[Dixielandjazz] Music in the Dark
Ron L'Herault
lherault at bu.edu
Wed Feb 16 07:51:09 PST 2011
I often close my eyes when listening even to a live band to eliminate the
distraction of movement around me. Alternatively, I try to sit close to a
band if they are not playing with over done amplification.
Ron L
-----Original Message-----
From: dixielandjazz-bounces at ml.islandnet.com
[mailto:dixielandjazz-bounces at ml.islandnet.com] On Behalf Of Stephen G
Barbone
Sent: Wednesday, February 16, 2011 9:51 AM
To: lherault at bu.edu
Cc: Dixieland Jazz Mailing List
Subject: [Dixielandjazz] Music in the Dark
Maybe we should listen to, and perform Dixieland in the dark at OKOM
Festivals in order to have, as described in the below article
excerpt, the listeners experience a heightened state of awareness,
becoming acutely attuned to the intricacies of a psychedelically
beautiful soundscape that unfolds in total darkness"?
Could be fun, as well as a way to reinvigorate the genre. <grin>
Cheers,
Steve Barbone
www.myspace.com/barbonestreetjazzband
Unearthly Harmonies, Best Heard in the Dark
By Vivien Schweitzer - NY TIMES - February 16 2011
During Georg Friedrich Haas's "In Vain," the listener experiences a
heightened state of awareness, becoming acutely attuned to the
intricacies of a psychedelically beautiful soundscape that often
unfolds in total darkness.
Mr. Haas is unusual in the way he wields light and darkness in his
scores. Stipulating that a work be performed in a pitch-black hall
sounds potentially gimmicky, but in this case it isn't - it renders
the experience initially disorienting, then intoxicating.
There is artificial light everywhere, Mr. Haas said in a phone
interview in explaining his decision to write music for darkened
spaces. "We do not have any night in our modern life," he said. "But I
think our body and our souls desire night, and I give this in my art.
If we close our eyes, of course our ears are more sensitive. Maybe we
don't listen to music; we listen more to sounds."
When composing "In Vain," Mr. Haas said he incorporated light "like a
silent percussion instrument." His swelling soundscapes become even
more startling when suddenly pierced by ghoulish glimpses of the
musicians, a phantom orchestra that ominously fades away.
Performing in the dark is obviously an enormous challenge for the
players, who must memorize chunks of the score and play without visual
cues. "We have to prepare everything in rehearsal, and then it's a
huge leap of trust," Mr. Galante said. "Everyone's awareness is
heightened."
Discussing "In Vain" from a listener's perspective in a preconcert
chat viewable on YouTube, the composer Bernhard Lang said: "Awareness
of sound and perception is changed.
After conducting "In Vain" at the Miller Theater, Mr. Galante said, he
felt as if he had "gotten the wind knocked out" of him.
"I was sitting there in a stupor," he said. "It's amazing to hear a
work that makes you think differently about the possibilities of music."
And it's intriguing how hearing such music in a setting removed from
the concert comfort zone can affect your perception of ordinary
sounds. After the performance in 2009, I drifted out of the Miller
Theater in a mild trance, attuned to how the noises of street and
subway were meshing into a haunting nocturnal soundscape.
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