On Leap of Faith: "Alien yet familiar, bizarre yet completely fascinating. Expanding, contracting, erupting, settling down, always as one force..." - Bruce Lee Gallanter, DMG
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Audio CD Evil Clown 9145
Metal Chaos Ensemble - Post Transition Elements
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Carbon Group - 1:10:28
PEK - clarinet & contraalto clarinet, tenor & bass saxophones, tarota, wood flutes, [d]ronin, daxophone, slide whistles, orchestral chimes, hand chimes, ms-20, crank siren,Ableton mix, electric kazoo, metal, wood, voice, electronics
Yuri Zbitnov - drums, daiko, danmo, crotales, cymbells, hand chimes, glockenspiel, [d]ronin, orchestral chimes, metal, wood, voice
Kevin Dacey - drums, daiko, crotales, cymbells, [d]ronin, daxophone, danmo, wood flutes, aquasonic, orchestral chimes, hand chimes, kazoo, metal, wood, recitation, voice, electronics
Joe Hartigan - drums, glockenspiel, balafon, orchestral chimes, metal, wood
Raffi Photos tweaked by PEK
A Metal Chaos Ensemble quartet at Evil Clown Headquarters. First time with this particular line up with relative newcomer Joe Hartigan joining the fun... A room full of percussion and electronics, three percussionist and the crazy horns of PEK!! What more could you ask for??!
Photos by Raffi
Metal Chaos Ensemble -
Post-Transition Elements
Evil Clown Headquarters, Waltham MA
7 June 2017
Composer and multi-instrumentalist, PEK, set his sights on something bigger with the Leap of Faith Orchestra's Supernovae. The previous incarnation of the LOFO expands from the fifteen musicians on The Expanding Universe (Evil Clown, 2016) to twenty-one players on this new outing. Another noteworthy element of this project is PEK's use of Frame Notation where the score is seen in written descriptions and straight-forward symbols within Duration Bars. The system provides the musicians with immediate understanding of their own parts and the higher-level arrangement of the music.
Supernovae consists of a single track composition running just under eighty minutes. The digital download includes a bonus track. Though the extended piece is not broken out by formal movements, there are clear delineations within the score. PEK's ensemble—not surprisingly—includes enough non-traditional and weird instruments to compete with a Dr. Seuss orchestra. Though they are not playing in a vacuum, that group of instruments dominates the first ten minutes before strings and reeds make themselves more clearly heard. Forty-five minutes in, we have the first case of prolonged melody, darker and more subdued than the overall tone of the first half.
Supernovae gives way to free improvisation overlaying the melody. Eventually the piece introduces a brilliant percussion passage before it reintroduces the non-traditional music elements, but here in a more refined manner. As with all of PEK's compositions, there is—behind the scenes—a painstaking amount of organization that is not always evident in the listening. That is part of the beauty of this album; the non-traditional approach to instrumentation and the lack of adherence to Western structure continue to make the various iterations of Leap of Faith consistently interesting. And interesting look at the written score can be viewed at http://www.evilclown.rocks/lofo-supernovae-score.html.
On Metal Chaos Ensemble: "... using unique strategies to yield densely active and eerily surreal music, an incredible excursion through experimental improvisation." - Squidco website staff
Evil Clown