scrapbook.june 30

JAMES TENNEY

Works for Solo Percussion and Electroacoustics by James Tenney
William Winant, Percussion

From the Los Angeles Times

Monday, July 2, 2001

   MUSIC REVIEW
   Percussion-Related Concert a Fusion of Sound, Setting

   By JOSEF WOODARD, Special to The Times


        A pleasurably odd new music garden party descended on the Schindler house in West Hollywood on Saturday, in an event all
   about unconventional percussion-related sound and thinking. The sounds were made by celebrated percussionist William Winant.
   The thinking came from composer James Tenney, and the venue came courtesy of this summer concert series known simply, and
   provocatively, as "sound." and presented in the backyard of this historic property, now the MAK Center for Art and Architecture. 
        The site was critical, not only because of the ambient aspects of bird song, a half moon emerging as the night darkened and the
   occasional cork popped at the wine bar. Winant set up inside the house, with doors opened toward the backyard audience,
   accenting Schindler's Modernist ideal of blurring interior and exterior space. 
        Now ensconced at CalArts, Tenney tends to coax expressive material from spare, conceptual ideas more than manuscripted
   road maps, an interpretive approach to which Winant is well suited. The dominant musical structure here was the basic,
   soft-loud-soft arch form, taken to intriguing extremes. 
        In "Maximusic, for Max Neuhaus," sensuously rumbling drones, with mallet rolls on a cymbal, framed a bombastic, flailing
   midsection on a drum kit. "Having Never Written a Note for Percussion, for John Bergamo" was essentially one extended note,
   rolled out on tam-tam in crescendo-decrescendo fashion. A similar pattern governed "Deus ex Machina," with the addition of an
   extended echo, like a ghostly afterimage. 
        Electroacoustic dialoguing attended the mixture of Tenney's evocative, early '60s electronic tape piece, "Ergodos II," and the
   graphic-scored "Percussion Responses, for John Cage." While the tape spilled its Cubist mobile of sound, Winant offered
   sensitive complement, with a palette including a well-rubbed balloon and the friction of a mallet rubbed along the beams and
   windows of the famed house itself. Site-specificity reared its head, again. 

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