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Event
Hauschka : A Prepared Piano Performance with support from Glenn Jones
Hauschka is the alias of Düsseldorf-based Volker Bertelmann, who signed to FatCat's 130701 post-classical imprint in 2007. Having studied classical piano for ten years, his work as Hauschka is based upon an exploration of the possibilities of the 'prepared' piano. Creatively undermining the preconceived idea of the piano as a pure-toned, perfected instrument waiting for a gifted virtuoso to play on it, Bertelmann instead modifies it by placing an assortment of material (gaffa tape, kitchen foil, felt wedges, bottle tops, ping pong balls, guitar string, etc) within its innards. What results are vivid, unconventional pieces made in a spirit of playful research-enthusiasm. As precised by Mojo magazine, "The sounds Bertlemann creates with(in) a piano are nothing short of astonishing."Two well-received albums (2007's 'Room To Expand' and 2008's 'Ferndorf') backed by an engaging series of live shows have seen the artist's profile steadily rise. Where the previous album comprised mostly solo piano recordings (with a few electronic and instrumental overdubs), 'Ferndorf' was a far more expansive album, also featuring a string duo, enabling an increased solidity. 'Foreign Landscapes' marks the next big step forwards.
The Wanting, Glenn Jones' first album for Thrill Jockey, was recorded in a fourth floor apartment on Commonwealth Avenue, Allston, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston, overlooking the commuter train line. If you listen carefully to the record, you can occasionally hear trains going by in the background. Reuben Son recorded the album between December 12, 2010, and April 20, 2011. The Wanting was mixed and mastered by long time collaborator Matthew Azevedo. Simply put, The Wanting is a collection of original compositions for solo acoustic steel string guitar, six-string, 10-string and bottleneck, and 5-string open-back banjo. A little background and context may help. So in his own words:
"The '60s, as has been drummed into our heads to the point of tediousness, was a period of musical growth and exploration. And while there does seem to have been something in the water back then that everyone of a certain age was sipping, I came of age late in that decade. In 1967, my head was blown off by Jimi Hendrix's second album. After hearing it, I bugged my old man till he bought me my first guitar. I was 14. Today, I consider myself to be part of a tribe of acoustic finger-style guitar players whose main inspirations are the "American Primitive" or "Takoma school" guitarists, those centered around John Fahey.
The model par excellance, and the fountainhead, John virtually single-handedly created a style of solo guitar playing, as well as an audience to support it. He was also, for people like me, the inspiration to try making some kind of coherent music utilizing the acoustic guitar myself. Playing like the people who influence you, however, only gets you so far. No matter how much one loves a particular player, or how long one studies their work, it's all but impossible to beat them at their own game. You're always at a disadvantage. Better, therefore, to make up your own game, devise your own strategies, invent your own rules. This is what Fahey and Robbie Basho did, as well as such lesser-known players of the early-to-mid '60s as Max Ochs, Harry Taussig, Fred Gerlach, Dick Rosmini and others.
As I got more into the instrument and began listening to the music of guitarists of all kinds, I found that the "Takoma school" players were decidedly different from other guitarists. Despite the fact that many guitarists were technically more adept, polished or sophisticated than the American Primitives, what I like about the latter was the fact that their music was not about virtuosity for its own sake, but, rather, was a way to express some kind of feeling. Though every record I make is a ready acknowledgement of my debt to the guitarists I learned from, I strive to create music that is my own. "Strive" is perhaps not the right word. It sounds like I'm trying to do something, whereas, from where I sit now, this many years down the knife-edge, what I do is what I do: there is no trying, there is only the need to play everyday, and to create something that validates me to myself."
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LocationWest Park Presbyterian Church (View)
165 W 86th Street
New York, NY 10024
United States
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Kid Friendly: Yes! |
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes! |
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