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Sergio Armaroli with Fritz Hauser

PRISMO

Structuring The Silence Extended

Quartetto | für Quartett [in resonance]

for FOUR | per quattro

Fritz Hauser, drum and percussion

Martina Brodbeck, cello

Francesca Gemmo, piano

Sergio Armaroli, vibraphone

LINER NOTES by Andy Hamilton

Percussionist Fritz Hauser, a member of the quartet on this recording, has long been fascinated by silence: "Developing sounds out of silence, fading into silence, stopping a cymbal crescendo to let the silence explode into space," he explains. The composition they perform, Sergio Armaroli's Structuring The Silence Extended (2019), is an essay in Cageian themes. It follows Armaroli's 2017 release Structuring The Silence, in which he was partnered by Fritz Hauser. Armaroli explains that "I intended to broaden the improvisation experience by incorporating a typically Cagean conception of time and space...for Cage silence is the world, what we do not control".

 

Music is a sounding, vibrating phenomenon, patterns of intentionally-produced sound that begin and end in silence. If architecture is the articulation of space, then music is the articulation of silence. "Articulation" is not just enclosure – it means both "expresses" and "breaks up". It also suggests that the space, or silence, is not pre-existing, but created. In these artistic senses, space and silence are not an observer-neutral Newtonian plenum, but human creations. (Kant's understanding of space as mind-dependent, and Einstein's understanding of observer-relativity, may be less alien to the artistic picture.) Silence frames the musical performance, but also occurs within it, as a result of music's humanly physical status. Music-making traditionally involves blowing, plucking, stroking, vocalising and other actions, which produce non-continuous sound and therefore silences.

 

According to the modern philosopher of silence, John Cage, total silence does not exist – any more than a total vacuum does. Cage's concern with silence was stimulated by his visit to Harvard University's echo-free anechoic chamber. Its walls, ceiling and floor, lined with sound-absorbent material, minimised reflection and insulated the room from external noise. In the room one hears only direct sound, with no reverberation – an unsettling and disorienting experience. Cage heard a high sound, and a low one – the engineer explained afterwards that these were his nervous system, and his blood circulation.

 

For Cage, all sound, including silence, is music; he concluded that he was creating music unintentionally and continuously. Hence 4' 33", in which form became emptiness, emptiness became form. It is not really a silent piece, as it features contingent ambient sound. At the première, Cage recalled, "You could hear the wind stirring outside during the first movement. During the second, raindrops began pattering the roof, and during the third people themselves made all kinds of interesting sounds as they talked or walked out."

 

Cage's philosophical claims need contextualising. On a liberal, postmodern definition, any sound can be music. But the definition is parasitic on the existence of traditional music – an art of tones, of relatively fixed and enduring pitched sounds. As with conceptual and readymade visual art, we couldn't respond to Cage's 4' 33", if we had not experienced traditional music-making. Aesthetic responses to non-musical sound are parasitic on aesthetic responses to tonal sound – and arguably, 4' 33" is soundart rather than music.

 

Armaroli's Structuring The Silence addresses Cageian themes while making connections with more traditional music-making – in particular, through the art of improvisation which the American maverick professed to reject. Armaroli argues that Cage discovered its value late in his career, through collaboration with improvisers like Fritz Hauser, for whom he wrote one of his Number Pieces. The score for Structuring The Silence develops Cage's technique in those Pieces, in which "time is conceived as a possible container of musical form." In the Number pieces, Cage's focus is on duration rather than rhythm, and this is another factor that makes his work soundart rather than music – though the boundary between these categories is always contestable. And I'd reiterate that Armaroli's work has more affinities with traditional music-making – the performances on this recording are clearly tonal and rhythmic.

 

Armaroli was born in Italy in 1972, and lives in Milan. He is a painter, poet and "percussionist concrète", who's worked with Sylvano Bussotti, Alvin Curran, Walter Prati and Elliott Sharp. Hauser, born in 1953 in Basel, composes for solo percussion, percussion ensembles, chamber orchestra and choir. He's created sound installations and music for films, and works with architects and choreographers. For this recording, the Armaroli-Hauser partnership becomes Quartet Prismo, with Francesca Gemmo, Italian pianist and composer, and Martina Brodbeck, principal cellist of the basel-sinfonietta. Here, Armaroli plays vibraphone, and Hauser percussion.

 

Armaroli's score is conceptual, containing instructions such as: "Choose nine sounds (or groups of nine sounds) in the order: 9 + 9 + 9...with fixed characteristics (amplitude, tempo, overtone structure, duration, etc.) and nine elements: gestures, intention, words and other suggestion(s) etc." Durations and dynamics are free: "The sounds to be made are long and short or very short. Instruments can play alone, duo or trio." Four instruments are specified: drums, cello, piano and vibraphone.

 

A score such as this invites the question: When does interpretation become improvisation? Conceptual and graphic scores undermine the distinction, and this seems especially true for Structuring The Silence. Influenced by Cage's ideas of duration, silence and non-intention, the quartet's exploratory quest and fragile balance results in music that perhaps sounds improvised – but they convey the rightness and certainty of the most persuasive composition. Gemmo's quicksilver and delicate piano figurations, Armaroli's sonorous vibraphone, Brodbeck's classical and jazzy cello and Hauser's protean, sometimes explosive percussion make for a soundworld that is tantalisingly liminal. If pressed on whether a performance "sounds improvised", often I'd ask, "It depends what you mean by improvisation and composition – because improvisation is itself a method of composition, in the sense of putting things together in an aesthetically pleasing way". These sensitive performances bear out that important uncertainty.

Art Lange wrote (to Werner X. Uehlinger)

 

By the way, I thought Sergio Armaroli/Prismo was an excellent release. I liked the music and the quartet’s subtle interaction very much. If possible, please pass along my congratulations to Fritz Hauser. 

 

Take care… Art

For several years I have been working with the Italian percussionist Sergio Armaroli again and again. Armaroli lives in Milan, teaches in Cremona, and has devoted himself entirely to contemporary music - with jazz noises. His composition / improvisation concepts are based on ideas that John Cage developed many years ago and that work primarily with time. 

Simply put, it's about structuring an improvisation by creating time brackets that allow the musician in question to play or not. Every improvising musician knows the problem: when should I play, when should I not play? Not playing doesn't necessarily mean listening. Not playing could also mean: I'm not interested in what's going on at the moment. 

Now the first rule of improvised music is to leave your prejudices and overly quick judgments at home. You listen and relate to what you hear. You react as spontaneously and quickly as possible, absorb a thought, develop it further, and risk making a mistake, maybe even falling into musical nothing. More important is: hold up energy! That doesn't necessarily mean playing loud and fast. Energy takes place in all states. Even very subtle, subtle moments often live from raging energy!

If the time brackets determine the stakes, this decision does not have to be made. It's like parachuting in an association. It's your turn and you jump ... And you don't have to worry about when to stop playing. Time decides. And the nice thing about the time is that it doesn't know any feelings. It is easy. And we follow her. 

Sergio Armaroli uses a random program and only enters the parameters that are necessary: number of musicians, total duration, perhaps also the minimum duration of an assignment or maximum length of an assignment. Then it starts. 

In the case of Prismo, we discussed whether we wanted to expand the duo formula and that seemed like a good idea. Sergio brought his wife Francesca Gemmo into play; I suggested Martina Brodbeck, a cellist with whom I have played many improvised concerts. 

The recordings took place in Italy, in a small private studio near Biella. With this concept, it is important that the instruments are recorded in individual rooms so that adjustments or modifications to the instruments can be made during the individual breaks in playing without disturbing the other musicians. Communication with one another takes place via headphones. 

On the one hand, we interpreted the aforementioned formula by Sergio Armaroli - Structuring the Silence for Quartet -, on the other hand, we played free improvisations in random combinations. The final selection of the recordings for the CD took place in a joint discussion.

Due to the variety of combinations it is possible when listening to the CD, the individual instruments resp. To experience interpreters from different perspectives and thus to get to know the sound possibilities. When mixing, we made sure that the common sound space remained and did not use any effects. 

Fritz Hauser

From Squidco, US distributor :
 
I should mention also that I'm very impressed with the Armaroli CD as well.  Both CDs will be listed as "Squidco Picks" in our upcoming mailing list.  Kudos for releasing such important music. 
Sincerely, phil

RECENSIONI | REVIEWS

Top 3

DA DOVE SCATURISCE IL PRODIGIO

di Mario Gamba

Le parti di violoncello in apertura del brano resteranno nella storia come “i dieci minuti di musica che sconvolsero il mondo”. L’intensità del lirismo dentro e oltre l’espressionismo astratto. La solista si chiama Martina Brodbeck, l’opera è firmata Sergio Armaroli, compositore, improvvisatore, vibrafonista, percussionista, poeta, artista visivo. Il titolo dell’opera, che è la più ampia in una raccolta di 11 che formano l’album Prismo (Hat Hut Records) è Structuring The Silence Extended. C’è una piattaforma scritta, basata sulla distribuzione dei suoni nel tempo, come nel Cage dei Number Pieces, non sulla prescrizione di altezze e durate, e tutto ciò che accade in questo campo sonoro è improvvisazione. Di un quartetto in cui agiscono lo stesso Armaroli al vibrafono, Brodbeck al violoncello, Francesca Gemmo al pianoforte, Fritz Hauser alle percussioni. Da dove scaturisce il prodigio di Brodbeck, che non è l’unico peraltro nella prodigiosa costellazione che è Prismo? Dalla vena creativa della solista, questo è certo. Anche dalla piattaforma approntata da Armaroli, pure questo è certo. Ha voluto sperimentare con questo lavoro le possibilità dell’improvvisazione di evitare i cliché, di misurarsi con una logica temporale senza riferimenti armonici-melodici. La bellezza del quesito- quanto è dovuto al leader e compositore, quanto alla solista – è la stessa di quando si ascolta, mettiamo, un mirabile assolo di Booker Ervin in un brano di Charles Mingus. Difficile trovare l’”anima” di Structuring che dura mezz’ora e non conosce stanchezze. Nel pianismo sempre estroverso/felice di Gemmo, oltre, s’intende, i memorabili dieci minuti di Brodbeck? Nelle parti cello-percussioni che sono appunto le più “animate”? Inutile chiederselo: qui il rapporto scrittura-improvvisazione raggiunge un punto altissimo nella vicenda aperta della musica contemporanea. Armaroli, si diceva, ha cercato con Structuring di evitare i cliché proponendo un campo strutturato. E allora negli altri dieci brani di Prismo, brevi e brevissimi, che sono tutti di pura improvvisazione, senza nessuno schema preordinato, abbondano i cliché? Proprio no. Quartetto Tre è uno dei brani più densi e concitati, buono per far capire che l’”intellettualismo” di Armaroli è un’arma a favore della sua potenza espressiva e non ha niente a che vedere con la freddezza. Quartetto Sei si svolge in un clima estatico, rimanda al meditare che fu di Feldman e Nono, è una squisita ricerca del possibile (nei suoni, nell’esistenza). Gemmo forever in DueDue (piano e percussioni!). Impudiche volate dissonanti sulla tastiera. Cecil Taylor rivive. Più essenziale e solare.

Inutile chiederselo: qui il rapporto scrittura-improvvisazione raggiunge un punto altissimo nella vicenda aperta della musica contemporanea. 

Swiss percussionist Fritz Hauser and Italian vibraphonist Sergio Armaroli emphasize their instruments’ deliberate and lilting qualities plus their rhythmic functions by maneuvering between improvisation and chance music. Recorded within four months of one another these CDs testify to this delicate balance, with Angelica’s two extended tracks more inclined towards free music, while Prismo’s one extended and 10 much briefer tracks suggest leans towards the aleatoric. Another reason for the latter is that the duo is joined by Italian pianist Francesca Gemmo who has collaborated with Alvin Curran and Swiss cellist Martina Brodbeck, a member of the Basel-Sinfonietta. Hauser works with directors and choreographers and players like Joëlle Léandre, while Armaroli, involved with what he calls percussion concrète has played with Roger Turner among others.

Expressive echoes of repetitive vibraphone plinks and accented rattles and shuffle from the percussionist set up the live Angelica recital as the exposition judders upwards and downwards to expose the quickening theme. Yet as the narrative’s well-modulated metronomic parameters are emphasized, freer interludes where Armaroli’s lyrical intervention resembles Milt Jackson’s balladic skill and Hauser’s vehement strokes aim for Elvin Jones-like power arrive. In tandem or double counterpoint, the duo emphasizes both sides of the cadenced and chiming divide. The vibraphone’s motor power allows bell-like tinkles to undulate in the air or alternately create jagged metallic scrapes. Meanwhile Hauser’s versatility extends to strokes that resemble African hand drum malleability or thumping ruffs that suggest kettle drums. He works out simple patterns behind the vibist’s more lyrical passages or when Armaroli turns to tough ringing, he moderates the impact with a collection of guiro-like ratcheting stokes, maracas-like shakes and a showpiece of rolled paradiddles. Reaching a swirling climax of airy metal bar twinkles mixed with reparative drum pops the piece fades with a connective and distinctive buzz.

Four months later as part of a quartet, emphasis is on statelier and precise interpretations since the cornerstone of the session is Armaroli’s almost 30¼ minute through composed “Structuring the Silence Extended”. Initially expressed as mid-range lyricism from bowed cello and gentling vibraphone strokes, the dual introduction stretches into spiccato string squeaks and thinner vibe reverberations backed by cymbal plops. Changing pace before the half-way mark, swing inferences enter as Brodbeck plucks her instrument as if it was a Jazz double bass, Hauser paces drum top licks and Gemmo creates sprightly vibration. This restrained story telling becomes almost recital-ready formalism and briefly returns to suspended silence until interrupted first by a sequence if drum top rubs, bell ringing and chain shaking from Hauser and then by multi-string sul tasto string pulls that into a sequence of thickened cello buzzes. As this continues it’s contrasted with keyboard glissandi and maracas-like intonation from the percussionist. Straining upwards the final sequence of cello swipes and vibe ringing backed by piano plinks wraps up the program even as it recalls the introductory motif.

While that track is the opposite of animated with its mournful tempo, it sets up the paradigm as to whether the four should be considering a percussion ensemble or a strings and drums combo. Without coming down on one side or another, the musical architecture on the other tracks in duo, trio or quartet form suggests tentative answers. Essentially the duos showcase the antithetical or conjoined collaboration of various pairs like the strained and stretched string-stropped squeals of the cellist and pianist on “Duo Quattro” or the dissonant clanks the percussionist adds to Gemmo’s measured key clipping and octave leaps on “Duo Due”. Featuring vibes, piano and percussion “Trio Due” demonstrates how joining brief vibe strokes, doubled drum pops and slides from low to elevated piano pitches creates expressive dynamics. While “Trio Uno” subtracts Armaroli, limits Hauser to pitter-patter and plays up the challenge between the cellist’s sul tasto pressure and the pianist key cracks. Following the protracted “Structuring the Silence Extended”, the interlocking textures of the final “Quartetto Tre” and “Quartetto Sei” confirm the group’s multiple identities. In the first case lyricism arises from drum rolls and vibraphone bounces and in the second graduated motion is indicated with solemn percussion and intermittent string plucks that coalesces into a quiet drone. The exact genre within which the playing and composing of Armaroli and associates fit may be difficult to define. But these CDs s still propose compelling sounds.

—Ken Waxman