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Guerrilla Music
April 4th, 2009Andrew Tholl is a Mad Genius
March 4th, 2009
I was just spending a little time getting to know my friend Andrew Tholl‘s relatively new website. Andrew is a very fine violinist and drummer. And as if that wasn’t enough, he’s started composing very seriously in the last few years, writing a whole slew of interesting pieces.
He’s always been great with titles, at least in my opinion. He’s one of two friends who I call if I am unsure about one of my own titles. Here are some of his gems:
our arrangement will never be mutually satisfyingpoke and tickle
who’s cranky now
Maybe you need to know him, but these titles are pretty fantastic to me.
But one title of his totally takes the cake. It’s called i’ll never be younger than i am today (for andrew tholl). It’s for solo violin, and lasts 1 hour and 5 minutes.
So first, I think it’s a deep title; lots of mortality hidden in there, but presented in a way that’s not too morbid. But what gets me is the dedication!
I know that a lot of composers are also great performers. And I know that a lot of composer/performers write music for themselves to play. But I love (and have never seen before) the idea of composing a work for oneself, dedicating it to oneself, and making said dedication part of the title!
Pretty brilliant. Andrew Tholl is a mad genius. He hits the east coast this April with the terrific Formalist Quartet, who will make stops in New York, Princeton, and elsewhere. Check ‘em out.
Photo by Todd Reynolds
Let’s all go to the movies! (and forget our rotten lives.)
March 1st, 2009As the recession deepens people are still putting some money into entertainment, or at least into movies. At least that’s what this article in today’s Times reports, sayings that box office receipts are up nearly 16%!
The standard percentage of movie attendees is usually around 10% of the population. It’s been that way, more or less, since the 1960s, bottoming out there after a gradual fall through the 40s and 50s. Thigh high-watermark for movie attendance was—perhaps not surprisingly—the 1930s, in the wake of the Great Depression. (Though this may also be attributed to the excitement over the advent of talkies, starting out with The Jazz Singer in 1927.)
But apparently it’s not just the economy, it’s also the films that studios are releasing in response to cultural desires: films that are, in one way or another, escapist. The article says:
The film industry appears to have had a hand in its recent good luck. Over the last year or two, studios have released movies that are happier, scarier or just less depressing than what came before. After poor results for a spate of serious dramas built around the Middle East (“The Kingdom,” “Lions for Lambs,” “Rendition”), Hollywood got back to comedies like “Paul Blart: Mall Cop,” a review-proof lark about an overstuffed security guard.
For someone whose life is dedicated to making art, the idea that Paul Blart is what society is looking for right now is troubling, a feeling driven home here: “A bunch of movies have come along that don’t make you think too much,” said Marc Abraham, a producer whose next film is a remake of “The Thing.” The article continues: “Cinematic quality has little to do with (financial success). The recent crop of Oscar nominees has fared poorly, for the most part, at the box office. Lighter fare has drawn the crowds.”
This is perhaps the best sign of how the recession might directly impact me. Financially, I live on very little money, have no serious investments, and can’t really get laid off. But if the audience for the type of art I feel it is important to make no longer demands what I can supply, well, that could be a problem. Soldier Songs, for example—though not about the Middle East—is a “serious drama” intended to “make you think,” and the upcoming Dog Days, though a (black) comedy, does involve a family starving in the wake of a devastating (maybe nuclear) war. (Sunshine and Puppies!) I will be very interested to read between the lines of the reviews for performances of these works in the coming months, to see if this sentiment—that they are too serious for these serious times—is expressed.
And though it’s not his fault, President Obama provides a double-whammy for this scenario. I was recently talking to my friend Dallas (whose new record is quite good). He was discussing the correlation between the popularity of metal and political power cycles. When the Republicans are in office, he said, metal thrives as a genre. But when Democrats are in office, it fizzles. The reason? People are simply less angry under Democrats, (or so he says…personally, I think I’m equally angry under each).
He claimed that during the Clinton administration, Slayer—one of the greatest of all time—couldn’t get anywhere near the top of the Billboard 200 charts. During the Bush administration, however, their Christ Illusion debuted at #5. (Who was at the top of the charts during the Clinton years? Hootie & The Blowfish, who were #1 twice, in 1994 and 1996, #5 in 1998!)
A quick look around the Billboard charts suggests that it’s a little more complex than this, and metal is certainly not a genre that is going to cast as broad a net as pop. (That’s part of what metal is about anyway: insider/outsider tension.) But it’s still interesting to consider what might have shifted culturally to have Slayer in the same Billboard slot that Hootie & The Blowfish had held eight years earlier.
Compare this 1996 performance by Hootie and The Blowfish, which makes Lionel Richie look like G.G. Allin…
…to Slayer’s 2006 take on PTSD; timely and intense. (Warning: some graphic images.)
The influence of metal is a big part of my work, as is the desire to encourage thought and questioning. If the above is in fact true, I’m not sure that what I can offer an audience artistically is really what they want right now, though it might be what they need. I guess I’ll just make what I need to make, and they can catch up to me when the smoke clears, and they’ve seen one Paul Blart too many.
Adventures in Fund Raising
February 16th, 2009Last night I attended the premiere of of Mermaid in a Jar–an excellent one-act opera by Rachel Peters and Royce Vavrek. After the show, I had the pleasure of meeting, among other people, Tom Ridgely. Tom is a director, and co-founder of the theater company Waterwell.
Checking out their website, I found this funny and adventurous fund raising campaign, giving potential donors countless reasons why they shouldn’t donate to the theater:
My favorite lines?
*”I’m Tom Ridgely. For just $12 a day you can get our Dramaturg the bottle of Pino Grigio she so desperately needs to fall asleep each night.”
*”They don’t need your money. They don’t need it. They’re just telling you that because they like to buy nice things.”
*”The other day, I saw them stepping on kittens.”
Brilliant! I’ll be curious to know how well it worked!
The Ultimate Jew meets Amanda Lepore: Surreal Scenes on South Beach
January 31st, 2009So I just returned from Miami, where I had the pleasure of working with the wonderful musicians at the New World Symphony, along with my old friend Jeff, and my new friends Timo and Daniel. (We were there to hear the premieres of new works inspired by Charles Ives. It was a really great show, organized by the wonderful Yuki Numata.) The orchestra’s headquarters is in South Beach on Lincoln Road, which is a strange mix of Aspen, Venice, Atlantic City, and some of the older-feeling parts of LA. It’s a pretty out place. Not too much of what you see is real, and by the second morning I had officially proclaimed Amanda Lepore as the patron saint of South Beach.

Getting caffeinated before a rehearsal, I noticed a woman sitting at a nearby Starbucks who was the closest thing to Lepore that I may have ever seen. It was pretty ridiculous. So collagen-injected she could barely speak, she was a wonderfully grotesque example of “beauty” in that particular shallow, late-capitalist, crumbling society sort of way.
Suddenly an older gentleman walks in and sits down next to her. I swear he looks like Jackie Mason, but I can’t remember if Mason is dead or not. (Is that terrible?) This gentleman tries to flirt with the plastic lady, and she treats him kindly, like a cute grandfather–(I am at this point tending to my cream and sugar needs)–but what matters is that I got to hear his voice, which further suggests that it might well be him.

Earlier today, now back north, I remembered this bizarre scene, and decided to Google “Jackie Mason” and “Miami.” Lo and behold, it turns out that Jackie Mason was on Lincoln Road in South Beach on that very day shooting The Ultimate Jew, his video-blog, where he pretty much rambles nonsensically, sounds off on Republican talking-points, and gets schooled by young whipper-snappers on politics. It’s enlightening.
Watch Part 1 here, in which Jackie discusses the closing of Guantanamo with a fellow Jewish stand-up comic who is also, coincidentally, a relative of Senator Chuck Schumer:
Three Cheers for Miami Beach!
Hennacy on Hersey
January 26th, 2009“Heresy is a word that has no meaning to me now, for I renounce the whole system of Catholic or other theology, which is based upon the fear of hell and the hope of getting into heaven by all sorts of dubious bargains.”
– Ammon Hennacy, On Leaving the Catholic Church (1965-1968)
No Pussyfooting.
December 20th, 2008There is a really interesting interview with my good friend and fellow composer Ted Hearne over at InDigestMag.com. It covers a lot of ground, though focuses mostly on Ted’s Katrina Ballads and the musical and political issues that relate to it. Of particular interest to me are Ted’s thoughts on drum set in classical music, which I hope to write more about here. As always, you can be sure that Ted is going to speak his mind. There’s no pussyfooting around.
Check it out here.
Or, to listen to some of the recently re-issued Eno/Fripp record (No Pussyfooting), go here.
Really though, you should probably do both.
Well now…
November 22nd, 2008Video from the Newspeak Election Night Party!
November 20th, 2008An excerpt of the premiere performance of Robert Davidson’s “Generation After Generation” from the Newspeak/Anti-Social Music Election Night Party! 11.04.08
Hello world!
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