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- x-gateway: rodan.UU.NET from love-hounds to rec.music.gaffa; Tue, 22 Dec 1992 00:52:10 EST
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 00:49:07 -0500
- Message-ID: <m0n42Tp-000ilXC@fciad2.bsd.uchicago.edu>
- Path: sparky!uunet!wendy-fate.uu.net!never-reply-to-path-lines
- Sender: Love-Hounds-request@uunet.uu.net
- Approved: wisner@uunet.UU.NET
- From: chrisw@fciad2.bsd.uchicago.edu (chris williams)
- Errors-To: Love-Hounds-request@uunet.uu.net
- Subject: Over-looked Kate session in Dec. Pulse
- Newsgroups: rec.music.gaffa
- Lines: 65
-
- Chris here,
-
- In the December Tower Records magazine _Pluse_, someone (I forget who)
- spotted Happy Rhodes' _Warpaint_ bizzarrely listed as one of the ten
- best "Dance Records" of the year. (Well, you *can* if you *want* to.)
-
- But our otherwise sharp-eyed Love-hound missed a Kate reference.
-
- Here it is...
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Cover up
-
- In the tight race toward that late-20th century Holy Grail --
- a pop-classical crossover watershed --the Balanescu Quartet has a
- strong resume in it's favor. Leader Alexander Balanescu left the
- preeminent Ardditti Quartet a ways back to start an ever more
- contemporary forum. Ardetti serves up prolific helpings of Cage,
- Legiti, Hans Werner Henze and other 20th century masters; Balanescu
- adopts the efforts of Lounge Lizard head John Lurie, jams with
- Kate Bush and the Pet Shop Boys, and keeps it's experimental edge
- sharp with composers Michial Nyman and Gavin Bryars.
- Following a spirted Argo recording of Nyman quartets, Balanescu
- hits us with _Possessed_ (Mute), consisting half of Kraftwerk covers
- ("Autobahn," "Pocket Calculater"), half of originals, plus one David
- Byrne piece. The Kraftwerk tracks are drab, maybe even silly; they play
- like those half-recognizable Muzak variations which keep us playing
- guessing games in shopping malls. Balanescu's originals, on the other
- hand, are pretty interesting. Exceedingly rhythmic and ripe with drama,
- they draw on pop music's resources internally, often intuitivly. Light
- percussion, and a rich supply of tasty, cellular melodic motifs and an
- urge toward cinematic expression drive Balanescu's compositions. Rather
- than simply play the game the Kronos Quartet did with it's cover of
- Jimi Hendrix's "Puple Haze" (or the Greene String Quartet with Gun's N'
- Roses' "Welcome to the Jungle," or the Tango Project with Jefferson
- Airplane's "White Rabbit" ... when will this end!?), composer Balanescu
- rewards us with a model for a true crossover: He doesn't need to cover
- a James Brown song to affirm his gratitude; he just works a variety of
- musical threads through his far-ranging, satisfying pieces, and leaves
- the listener to trace the patterns to their sources. (The quartet's
- adgenda is too large for one label; at presstime a sophomore Argo
- recording was announced, containing works by Byrne, Robert Moran,
- Michael Torke and John Lurie -- his _Stranger Than Paradise score,
- speaking of cinematic urge.) The Kraftwerk misstep aside, Balanescu
- adapts traditions with an ear for harmony, not publicity.
-
- Marc Weidenbaum
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Copyright - who cares! Like I'm going to try to obtain copyright
- permission for an excerpt from a give-away mag! Sheesh...
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- I can't *believe* that he mentioned Kate, and neglected to mention
- what song Kate appears on. And is "jams" just hyperbole, or does Kate
- appear here as a musician, instead of as a vocalist? Does she sing on
- the Kraftwerk covers? "I am the operator of my pocket calculator..."
-
- Chris Williams
- chrisw@fciad2.bsd.uchicago.edu
-
-
-