Sandbox Percussion
Jonny Allen, Victor Caccese, Ian Rosenbaum, Terry Sweeney,
Haiku 2 – Andy Akiho
Interdependence (world premiere) – Brendon Randall-Myers
Dark Full Ride – Julia Wolfe
Bell Patterns – Victor Caccese
Postlude 6 – Elliot Cole
Sonata – Jonny Allen
Drumming Part 1 – Steve Reich
This is an outdoor series that takes place on Governors Island. Originally scheduled for Saturday, this concert was postponed to Sunday (oddly, as announced from the stage, their inaugural concert was totally rained out both days last year (or two ago?)). It was a concert that, alas, looked better on paper than it turned out in the ear. Don’t get me wrong, the physical artistry on display was phenomenal. The overall result, not so much.
First, all four percussionists played many instruments, sometimes within the same piece, so concrete details will be distinctly lacking. Haiku 2 featured two metallophones and a marimba. And drumstick on metal disk, wine bottle, metal coffee(?) pot, and wooden block (not claves). There was also minimal choreography, where eventually all four players circled, counterclockwise, before ending at the front of the stage with their drumsticks and bangee of choice.
Interdependence featured a singing bowl (think a larger version of running your dampened finger around the rim of your wine glass). There was also bowed metal (I think it was a cello or double bass bow scraped along a bar of the metallophone—too technical?). The piece was really New-Age-y and really, really long. The composer was in the house (actually, on the lawn), so we had had to be polite. I would have been anyway. [Note: The percussion quartet turned into a quintet with the addition of an overhead helicopter. That counts, right?]
Dark Full Ride featured a quartet of high-hat cymbals (part of a drum set). It was repetitive and redundant. Apparently Ms. Wolfe won a Pulitzer Prize for a different composition. This one was also turned into a quintet by the addition of a ferry horn.
Bell Patterns, Postlude 6, and Sonata were played as a continuous set. I think the first was played with a recorded score, but I couldn’t be sure. At any rate, I’d rate it as choreographed cacophony. Postlude 6 (as well as some of the others) had bowed vibraphone bars. If you’ve ever seen someone playing a musical saw, it’s like that but with a fixed pitch. Sonata had a tom-tom drum added and what seemed to be a guiro (a fish-shaped hollow gourd with a grooved exterior that you can scrape, as a percussion instrument). A standing cymbal was featured in Sonata.
Steve Reich. Definitely not my favorite. Original input unchanged. This piece, as described from the stage, featured phasing—drumming in unison, then one of the two drummers changing the rhythm slightly. I never heard it. There were two drummers at once (though not always the same two) – then three – then four. The piece was slightly mesmerizing (though not in a good way) and really, really long.
Will I go back to Rite of Summer? Probably. I still need to expand my horizons.
ConcertMeister
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