by Jefferson Hansen
(On Sunday, July 7, Zeitgeist New Music Quartet performed Hugh Livingston's "Sound and Place: Minnesota" at Caponi Art Park in Eagan, MN.)
“Verisimilitude.”
Life like.
The key to this word, for me, is “similar.” Similar implies
not the same, not “as”— a gap between the thing and the representation. The
representation hints at the thing.
An art park carved in woods. Bird sounds on small audio players in
bird cages spread around the area. A toy piano. Many different sorts of
percussion instruments, from clavinets to tubes to chimes. A clarinet. The
percussionists and clarinet player wander about the crowd, around trees, on a
chalked out path.
The random—
> Many people brought their kids to the performance. They
did their usual did: cries, questions, just talk. The parents bustled. Part of
the piece.
>“Real” birds.
>Traffic from nearby Diffley Road.
>My friend Jonathan saying, “It might be better if we
follow them.” A park worker toward the end beckoning us to climb a hill to hear
the final sounds—of the composed piece, considered narrowly.
The improvised—
>A clarinet walking and winding among the kids and
parents and people. Sometimes playing directly to specific individuals. A wide
variety of percussionists, sometimes darting from tree to tree, like birds, and
appearing to hide, face to the bark. Like woodpeckers?
>To what extent was the toy piano improvised?
The composed—
>Directions for movement for the musicians—like
choreography. (The chalk line).
>Various keys and other foundations. "Faith in good
musicians," Livingston told me.
The prerecorded—
The bird songs in the cages.
All four elements—the random, improvised, composed, and prerecorded—bumped,
interpenetrated, overwhelmed, commented on, responded to each other. Engaged in polyphony,
harmony, call and response. Sometimes intentionally. Sometimes not. Does it
matter? The random is part of the piece.
The piece ended with
all the musicians sitting atop a hill and gently tapping large, tubular chimes.
One by one, the musicians dropped out, until one tapped quieter and
quieter, until he was below hearing. A man coughed. The traffic. A child asked
for something. I heard “real” birds.
Verisimilitude creates counterpoint.
The art of this piece will reverberate with me next time I
go hiking. The bird sounds will bounce against what I heard in those recordings
in cages, I will see the “wild” birds framed by their not being in cages, I will
hear their songs against the quiet tapping of those long chimes. I will see
them dart from branch to branch as the percussionists darted from tree to tree,
and then leaned against them like woodpeckers.
Art is nature is art.
Art is not nature is not art.
Art like nature like art.
The night was hot.
_________________________
Livingston Sound
Zeitgeist
Heather Barringer, percussion; Patti Cudd, percussion; Pat O'Keefe, woodwinds; Shannon Wettstein, piano
Zeitgeist is one of the leading New Music quartets in the world, and we in Minnesota are blessed to have them.
_________________________
Livingston Sound
Zeitgeist
Heather Barringer, percussion; Patti Cudd, percussion; Pat O'Keefe, woodwinds; Shannon Wettstein, piano
Zeitgeist is one of the leading New Music quartets in the world, and we in Minnesota are blessed to have them.
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