Showing posts with label Stephan Thelen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephan Thelen. Show all posts

Thursday, May 6, 2021

Stephan Thelen - World Dialogue

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:03
Size: 103,8 MB
Art: Front

(10:09) 1. Circular Lines
( 4:32) 2. Chaconne
(15:20) 3. World Dialogue
(15:01) 4. Silesia

Stephan Thelen's compositions for his band Sonar have a minimalist groove that clearly relates to other groups in the experimental sphere like Swiss pianist and composer Nik Bärtsch's band Ronin. These works for string quartet are not stylistically far removed from Thelen's Sonar music, but the classical chamber music context establishes them in the world occupied by composers like Steve Reich. Thelen's desire to compose for the Kronos Quartet was the driver for this album. He composed the title piece with them in mind, but they decided to commission a new piece for their Fifty for the Future: The Kronos Learning Repertoire project. Thus the piece Circular Lines was born. Composed in 2016, it was recorded in 2017, and opens the album with relentless rhythmic propulsion that does recall Sonar's music. With its 3-against-4-against-5 polyrhythms It is also the most rhythmically challenging piece Kronos has played (which is saying something).

The composition is also full of melody, usually riding on top of the rhythmic continuum. So it is both propulsive and lyrical. After a dramatic opening gesture the music moves gracefully through a series of events. The sound is far from monolithic: there is even a bit of a breakdown at about the eight minute mark. An insistent repeated figure brings it to an exciting conclusion. Kronos violinist David Harrington encouraged the Polish, all-women Al Pari Quartet to play Circular Lines to strengthen their internal rhythmic cohesion. Impressed by their performance of it, Thelen began working with them. They went on to record World Dialogue for this album (in place of Kronos). The piece was written in 2006 when Thelen was experimenting with additive rhythms. It is indeed fascinating rhythmically, but it has a rich harmonic structure which may be even more interesting. It is unusual for a minimalist composition to have such a large amount of harmonic movement: it moves backwards through the cycle of fifths all the way from the key of G back to G—12 key changes in all.

Thelen wrote a new piece for the Al Pari Quartet called Silesia named for the region of Central Europe (located mainly in Poland) where the group lives. They asked him to base the composition on traditional Silesian music, which gives it the most traditional sound on the album. It shares his characteristic rhythmic drive, but the Eastern European material is a bit reminiscent of Béla Bartók's string quartets. The ending is especially striking: a gradual decrescendo promises the sound of an electronic fadeout, but a final dramatic gesture provides a satisfying finale. Thelen makes a stunning debut as a New Music composer here. Hopefully the Kronos Quartet's marquee appeal will help it gain the attention it deserves.~ Mark Sullivan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/world-dialogue-stephan-thelen-rarenoiserecords

Personnel: Stephan Thelen: guitar, electric; Kronos Quartet: band/orchestra; Al Pari Quartet: band/orchestra.

Additional Instrumentation: Stephan Thelen: composer; Kronos Quartet: David Harrington: violin; John Sherba: violin; Hank Dutt viola; Sunny Yang: cello. Al Pari Quartet: Marta Lucjan: violin; Alicja Miruk-Mirska: violin; Magdalena Maier: viola; Elzbieta Rychwalska: cello.

World Dialogue

Monday, May 3, 2021

Stephan Thelen - Fractal Guitar 2

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Fusion
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:46
Size: 169,3 MB
Art: Front

(14:08) 1. Cosmic Krautrock
( 7:58) 2. Fractal Guitar 2
(12:03) 3. Mercury Transit
(14:54) 4. Ladder To The Stars
(12:29) 5. Celestial Navigation
(12:12) 6. Point Orf Inflection

Guitarist and composer Stephan Thelen's Fractal Guitar (MoonJune Records, 2018) found him stepping outside of his role in the band Sonar in a big way. An absolute feast of multiple guitars with electronic effects, live looping and soundscaping, it also featured a star-studded group of guest guitarists (not to mention a grooving rhythm section). The good news is that almost all of them are back for the second instalment, along with some new friends. The original album was largely created via file sharing, a process ideally suited to pandemic conditions. So, in that sense, the procedure was surprisingly similar to the first album; if anything this one is a bit more "live" in that one track was partially recorded by a core group of musicians in a room (back in the halcyon days of November 2019). "Cosmic Krautrock" opens the set with a familiar odd-meter groove. New drummer Andy Brugger (who alternates with Thelen's Sonar band mate Manuel Pasquinelli) is joined in the rhythm section by new touch-guitar U8 player Stefan Huth on bass, along with percussionist Andi Pupato. Pupato played on one track on the first album, but here he plays on all of the tracks, providing significant rhythmic continuity to the group sound. Solo highlights include Markus Reuter's heavily processed touch guitar, Jon Durant's blast of high energy guitar, Pupato's atmospheric percussion interlude (over soundscapes and feedback guitar), and Bill Walker's final psychedelic guitar solo.

The title tune, of course, features Thelen's fractal guitar (a rhythmic delay that creates cascading delay patterns), as well as Reuter's glitchy touch guitar, Barry Cleveland's melodic 12-string guitar, and the first of several striking Durant fretless guitar solos. "Mercury Transit" is marked by quite a bit of solo space for the composer, first in the opening section (with Cleveland's bowed guitar and keyboardist Fabio Anile, a new recruit), then with e-bow. "Ladder To The Stars" is built upon Anile's striking 11/8 bass line, played by Andy West. This is the track built upon a live session, with West, Chris Muir's electric guitar and live looping, Thelen's electric guitar, and guitarist Henry Kaiser (who plays a wild glitched solo near the end). "Point Of Inflection" closes the album with Cleveland as co-composer (also playing bowed guitar, a memorably melodic solo, and a lovely fuzz guitar ensemble), and no less than three David Torn solos. Once again, Thelen and his collaborators have crafted a banquet of odd-meter grooves (which always feel completely natural) and guitars, guitars, guitars! Enthusiastically recommended to fans of the first installment. Thelen has mentioned a number of contributions that will appear in the remix version something to look forward to.~ Mark Sullivanhttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/fractal-guitar-2-stephan-thelen-moonjune-records

Personnel: Stephan Thelen: guitar, electric; David Torn: guitar, electric; Markus Reuter: guitar, electric; Henry Kaiser: guitar, electric; Jon Durant: guitar, electric; Bill Walker: guitar, electric; Barry Cleveland: guitar, electric; Chris Muir: guitar, electric; Fabio Anile: keyboards; Stefan Huth: guitar, electric; Andy West: bass, electric; Andi Pupato: percussion; Manuel Pasquinelli: drums; Andy Brugger: drums.

Additional Instrumentation: Stephan Thelen: electric guitar, choppy organ, granular synth, programming, fractal guitar, e-bow, keyboards; David Torn: electric guitar, live looping; Markus Reuter: touch guitar U8, soundscapes; Henry Kaiser: electric guitar; Jon Durant: electric guitar, cloud guitar, fretless guitar, VCS3 guitar: Bill Walker: electric guitar, live looping, lap steel; Barry Cleveland: 6 & 12-string guitar, bowed guitar, Revox loops; Chris Muir: electric guitar, live looping; Fabio Anile: keyboards, electric piano; Stefan Huth: touch guitar U8 (bass); Andy West: bass guitar; Andi Pupato: percussion; Manuel Pasquinelli: drums; Andy Brugger: drums

Fractal Guitar 2