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CATALOGUE
RETURN
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Theo
Bleckmann
Origami
(SGL
1534-2)
Release date: March 17, 2001
with
Ben Monder (guitar), Matt Moran (vibraphone), Skuli Sverrisson (bass),
and John Hollenbeck (drums, percussion, melodica)
A
songbook often without words and practically without borders, Origami is the latest report back from Theo Bleckmann on his
continuing explorations into the unsuspected emotional and expressive
possibilities of the voice in an unfettered group context. It is also
a meticulously constructed, exquisitely detailed collection of songs
that ranges across centuries, continents and musical styles for its
inspiration. The ancient Japanese art of paper folding, origami, is
a constant touchstone, unfolding (and enfolding the listener) in unusual
ways. Building on his earlier collaboration with downtown New York instrumentalists
Ben Monder, Skuli Sverrisson and Jim Black, No
Boat (SGL 1516), he creates lush environments through overdubbing
and live electronic layering, embedding his vocals in diverse rhythms
and textures, shifting from song to sound and from composition to improvisation,
developing a mercurial aesthetic that encompasses (at least) jazz, folk,
minimalism, ambient, noise, and free improv.
Bleckmann's
original compositions, combining jazz and American classical influences
(Ives, Copland) often reference a chorale-like serenity. "Origami" (set
to a poem in Japanese by Reiko Aoki) begins simply but becomes both
fuller and freer as the group collectively embellishes it. "DNA" features
a Latinish beat and intricate octave-displaced counterpoint; it is modeled
after unit-origami, in which hundreds of geometric shapes are assembled
into a larger unit. "Nova Scotia" layers folk-like melodies into ambient
soundscapes, restlessly bringing in new lines over previously established
chords; it could be a kind of ambient ghost story, a preternatural lullaby
in which innocence and experience (or good and evil) contest with no
obvious resolution. "Without Sky," written for long-time collaborator
Ben Monder, evokes the plains of middle America; it's segued here with
the group improv "Rhombiododecahedron," which fits Out critic Andrew
Velez's characterization of Theo's music as an "aural Rorshach test"
from "a singer who has only recently fallen to earth." Urban and rural
melt together in the prayer-like improvisation "Alloy," in duo with
Skuli and sung through a megaphone.
The
four "standards" provide a historical perspective even as their completely
personal treatment recontexts them in the present. Machaut's courtly
love plaint "Douce dame jolie" takes on an obsessed, gently ominous
tone, while Brecht-Eilser's anti-Nazi tribute "An den kleinen Radioapparat"
is as embodied as direct testimony. "I Remember You" seems caught in
some trip-hop psychedelic deconstruction of time, the singer himself
eventually dissolving into the past and gone with the loved one; "Life
is Just a Bowl of Cherries" is autumnal retrospection and heartfelt
hymn.
Layering
and silence are as much a part of this music as surprise and reflection.
With its subtle modulations between ethereality and pathos, sublimity
and dread, knowingness and outright irreverence, ironic detachment and
tenderness, Origami
cultivates the art of musicmaking with and beyond language for the expression
of life's fleeting, inchoate experience and its underlying connections.
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*
DNA
* Douce dame jolie
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None of the Above
*
Origami
*
Static Still
*
Alloy
* I Remember You
* Like Brother and Sister
* Nova Scotia
* An den kleinen Radioapparat
* Without Sky
* Rhombicosidodecahedron
* Life is Just a Bowl of Cherries
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