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sudden
music | cs002
#1
round angles and sharp lines
#2 something is going to happen
#3 lateral thinking
#4 landscape with persons and furniture
Ernesto
Rodrigues violin, viola
António Chaparreiro electric guitar
José Oliveira percussion, inside piano
Total Time 70:26 ©
2002
Recorded on 9 December
2001 at Tcha Tcha Tcha Studios, Lisbon
Cover design Carlos
Santos
In
«Noise», the essayist Jacques Attali writes that music is
no longer a way to mask silence, for the simple fact that, having ceased
to incarnate power, it is itself a power. If, along the 20th century,
with a particular incidence on the second half, music made everything
to surpass in volume and in the quantity of chained auditive events,
all other sounds of human production, from the urban to the industrial
ones - jazz and rock were nothing (they still are) but examples of this
attempt, manifestations of power from specific social groups in relation
to what surrounded/surrounds them -, the passage to the new century brought
a novelty in the scope of point music: today’s tendency is that music
is extracted from silence or that it is “grafted” with silence itself.
The
need to “fill” silence, to pretend that it does not exist, is no longer
necessary - now, not only it is permitted that silence (apparent absence
of sound) is part of the music, but also that… it is music. It is true
that this change has been announced for a long time (John Cage),
but only now conditions have been achieved (existential, to start with)
so that it takes a clear form. If last century was dominated by the aesthetic
of noise, announced by the marvelousness of the Futurists in relation
to the machine, the new century may as well be marked by the aesthetic
of silence, as radical in its reach as the former, judging by the
recent routes of Bernhard Günter and Radu Malfatti. It was finally
understood that it is not by mimesis that we can give an order, real or
imaginary, to the sound chaos of our world. An art music in total refusal
is the largest conceivable expression of power.
This
process of music “silencing” found in the so called “free improvisation”
a specially inviting practice for the new concepts. Nothing more natural:
idiomatic (jazz) or not, improvised music always had one of its main characteristcs
in the excess of expression. The expressionism is inherent to it, and
with more negative to the temptation of the exhibitionist virtuosity.
This means that there is a loss in organizative contention, in self-control,
in separation as opposed to the created musical product, indispensable
factors when it is understood that to improvise is to compose in the immediate.
Now,
what the “improvisers of silence” do is just this: they dose an expression,
control the compositive drift in real time, give a new importance
to each sound withdrawn from nothingness (a sound which, after all, was
already there, dissimulated in the immense field of possibilities of Acoustical
Physics). This is the approach created by Ernesto Rodrigues and by his
companions in «Sudden Music»: the great spaces and intervals
they use give the four recorded improvisations a dimension that this type
of music usually does not have, and thus they get it down to earth, adjust
it to the rhythm of the inner life of all of us, to our biologic
rhythm. The power of men is in themselves, not in their factories and
offices or in their towns. The music that we listen to here is "sudden"
because it emerges as if by miracle from a surface that we thought neutral
(silence) to disappear at once, AS IF IT HAD NEVER EXISTED. The sounds
that we have perceived are like plants, but if on a given moment they
grow with vigour, on the next they withdraw into the subsoil and
are never heard again. Everything is sudden, immediate, unexpected,
but nothing happens out of its place, nothing is in excess or in need,
transmitting to us a curious illusion of PERMANENCE.
Rui
Eduardo Paes - (journalist and music writer)
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