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New Sounds

Thursday, July 29, 2004
  • los angeles guitar quartet lagq guitar heroes

    Program #2313

    On this edition of New Sounds, hear inventive music from the Los Angeles Guitar Quartet, with selections from the new CD, "Guitar Heroes." Embracing their roots- both individually and collectively- the quartet pays tribute to jazz, bluegrass, rock and flamenco guitarists who have influenced and inspired them. The pantheon includes Frank Zappa, Hendrix and Michael Hedges; Pat Metheny, Django Reinhart and John McLaughlin; Steve Howe and Ralph Towner, among others. And much more.

PROGRAM #2313 Unusual Guitar Works (Thurs. 7-29-04)

ARTIST(S)

RECORDING

CUT(S)

SOURCE

LAQG (The Los Angeles Guitar Quartet)

Guitar Heroes

B. Johansen: Pluck, Strum, and Hammer (for Jimi Hendrix) [4:00]
M. Dunne: Gypsy Flower (for Django Reinhardt) [6:00]
B. Johansen: Let's be Frank (for Frank Zappa) [6:30]

Telarc #80598**
www.telarc.com*

Andrew McKenna Lee

Private CD

Arabescata [5:30]

andrew@andrewmckennalee.com OR www.andrewmckennalee.com

LAGQ

Guitar Heroes

E. Hirschelman: Lament And Wake (for Michael Hedges) [6:00]
Steve Howe: Aire Para Un Dia / Mood For A Day [4:00]

See above.

Bert Jansch

Avocet

Osprey [3:00]
Kittiwake [3:00]

Castle Music #CMQCD763. www.sanctuaryrecordsgroup.co.uk

Arthur Kampela

Private

Exoskeleton [6:30]

For info: www.kampela.com

*, ** - Find the recordings you've heard - go to the New Sounds Recordings Information page

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Twitchy Renaissance-Infused Minimalism

New Sounds

From the New Sounds Live concerts at Merkin Hall, Nico Muhly presents a series of new electroacoustic ensemble works, combining “twitchy Minimalism” and Renaissance polyphony. Hear brand-new works from "Mothertongue," along with other works, recorded live.

In Robert Moran's Kitchen

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From October 30, 1989, the infamous "cooking show" with composer/raconteur Robert Moran. Recorded while cooking an Indian dinner in John Schaefer's kitchen, for reasons still not entirely clear. Along the way, we hear an "acoustic" version of Cage's 0:00 - for amplification of chopping vegetables and blender. And don't miss the teary conversation as onions are chopped. View the the recipes.

Michael Hedges and Michael Manring

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The incredibly gifted and astonishingly original guitarist Michael Hedges left the planet much too soon in 1997. Avant-folk and ever-entertaining, Hedges made brilliant music with alternate tunings, harmonics and was known for striking the guitar’s body and strings with his fingers, palms and knuckles. His close friend and sometime collaborator, electric bass virtuoso Michael Manring, was a genre-bender, before music writers ever discovered that hyphenated term. He started out in the New Age bins, but moved all over with various projects, including the very first New Age-death-metal-jazz-funk-fusion record, among other things, with his “hyperbass”, (a fretless instrument which makes re-tuning mid-piece a little easier). On this October 10, 1987 edition of New Sounds, the two artists visited and played at the WNYC performance studios.

Caravan Variations

New Sounds

Like camels slogging through the sand, the exotic strains of “Caravan,” by Duke Ellington and his sometime trombonist Juan Tizol (with rarely heard lyrics by Irving Mills), have been played loose, fast, swinging, and/or slow by just about everyone. For this New Sounds program, it’s another of the occasional series of programs of Theme and Variations, where the premise is simple: take a single piece of music and explore what a number of musicians have done with it, through arrangements, deconstructions, and revisions of the original theme. This time around, it’s Duke Ellington’s “Caravan.” Listen to arrangements by Romania’s Fanfare Ciocarlia, Hungary’s Kalman Balogh & The Gipsy Cimbalom Band, the California Guitar Trio, the ska group Hepcat, banjoman Bela Fleck, Lebanese composer Rabih Abou-Khalil, and trumpeter/composer Jon Hassell, among others.