With Bayou-Borne / Jittgerbug the Amsterdam based MAZE presents the first recordings of the new composition Bayou-Borne, for Pauline, and Jitterbug by composer Annea Lockwood

Bayou-Borne / Jitterbug is released on CD mastered by Jos Smolders at EARLabs and comes in beautiful artwork designed in line with the Contemporary Series by Rutger Zuydervelt with extensive notes by Annea Lockwood and Reinier van Houdt.

About Bayou-Borne / Jitterbug

In 2017 MAZE gave a stunning interpretation of Jitterbug at the Tactile Paths Festival in Berlin, full of subtle detail and fluid energy. That they have returned to the work now – and have also created this beautiful realization of bayou-borne, for Pauline – is something for which I am deeply grateful.

Both works draw on improvisation and are guided by graphic imagery: of a river system in Texas and of rocks from the Continental Divide in Montana.

Bayou-born, for Pauline

Bayou-born, for Pauline (2016) is dedicated to Pauline Oliveros and was composed with her passions in mind. She was born in Houston, Texas, so I created a graphic score from a map of the six bayous which flow through the city to Galveston Bay, thinking that she would have known one or all of those rivers intimately as a child – swimming, wading, river mud between her toes. She was a superb improviser, so it is scored for six improvising musicians with each player reading one of the rivers as a guide. Their lines move independently at first, coming closer together at the confluences to form duets and trios, before converging at the red star, the whole sound darkening as they approach Houston in memory of the devastation and deaths caused by Hurricane Harvey in 2017.

This is one of eighty-five scores contributed to a memorial celebration of Pauline’s life: Still Listening: New Works in Honour of Pauline Oliveros (1932-2016), held at McGill University, Canada, in 2017. I wish to thank Doris Yokelson for the design of the map.

Jitterbug (2007)

A rock surface is not perhaps the most intuitive choice on which to base a graphic score, but I was looking for something which might be an unfamiliar stimulus for the musicians of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, which commissioned me to make a piece for a new dance, eyeSpace, in 2006. That summer I was recording aquatic insects up in the Rockies near Glacier Park, Montana for the piece, and started collecting rocks from the area, striated with unusually clear and beautiful markings. This underlying connection between image and sound is important to me, and of course, the title was irresistible.

Six of these rocks were photographed by Gwen Deely. The players interpret two or three agreed-upon images together, one after another within a predetermined time frame, reading each image in layers from right to left and from bottom to top, as described in the textual score.

I have composed pre-recorded sound files, or episodes, which create an expanded sound world around the players, drawn from those aquatic bugs and from terrestrial insects.* These recordings are interwoven with resonant tones from bowed gongs and piano strings performed by Gustavo Aguilar, Joseph Kubera and William Winant, and recorded for the project by sound engineers Marilyn Ries and Maggi Payne. In performance, these episodes are brought into the mix by an additional player according to the evolving shape of the piece.

— Annea Lockwood, December 2021 —

*recorded by Lang Elliott, the NatureSound Studio and The Music of Nature.

Reviews

Vital Weekly, Arjan van Sorge

Ah, that rocking chair, that does it… Bearing in mind the logo of the famous label Moving Furniture, it seems pleasant to sit on such a moving piece of furniture, with a new release from the Contemporary Series in the CD player. At least, that’s what you think when you prepare to listen to ‘Bayou-Borne’, a tribute to Pauline Oliveros (1932-2016) — the composer/accordionist who played such an important role in the development of post-war experimental and electronic music. The album consists of two pieces, Bayou-Borne of about twenty minutes and Jitterbug of more than half an hour. Pauline Oliveros was born close to the bayous running through her hometown Houston, Texas, and Annea Lockwood wanted to reflect that in the first composition. It flows and meanders indeed richly, although it is a bit startling in the beginning when it seems as if Wiek Hijmans is just tuning his guitar. But together with the other musicians of the Amsterdam collective Maze (Anne La Berge: flutes, electronics, Dario Calderone: double bass, Gareth Davis: bass clarinet, Yannis Kyariakides: electronics, and Reinier Vanhoudt: piano, electronics) everything quickly flows into a beautiful stream. Jitterbug is a bit more fragmentary, inspired by insects and pieces of rock from Glacier Park, Montana, and was once commissioned by the Merce Cunningham Dance Company. An exciting and very varied piece! Both compositions are a pleasure for the ears and the mind. Let that good old rocking chair go back and forth. (AvS)

CD limited to 300 or digital available in our webshop.

Or find the album in your preferred streaming service: https://orcd.co/lockwood-maze_bayou-borne

Annea Lockwood

Picture by Julia Dratel

Annea Lockwood (1939, New Zealand) is known for her explorations of natural acoustic sounds and environments, making works on the intersection of body, environment, sound and text – a life’s work that equally highlights acts of generous listening, invitational composition and a hunger for considered experimentation.
Having started studying electronic music in the 1960’s with Gottfried Michael Koenig, learning to synthesize, measure, serialize and edit sounds, at some point she had a major epiphany . When she witnessed a performance with La Monte Young slowly pushing a chair across the floor, emanating an unstable ever-changing but continuous sound.

This was a sound not ‘composed’ by anyone, but it seemed to have an agency of its own, an inherent vitality that could totally engage our ears. From that moment on, she decided to concentrate on working with untreated unaltered sounds, whether coming from the environment, from non-intentional situations or from open instructions to performers, all sounds becoming alive by the act of listening.
Annea Lockwood became a pioneer in the use of field recordings, creating groundbreaking installations like the soundmaps from the Hudson or Danube rivers, or performances like Glass World. Much of her work has been focused on the fluidity of rivers, the vibratory shimmer of oceans and lakes, and the pulsation of waves.
“In general, I experience sound so strongly in and through my body that it brings me a real visceral sense of connection to whatever I’m listening to, and that is probably true for many of us. That, to me, is a powerful embodied, often unconscious reminder that I am not separate from the world around me, and I suspect this is true for many people. And is, in itself, a creative practice.”

In the last decade her environmental works have gained an extra dimension related to the imminent dangers posed by climate change. Also the responsibility her scores give to the performers take on an additional depth. As performers we are asked to respect the sounds, let them come naturally, follow them, not push them around, and also take responsibility for them – to take responsibility for the musical environment and everybody in it – the environment we create, influence and are influenced by. 

www.annealockwood.com 

MAZE

MAZE is an Amsterdam based collective for exploratory music. They work on developing open forms, hybrid scores and notations, and performances that subvert hierarchies between listeners, musicians, composers and scores. Next to presenting their own works they collaborate with pioneering composers like Christian Marclay, Barbara Ellison, Robert Ashley, Alvin Lucier, Okkyung Lee, Michael Pisaro, Peter Ablinger and Annea Lockwood.

… the name MAZE couldn’t be more appropriate for this endeavour … gauzy webs form in the darkness, thicken and soon dissolve into other tentative textures … this is a very unusual interplay in which the unfolding of highly subjective personal dimensions invoked by each performer will have in turn its implications in the personal environments of the listeners: it’s like being written into a Jorge Luis Borges story …
Stuart Marshall, The Sound Projector.

Anne La Berg: flutes, electronics
Dario Calderone: double bass
Gareth Davis: bass clarinet
Yannis Kyariakides: electronics
Wiek Hijmans: electric guitar
Reinier van Houdt: piano, eletronics

www.maze.nu

Share this:

;