Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Tribute: The Recording



Two weeks passed since the day of the last recording session of my Tribute project. All that was planned has been finished, as well as the new ideas that appeared during the process fixed in digits. Some stuff was filtered out, another got sense. The process of creation indeed contains some magical ingredient. We could talk many hours through about it, but for this Journal I am going to limit it to just a few flashbacks.

From the first day of recording (8th of July last year) through to the last one I felt as if I was diving into some adventure. Probably, it is about the responsibility taken when one wants to record a tribute (whoever it is going to be dedicated to) – someone might be judging about the original performer having heard your version.

They say you have to keep putting one foot in front of the other, so I just had to start doing something. This principle worked even when I didn’t want to go out into cold and dark night (very often we set up our meeting time in the studio to take place at 1:00AM) – you just walk out in the street and the road takes you there. So, step by step, we have reached "today".

The first five songs were finished in late Summer 2014, and their destination point was the group Tribute album (on which I shed some light in my previous posts). After everything was done I’d got a feeling which can be described as “I want more!”, so after the real candidates had been selected and necessary test-rehearsal done we started the "second season" of recording. Same studio, same sound engineer, same basic set of instruments, but different approach and direction. I wanted to escape possible repetitions, so some portion of the “new” material passed through metamorphoses. There is a point of view that changing the form of the songs that we are “accustomed to” may affect their “adequate” perception. But as for me, I would prefer to hear from my stereo what is currently playing in my head. I can do nothing about that – this is my perception of those songs.

Many ideas arrived in real time; I even got some answers to my questions on my way to the studio, and some of the solutions lied in denial of my initial ideas. I suppose, the material with justified factor of unpredictability will win in the end.

Of course, the result will highly depend on the successive mix, and this important process is currently at its initial stage. I hope I will be able to share the final list of the songs that will enter my personal Tribute album after two months or so, and to talk about each of them.

And at the end of the year of recording I’ve got a new feeling already, something like: “I want to work on something that is mine!”

Have I acquired a taste for the process of creation? Has it ripened? Have I ripened? Only when I start doing something I will be able to give any answer. But this will be (at last!) something that is mine!

Sunday, May 3, 2015

I'm still with Kronos Quartet....



Most likely I won’t be able to describe in a worthy manner what I was feeling during the Kronos Quartet that happened in the Yerevan Opera Theatre on 29th of April this year. I won’t be able because, as someone said many years ago (and they are still trying to find out who exactly and when) – "Talking about music is like dancing about architecture". One had to be there to feel it. I succeeded in describing concerts in the past, and maybe I will in the future, but this specific one was different.

To find a way out of this situation I decided to bring in the list of the works they performed that night, supporting them with short comments and some YouTube links. Some of them are studio recordings, others played live, sometimes even played by previous line-up. With this I am hoping to create at least some idea on what happened on that night.

1. Bryce Dessner - Aheym (Homeward) (link)
Nerve from A to Z. Basically, that was enough for the audience to understand who they deal with.

2. Laurie Anderson (arr. Jacob Garchik) - Flow (link)
Honey to one’s soul. So quiet, so calm.

3. Nicole Lizee - Death to Kosmische (link)
The audience expands not only their sights on Kronos Quartet, but on music in general.

4. Geeshie Wiley (arr. Jacob Garchik) - Last Kind Words (link)
They introduced this title as a “song”, but damn!, they performed it like a song!

5. Ramallah Underground (arr. Jacob Garchik) - Tashweesh (link)
This piece is still somewhere in my sub-consciousness.

6. Clint Mansell (arr. David. Lang) - Lux Aeterna (from Requiem for a Dream) (link)
I could not even dream to listen this live performed by them! This theme takes me by the throat each time I hear it, starting from the very first time, although it did not deal with “Requiem for a Dream” movie (that was a trailer to “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers”).

7. Terry Riley - Good Medicine (from Salome Dances for Peace) (link)
I listen to it and I see myself running down the green fields and up the hills, then don in the valleys, butterflies around me.... Good Medicine – the title speaks for itself!

Intermission

8. Vladimir Martynov - The Beautitudes (link)
Relief, peace, tranquility, light... This is the music one would want to listen to in his or her last minutes.

9. Mary Kouyoumdjian - Silent Cranes (World Premiere, hence no link for this one)
i. Slave to Your Voice
ii. You Did Not Answer
iii. [With Blood Soaked Feathers]
iv. You Flew Away

As it was mentioned above, it was world premiere of “Silent Cranes”. Her author Mary Kouyoumdjian is one of those who were selected through the Kronos: Under 30 Project. This 35-minute long composition in 4 parts is homage in memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide of 1915. A special video has been prepared for it – collage of photographs, ornamental patterns, drawings. The performance was also supported with the voices of the eyewitnesses telling about those tragic times.

Maybe the first piece of the second half (see above) was perfectly chosen, maybe it was due to the video, maybe our history speaks in us, or maybe something else, but this composition was something bigger that just something played by Kronos Quartet. Many people later told me that there were moments when they were forgetting about some four people playing something on the stage, and that those are them who flood the huge hall with music and emotions with their two violins, alto and cello. By the way, our audience has significantly grown up as compared to what I saw eleven years ago. Today there was no noise, no distracting chatter, no indignant snobs, no cynical jokes.... There was no place for that here!

And when the last fourth part of the “Cranes” ended I witnessed the Magic, on which I nevertheless wrote a comment on Kronos Quartet Facebook page, wrote all I could the next morning. Those were my pure emotions, which I am not going to rewrite now, four days later.

1,200 hall was packed.... in the end the lights went dim, the music echoed away, darkness fell on the stage and in the hall.... 5 seconds... 10 seconds..... 20..... SILENCE! not a single breath was heard.... not a single breath!.... a few more seconds..... lights slowly came back.... the Quartet frozen, and so are we...... not a single breath!..... The Quartet is gradually coming back to reality, and so are we..... SILENCE!.....

..............

And then the hall burst in standing ovation......

A True Masterpiece!

Just like it was the last time, we got an Encore. They performed mournful but so important at that moment “Wa Habibi”, thus bringing us back to the world from which we entered this hall.

But we were already different when we were exiting it.

Many many thanks to Lilia Margaryan for her “without whom it would never be” kind of help.

Monday, April 20, 2015

Tribute: The Process



Almost seven months passed since I posted my first post describing the work on my Tribute project. Some part of what was planned is being successfully materialized, some things had to be corrected in course of time, and some ideas abandoned. Nevertheless, the result tends to be even more interesting than it was expected in the beginning.

One of the most important achievements is discovery and consolidation of my own vision of the idea and choice of the way it is materialized. I had to make decisions several times. At such moments doubts do not leave me alone, but my brain works due to their existence. Who knows, maybe in different situation, in different time and place I would resolve those problems differently, but today it is this way of working that gets me closer (significantly closer) to my goal.

Sometimes it is sudden “aha!” that helps. It is pretty possible that that is just a result of brain work, aimed at resolution of the above-mentioned task, but when it happens its nature is not that important. Not that important when you go forward on the wings that you feel behind your back.

The amount of “a few more songs” which should be added to the group project has now exceeded a dozen. Fortunately, sense of limit helps me to resist the temptation of doing more and more. After all, the songs that will enter (let’s call it) “the album” must prove to have the right to live. And I have lot of work to do to make this happen.

Given that the frequency of my coverage of the “album” creation process does not change, the next post has all chances to describe the accomplished work. We’ll see....

P.S. The Group Tribute album has not yet been finished as well, but it also grows up to become Something Big!

Thursday, October 9, 2014

On Talents and Suicide



Along with celebrating my brother's birthday today, I will be remembering another event that happened on this day, October 9, back in 1992 - my first (big) live concert on the stage of the Big Hall of Yerevan (then) Polytechnic Institute (now State Engineering University of Armenia).

I was the bass-guitarist of “The Breeze” band then. The new and expanded line-up had been existing for two months already, and was ready to hit the stage by the beginning of October. Since clubbing life was at its embryonic stage, all our groups were aiming for one big concert, after which they normally went into euphoria. Not all of them thought about the need to go forward: some of them didn’t even make their second gig, but some did though, heading to another gig, and even moved to the recording studio.

I remember the first song, which actually lasted some four minutes, seemed endless to me! However, quite soon we got into the right way and we “made that night”. The gig went absolutely fantastic for those days, at the end of which our full line-up (9 musicians!) went on stage to perform Kiddy Jones (five "electric" musicians + string quartet). It is important to mention that our line-up was changing constantly on the stage. We presented electric quartet (with our drummer on vocals), electric quintet (with our lead vocalist), electro-acoustic quartet, a guitar solo-composition played on 12-string guitar and sung by Arsen, string quartet + 12-string guitar, string quartet + electric quintet, and ended up with a song, sung in three voices accompanied by grand piano/bass/drums trio. And we were called out for an encore!

What happened after we played Kiddy Jones song – oh, it worth that all! I still can see in front of my eyes that overcrowded hall through the stage with all of us standing still with shivers running down our spines. They were all applauding and cheering us up, asking for more. I even got a present from an unknown girl – a book that is still with me. And it went in harmony with all that happened on stage and in our hearts in those days. We were then writing our own music, improving ourselves, we had our dreams.

But then, reality started telling its rules, so many of our good musicians ended their musical lives up through suicide. It became difficult to create something, unfashionable, unprofitable... Ah, creating! It always means “giving”, doesn’t it? But the musicians already started to want to get. So, having some bargain with our Dream, we decided to continue our creative union in a new, commercial way. And he wave reached some success, however the overall spirit of our work was already different. But, as for many other Talents, we missed something to bring this work to its end.

Arsen, who is the author of most of the songs, continued his relations with music, however today his talent is being wasted, in my personal opinion, on “things” like this.



I find it hard to call this music, hence the “thing” word is used. No-no, I do not contest the genius of this McCartney composition in any way... But this is McCartney, and it could have been Adonts instead! Without any doubts, he can sing and play, and for sure, he does it quite well, but... we have probably lost a lot of good songs during the past years, for he could “pick them out of thin air” and bring them into this world.

Soon I will be telling the world about my activity I have been occupied with for almost two years. It correlates very well with all I’ve wrote here today, and I hope I am not doing this in vain. I was also granted with something, something I do now want to kill in myself. And I want to be sure that the Universe that maintains the balance of all things, will not let Arsen’s Talent fall into Oblivion...

Eh, probably some other guy or girl on this planet was already granted with the same talent and s/he will soon make our lives brighter with a new Song.

P.S. By the way, here is an example of the songs Arsen was able to write that I was talking about:

Friday, September 26, 2014

Tribute: Introduction



While working on the project mentioned earlier on the pages of my Journal, I wanted to know about the origins of the word "tribute", used so frequently today.
According to the page on Wikipedia, the word "tributum" (Latin. Tributum) was originally used to designate a special levy in ancient Rome, which the properties of citizens and provincial lands (as part of the public property (ager publicus)) were subject to. Most of these charges were used for military purposes, and if, during the next war, the enemies were defeated, they had to cover all the military expenses, out of which citizens received their tributum back. Subsequently, the very essence of tributum and meaning of the word itself changed, but this is not the topic of our conversation today.

So what is a "tribute" in terms of music? “This is when musicians gather together and record their own versions of songs of some artist, which are then published in the form of a music album", many would reply.

The longer we live, the older and "more classic" becomes the music on which many generations grew up and new musicians were brought upon; it dissolves in our minds and nature, becoming an integral part of ours, blurring the lines between the present and the past. Music written many years ago is being played and replayed over and over again, sometimes by surprising line-ups and in unique arrangements, and it is not surprising that the works of Mozart or Liszt can be played during the same concert, by the same team on the same scene as those of Lennon or Blackmore. Young musicians want to play classics, and it's good!

However, if there is "good", it is always possible to find something "bad" hanging around. To anticipate the question "what is wrong with us playing the classics?" I would like to say: not moving forward. In a way, the word "classic" goes side by side with the word "past", so how can one go forward when he is constantly dwelling on the past? Even if the reader hasn’t yet formed this question in mind, I would say, "Yes, we must go forward!" "What about you? Are you going forward?", you may ask me. "Time will show, but for now I need to pay my tributum, which, in the event of a successful battle, will get back to me."

The idea of the tribute project, which is now in its sixth month of pregnancy (the duration of which has a chance to coincide with that of human) was born during another attempt to direct strengths and creative abilities of the members of one of the social network groups in order to repeat what was done in mid-90s, with the difference that this project will be implemented solely by the participants of one group, and the only basis for their work is to be their enthusiasm. No promises, no obligations, no expectations of any commercial benefits (it is supposed that the result will be available for free download). It will be a Labour of Love[1], a tribute, and a gift for.... for birthday, maybe, or it could be for Christmas. We'll see.

The readers of my Journal already know what artist I am talking about, especially since I participate in this tribute project myself (oh, what a narrow-minded person I am!). From the very start of this work I already knew who the person I had to ask for help was. I needed an experiences musician, with decent musical luggage and specific musical flair. Moreover, it was necessary for him/her to know what the studio work is about. Finally, s/he had to be able to play drums. From this perspective, it would not be surprising to meet me sitting on the bench in front of the State Philharmonic Hall together with Ashot Korganyan.
Having spent two hours of that spring evening in discussion, we parted. Shortly after, the idea of involvement of another musician established. It was due to the violin in the song proposed by Ashot. At first, I was skeptical about this idea, because it seemed impossible to me. However, Ashot insisted, so we gathered together for one single rehearsal on one day in May. One hour passed by almost instantly, but it was enough for me to confidently say "Yes!" My question "and what about violin?" received Ashot’s calm reply: "Rima can listen to the songs and prepare the music sheets ". That is how Rima Mirzoyan appeared in our part of the project
Soon, the list of the songs to be recorded in the studio was formed. It took several weeks to reduce the number of candidates from a dozen to four. I have to say that for the tribute only one song (maximum - two songs) was required. Initially, we had just a few performers to go with the project, so it would be wise to have one reserve track to be able to provide a full-length album in terms of duration. Today, the number of possible performers increased to sixteen, and there is the prospect of a "double" album (and maybe the Volume Two of the project). However, I have already been nurturing a new idea, the implementation of which is necessary for me to make one step forward: to make my own tribute album.
How can you recreate what has already been created, and created brilliantly? The task is very difficult, but at the same time it is quite interesting. As it was mentioned above, recording a tribute is not a big surprise at all nowadays. Tribute songs and entire albums are being regularly devoted to many significant groups. They are all different, just like are the approaches used for their creation. Let’s consider some of them in the list below, which does not claim to be complete in any way.
  1. Just to replay a song, to play it "as is" is one of the approaches. It is less attractive to me, for it lacks the aspect of creation. However, it clearly demonstrates the skills and abilities to recreate what was heard. It's like a qualification in sports.
  2. To play a song in your own way, or to play it "as is" with addition of something different, something special, listening to what will make people say "your version" of this or that song.
  3. To absorb a song so deeply that you start playing something that is not in the original. "Sorry, I can do nothing about it, I just hear it that way", the artist would justify himself in this case.
  4. Change the song so that the listener is shocked and does not accept your performance at all.
Of course, other approaches are possible, but you always have to leave the essence of the song, something that is important and which does not contradict with the spirit of the original, so to speak.
I have listened to only two performers from the whole list so far. They turned out to be so good that now I am dying to listen to the rest. However, it will require some time to make the project alive, and, in my turn, I need to spend this time wisely. One of the activities I am going to dedicate this period of time to is understanding the concept of my personal tribute album, which was mentioned above
What does it going to contain and how do I see the process of its creation? Of course, it will include all the songs already recorded in the period of preparation for my portion of the team tribute project. A few more songs will be added as well. Which songs exactly will be recorded is yet unknown even to me, although there are obvious candidates. Such choice became apparent because the essence of the choice is clear to me, and the choice is well-grounded. The process of creation, I think, will not differ from how we prepared the first group of songs: homework, sleepless night hours in the studio, the final mix. Just two lines…. so easy to write them but difficult to implement. However, this is what must be done
I will be covering the working process of both the team tribute and my personal one. In the meantime, I need to think about the implementation of another creative idea that has only an indirect relationship with the music.


[1] Song title from 1981 album