Fluxations

Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Denman Maroney (b. 1949) is known for his unique "hyperpiano" style, which involves playing the keys with one hand and the strings with the other using copper bars, brass bowls and other objects. Maroney is a rare example of a composer/improviser who has made "pulse fields" an ongoing platform for both his writing and improvising. An approach to time used by such American experimentalist icons as Charles Ives and Conlon Nancarrow, pulse fields are rhythmic relationships expressed as ratios such as 3:4:5. Though they are polyrhythmic, they should not be considered to be synonymous with polyrhythms. A pulse field can present a rhythmic ambiguity that is beguiling to the listener, but is vexing to the performer, which partially explains why pulse fields have remained more a tool for through-composition than for works that privilege improvisation. Fluxations is the first instance in which Maroney has utilized them in an album-length work, which gives some idea of the difficulty the use of pulse fields presents if the material is realized by musicians with less than impeccable ensemble and improvisational skills. For this daunting proposition, Maroney turned to some of his closest associates, Dresser being foremost among them, given their fifteen-year association in various co-op settings. While the resumes of Rothenberg, Kevin Norton and Dave Ballou are not as entwined with Maroney’s, they nevertheless exemplify the rigor Fluxations requires. Within this intricate compositional framework, Maroney and his cohorts create a challenging, enormously engaging work of wonderful rhythmic variety and delicate shadings that blends composition and virtuosic improvisation in fresh, unpredictable ways.

Of related interest: 80476 Ned Rothenberg—Power Lines

Fluxations, Music, Denman Maroney, Chamber Music & Recitals, Classical, Classical Composers, Jazz Music
Fluxations
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Fluxations
    Denman Maroney
    Manufacturer: New World Records
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    Chamber MusicChamber Music | Forms & Genres | Classical (c.1770-1830) | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Styles | Music
    ClassicalClassical | Indie Music | Stores | Music
    ASIN: B0000UJM5O
    Release Date: 2003-11-25

    Tracks:

    1. Part 1
    2. Part 2
    3. Part 3
    4. Part 4
    5. Part 5
    6. Part 6

    Album Description

    Denman Maroney (b. 1949) is known for his unique "hyperpiano" style, which involves playing the keys with one hand and the strings with the other using copper bars, brass bowls and other objects. Maroney is a rare example of a composer/improviser who has made "pulse fields" an ongoing platform for both his writing and improvising. An approach to time used by such American experimentalist icons as Charles Ives and Conlon Nancarrow, pulse fields are rhythmic relationships expressed as ratios such as 3:4:5. Though they are polyrhythmic, they should not be considered to be synonymous with polyrhythms. A pulse field can present a rhythmic ambiguity that is beguiling to the listener, but is vexing to the performer, which partially explains why pulse fields have remained more a tool for through-composition than for works that privilege improvisation. Fluxations is the first instance in which Maroney has utilized them in an album-length work, which gives some idea of the difficulty the use of pulse fields presents if the material is realized by musicians with less than impeccable ensemble and improvisational skills. For this daunting proposition, Maroney turned to some of his closest associates, Dresser being foremost among them, given their fifteen-year association in various co-op settings. While the resumes of Rothenberg, Kevin Norton and Dave Ballou are not as entwined with Maroney's, they nevertheless exemplify the rigor Fluxations requires. Within this intricate compositional framework, Maroney and his cohorts create a challenging, enormously engaging work of wonderful rhythmic variety and delicate shadings that blends composition and virtuosic improvisation in fresh, unpredictable ways.

    Of related interest: 80476 Ned Rothenberg—Power Lines

    Track Listings:

    1. Gaburo: Tape Play
    2. Galante Kurzweyl: Höfische Tänze aus Renaissance, Barock und Rokoko
    3. Graduation & Other New Country & Blues
    4. Handel - Saul / S. MacLeod · Cordier · Schoch · Schlick · McFadden · Beekman · G. Schwarz · Frankfurt BO · Martini
    5. Jascha Heifetz: The Unpublished Recordings
    6. Jerusalem - British Choral Classics [Import]
    7. John Cage: One7 [from One13], One8
    8. Le Chant de Virgile (Classical Poetry in Renaissance Music)
    9. Leopold Stokowski, Conductor
    10. Leos Janácek: Glagolitic Mass (Original Version) / Zoltan Kodály: Psalmus Hungaricus, Op. 13 - Sir Charles Mackerras / The Danish National Radio Symphony Orchestra & Choir

    Track Listings

    track listings

    Track Listings

    Wall Of Soul

    Bargiel: Piano Trios Vol. 1

    Bootin': The Best of the RPM Years

    Tijuana Moods [Original recording remastered]

    Paradise Pawned Vol. 1 [Enhanced] [Explicit Lyrics]

    Can't Get Enough

    Brotherman!: Lou Rawls Sings the Hits [Import]

    Beethoven: Symphony No. 7; Die Weihe des Hauses

    Austin Echo

    Beyond the Music

    Charge!!

    Breaking Night

    Bombazos Navidenos

    Ominous Guitarists from the Unknown

    I Let a Song Go out of My Heart