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Necronomicon--for String Quartet!

by Dan Clore <clore@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Feb 3, 2005 at 11:43 PM

[Anyone heard this guy's work? Is there a recording 
available of the Necronomicon piece?--DC]

MUSIC REVIEW
Atmosphere at Zorn tribute is decidedly cool
By Richard Dyer
[Boston] Globe Staff
February 1, 2005

New York avant-gardist John Zorn sat down for his ****trait 
Sunday afternoon in the Gardner Museum, but no 90-minute 
period of conversation and music could display the many 
facets of this protean musical personality who has 
do***ented his work on more than 250 CDs. Composer, jazz 
saxophonist, musical game maker, Zorn is a figure whose 
interests range from Webern and Varese to Carl Stalling 
(composer for Bugs Bunny cartoons), from Stravinsky to 
hard-core death metal, and his music reflects that diversity 
of interest.

The event, produced in collaboration with the Miller Theatre 
at Columbia University, launched a new series designed to 
attract a young and hip audience to the museum, and 
re****tedly did so on Saturday night. The repeat performance 
Sunday afternoon played to about one-third capacity -- and 
since this was a Zorn event, it wasn't a repeat. Instead of 
the piano trio "Amour Fou" from 1999, some of the musicians 
wanted to play Zorn's "Walpurgisnacht" for string trio, so 
they did.

George Steel from the Miller Theatre hosted the concert and 
brought Zorn onstage for a preperformance chat. The composer 
appeared in camouflage pants topped by a maroon athletic 
jersey over an orange T-****rt. One didn't envy Steel's 
efforts to pin Zorn down, and in fact he failed abjectly to 
do so. On Saturday night Zorn re****tedly delivered a 
foul-mouthed rant; on Sunday, chastened, he hardly said 
anything beyond mentioning that "Walpurgisnacht" contains 
the same number of bars as the string trio by Anton von 
Webern and indicating that the last piece on the program, 
"Necronomicon," is for string quartet. Steel said Zorn has 
produced four previous works in this genre.

Information and basic helpfulness were in short supply both 
in the conversation and in the program notes, which devoted 
three pages to biographies of the performers, without a word 
about the music. So the whole introductory chat gave off an 
uncomfortable in-group feel, exactly the opposite of the 
welcoming atmosphere it was designed to create; the attitude 
seemed to be, "Everyone is here because we are all so cool."

The music on the program was in fact pretty cool, and the 
performers were sensational. New England Conservatory 
pianist Stephen Drury, producer of many local Zorn events, 
played "Le Momo" with a leading New York new-music 
violinist, Jennifer Choi; they have recorded this piece and 
play it with fiery authority. Liner notes will tell you this 
work is "a ritual of exorcism and possession," and you can 
read elsewhere that "Le Momo" was the term the French 
absurdist playwright and poet Antonin Artaud gave to his 
disordered body after repeated shock therapy. At the Gardner 
we were on our own.

Choi, violist Richard O'Neill, and cellist Fred Sherry 
played "Walpurgisnacht," a depiction of the "Witches' 
Sabbath" familiar from the Faust legend and its musical 
treatments. The three of them were joined by violinist Jesse 
Mills for the string quartet, which deals with a magus, 
conjurations, and demonology. All three works demand 
high-tension virtuosity and shuttle schizophrenically 
between avant-garde, nontonal extravagance and almost 
hypnotically tonal sweetness.

The context in which we hear music determines some of our 
response. One wondered what the reaction to this music would 
have been if it had been composed by a senior composer with 
impressive academic credentials, as it easily could have 
been (and, after all, Zorn is 51 by now), and if the titles 
had been "Chronometry and Chaocity" or "Asynchronicity VI." 
But if that had been the case, this audience probably 
wouldn't have been there to hear it.

-- 
Dan Clore

My collected fiction, _The Unspeakable and Others_:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1587154838/thedanclorenecro
Lord We˙rdgliffe & Necronomicon Page:
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/9879/
News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo

Strange pleasures are known to him who flaunts the
immarcescible purple of poetry before the color-blind.
-- Clark Ashton Smith, "Epigrams and Apothegms"
 




 10 Posts in Topic:
Necronomicon--for String Quartet!
Dan Clore <clore@[EMAI  2005-02-03 23:43:46 
Re: Necronomicon--for String Quartet!
"RMJon23@[EMAIL PROT  2005-02-04 03:16:34 
Re: Necronomicon--for String Quartet!
Dan Clore <clore@[EMAI  2005-02-04 10:25:49 
Re: Necronomicon--for String Quartet!
"Tommy" <pol  2005-02-04 13:49:21 
Re: Necronomicon--for String Quartet!
"BS" <smi23l  2005-02-04 20:04:07 
Re: Necronomicon--for String Quartet!
Dan Clore <clore@[EMAI  2005-02-11 16:37:38 
Re: Necronomicon--for String Quartet!
"Tommy" <pol  2005-02-11 22:42:42 
Re: Necronomicon--for String Quartet!
"Tommy" <pol  2005-02-04 09:01:56 
Re: Necronomicon--for String Quartet!
David Samuel Barr <dsb  2005-02-06 07:08:33 
Re: Necronomicon--for String Quartet!
"Doug Boucher"   2005-02-06 19:15:35 

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