of shifting texture,
refigurings. This was a brilliantly sui
generis music, and we left the concert feeling energized, enlivened and moved.
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