* Holloway/Mortensen/ter Linden: Garrison Church, Copenhagen 2008-04-08 (FM 2CDR)
* Poulenc:
Complete Chamber Music (Nash Ensemble) (d.2) (Hyperion 2CD)
* Poulenc: Sacred
& Secular Choral Works (Gr. Vocal de France/Alldis) (d.1)(EMI Classics 2CD)
* Miles
Davis: Seven Steps: Columbia Recordings 1963-64 (d.1-2) (Columbia/Legacy 7CD)
* Sun Ra:
Media Dreams (Saturn/Art Yard 2CD)
* Sun Ra:
Disco 3000 (Saturn/Art Yard CD)
* Sun Ra:
Sound Mirror (selections) (Saturn LP>CDR)
* Sam
Rivers: Streams: Recorded In Performance At the Montreaux Jazz Festival
(Impulse! LP)
* Larry
Coryell: European Impressions (Novus LP)
* The
Crusaders: Free As The Wind (ABC/Blue Thumb LP)
* Lenny
White: The Adventures Of Astral Pirates (Elektra LP)
* Marilyn
Crispell Trio: Live in Zurich (Leo CD)
* Matthew Shipp: Nu Bop (Thirsty Ear CD)
* Matthew Shipp: Equilibrium (Thirsty Ear CD)
* Matthew Shipp: Equilibrium (Thirsty Ear CD)
* Ralph
Alessi/Kris Davis/Ingrid Laubrock/Tom Rainey: LARK (Skirl CD)
* Dawn Of
Midi: First (Accretions MP3)†
* Dawn of Midi: Live at WFMU
2010-08-03 (WFMU MP3)†
* Dawn Of
Midi: Live (Dawn Of Midi MP3)†
* Dawn Of
Midi: Dysnomia (Thirsty Ear CD)
* Grateful
Dead: Dave’s Picks Bonus Disc 2013 (12/21/69) (GDP/Rhino HDCD)
* Grateful
Dead: Dave’s Picks Vol.7: Normal, IL 1978-04-24 (GDP/Rhino 3HDCD)
* Grateful
Dead: The Spectrum, Philadelphia, PA 1995-03-18 (selections) (SBD 2CDR)
* Jerry
Garcia Band: Cumberland Co. Civic Arena, Portland, ME 1993-11-09 (selections) (AUD 2CDR)
* Crosby
Stills & Nash: Crosby Stills & Nash (Atlantic/Audio Fidelity CD)
* The Soft
Machine: The Soft Machine (ABC/Probe/Sundazed LP)
* King
Crimson: Discipline (DGM/Inner Knot CD/DVD)
* Kyuss:
Blues For The Red Sun (Dali/Elektra LP)
* Kyuss:
Kyuss (a/k/a Welcome To Sky Valley) (Elektra LP)
* Kyuss:
…And The Circus Leaves Town (Elektra LP)
* Sleep:
Dopesmoker (Southern Lord 2LP)
* Boards Of
Canada: Tomorrow’s Harvest (Warp 2LP)
* Steven
Wilson: Grace For Drowning (KScope BD)
* Steven
Wilson: The Raven That Refused To Sing (And Other Stories) (KScope BD)
* Opeth:
Newbury Comics, Leominster, MA 2013-04-20 (AUD CDR)
* Kylesa:
Static Tensions (Prosthetic/ Twenty Buck Spin LP)
* Kylesa:
Spiral Shadow (Season Of Mist LP)
* Clutch:
Earth Rocker (Weathermaker LP)
* Pelican:
“March To The Sea” (Hydra Head EP)
* Pelican:
City Of Echoes (Hydra Head LP)
* Pelican:
“Ephemeral” (Southern Lord EP)
* Locrian:
Return To Annihilation (Relapse 2-45RPM LP)
* Pineapple
Explode: Pineapple Explode (Pineapple Explode CDEP)
* Pineapple
Explode: A Bushel & A Barrel (Pineapple Explode CDEP)
* Beach
House: Bloom (Sub Pop CD)
†=iPod
‡=car
Commentary:
As usual, I went to my favorite record store on Tuesday
(which is, of course, new release day) and was pleased to see they had one copy of the
latest in the ongoing “Blue Series” on Thirsty Ear. Curated by executive
producer and monster pianist Matthew Shipp, pretty much everything they’ve
released over the years has been uniformly excellent. So, even though I had never heard of Dawn of Midi, I figured their "Blue Series" disc would be worth checking out. But, let me tell you: nothing in that
already super-eclectic catalog prepared me for what I was about to hear on Dysnomia.
I popped it in the CD player in the car for the ride
home and, at first, it sounded like early electronica, all locked grooves, stuttering rhythms
and fleeting snippets of what appeared to be synthesized melodies (think Aphex
Twin at his most bucolic—or some of Shipp’s own experiments for the label).
But, as it played, I realized this is not electronic music at all. It is 100% acoustic: pianist Amino Belyamani, bassist Aakaash Israni and
drummer Oasim Naqvi playing together, live, in real time. Wow! Okay, I get it: Dawn
of MIDI (as in Musical Instrument Digital Interface). Very clever.
I guess I should have known about DOM, whose 2010
debut, First (Accretions), won all kinds of awards as well as glowing critical acclaim
while subsequent online-only live recordings have documented well-received tours
all over the world. I had no idea. Yet having now heard those records (hastily
purchased downloads, anyway), Dysnomia would still have come as a shock. Their
previous work is essentially in a quasi-minimalist, free-jazz mode, with touches of
lush, impressionistic harmony—not so far away from the cool, cerebral ECM sound
of the early ‘70s in many ways. There are moments—especially in concert—that briefly
cohere into a pulsating, electro-ambient feel but they always eventually dissipate into fractalized
abstraction. Beautiful music to be sure—but nothing like what happens on
Dysnomia.
In fact, there is no improvisation whatsoever to be found on any
of these nine pieces, which seamlessly flow together as one long 47-minute work. The
band spent almost two years learning and rehearsing Dysnomia, scrapping the
original recording at the mastering stage and started over from scratch, ditching altogether their
usual semi-improvisational approach. The resulting album, with its machine-like
discipline and superhuman musicianship is truly mind-blowing, emulating as it does the motoric
stasis of electronica yet imbuing it with the empathic warmth of heartfelt intention. To
achieve such electronic-like effects from his piano, Belyamani plays the
keyboard one-handed, with the other hand damping or otherwise manipulating the
strings inside the instrument. Similarly, Israni attacks the upright bass like
the percussion instrument it is; meanwhile, Naqvi’s trap-drumming is subtle, elemental
and hypnotic. They also brought in renowned engineer Rusty Santos to mix the
album, and he gives it an in-your-face, aggressively bottom-heavy sound more
appropriate to modern dance music than jazz. But then again, this is not really
a jazz record, is it?
"Dysnomia" is an appropriate title for this album in that
while the music at first seems recognizable, it cannot be accurately named. Or,
rather, it can only be defined by what it’s not: it’s not electronic, it’s not
jazz and, although thoroughly through-composed, it is most definitely not a piece of “classical”
composition (it’s way too funky for that!). At times, it sounds more like some long-lost
Afro-Asian folk music than anything else—but it’s obviously not that either. Dysnomia is an undeniably impressive display of tightly controlled virtuosity—but it’s much more than just an empty athletic event. Beyond the
initial shock of mis-recognition, the music holds up to repeated—even obsessive—listening.
Belyamani, Israni and Naqvi, who originally hail from Morocco, India and Pakistan
respectively, have apparently tapped into something very deep here, crafting an album
of purely acoustic music that reflects—and incisively comments upon—our globalized,
virtualized, digitalized world. In that way, I guess you would have to tag this a kind of super-sophisticated folk music—but only in the sense that all
music is folk music of one sort or another. Whatever you want to call it, Dawn
of Midi are onto something with Dysnomia and listening to it is a rapturous—dare I say, religious—experience. Music that at first seemed merely impossible turns out to be
something nearly miraculous; I call that art.
Go check
them out on Soundcloud and "like" them on Facebook. Better yet, buy their albums. Supposedly a vinyl edition of Dysnomia is on the way. Dig it!
after a rave like that I had better have a listen.
ReplyDeleteHere are my lists from last week:
ReplyDeletePlaylist 2013-08-12:
*Sylvie Courvoisier/Mary Halvorson/Ikue Mori: 2010-07-24 Whitney Museum of Modern Art (CDR)
*Duke Ellington: The Private Collection, Vol. 10: Dance Dates California 1958
*Dizzy Gillespie: The Complete RCA Victor Recordings 1937-1949 (disc 1)
*Andrew Hill: 2000-04-29 London (CDR)
*Andrew Hill: Time Lines
*Paul Lytton/Nate Wooley: 2011-03-02 The Stone, NYC (CDR)
*Charles Mingus: Cumbia & Jazz Fusion (side 1)
*Charlie Parker: The Complete Live Performances on Savoy (disc 4)
*Wadada Leo Smith: Ten Freedom Summers (disc 4)
*Sun Ra: Continuation (Saturn/Corbett vs. Dempsey 2CD) disc 1
*Sun Ra: Disco 3000: The Complete Milan Concert 1978 (Art Yard)
*Sun Ra: Sleeping Beauty
*Sun Ra: On Jupiter
*Charles Bradley: Victim of Love
*Gary Clark Jr.: Blak and Blu
*Donald Fagen: Sunken Condos
*Grateful Dead: 1972-05-10 Amsterdam (CDR) discs 2, 3
*Grateful Dead: 1972-05-11 Rotterdam (CDR)
*Grateful Dead: 1972-05-13 Lille, France (CDR) “Truckin’>Drums>The Other One>He’s Gone”
*Grateful Dead: 1972-05-18 Munich (CDR)
*Grateful Dead: 1972-05-23 London (CDR) set 2 (selections)
*Grateful Dead: 1972-05-25 London (CDR) disc 3
*Guided By Voices: Isolation Drills
*Impressions: This Is My Country
*Jackie Mittoo: Last Train to Skaville
*Prince: The Hits/The B-Sides (disc 2)
*Prince: Montreux Jazz Festival (boot CDR)
*Prince: 2013 Leaks 2 (boot CDR)
*Prince: 2013 Leaks 3 & 4 (boot CDR)
*Prince: 2013 Leaks 5 (boot CDR)
*Prince: Days of Soundboard, Vol. 5: Rehearsals 2012-2013 (boot CDR)
*Rolling Stones: The Rolling Stones Singles Collection: The London Years (disc 2)
*Stock, Hausen, & Walkman: Oh My Bag!
*Various artists: Enjoy The Experience (selections)
Reading List 2013-08-12:
*Knode, Helen. The Ticket Out (started)
*Fleming, Ian. Thunderball (reread/started/finished)
*Ellroy, James. The Hilliker Curse (finished)
*Hyde, Lewis. Common as Air (in progress)
*Weldon, Michael J. Psychotronic Video Guide (in progress)