Chris Thomson
rockstar debrief 15May09

5/8 – 5/10: ACME and the Wordless Orchestra with MONO at Ethical Culture and (le) Poisson Rouge. 
It was a super fun week meeting and playing 2 shows with the Japanese band MONO, who demonstrate the perfect balance between an ultra-rockstar performance style on stage and a musically curious and completely down to earth personality off stage. 

First, a clip from the rockstar portion of the show:
Mono, Excerpt From “Wordless Music” Show @ The New York Ethical Society

Wordless Orchestra, Arvo Part at Ethical CultureNote: Look close and see Jeff Milarsky, one of the leading conductors of contemporary music, in front of the orchestra. I know I always talk about this, and to a certain extent is has received some publicity, but most people in contemporary music circles haven’t yet fully understood the magic of the Wordless Music series until they experience it in person. On the first half of the above show, as well as the following night at Le Poisson Rouge, Jeff and the Wordless Orchestra presented the East Coast premier of Arvo Pärt’s subtle, brooding Symphony #4, for string orchestra and percussion. Chalk it up to the programming genius of Ronen and Nadia; I can say with some degree of confidence that there has not previously been a performance of Arvo Pärt’s music to a sold-out standing room only audience of 20-something post-rock fans, which received rapt, focused attention and an exhilarated ovation. 

The LineWordless Music makes brilliant pairings of indy-rock (for serious lack of a better term) with contemporary/chamber music (also for lack of a better term), such that if you show up for one, you’ll most likely stay for the other. People have been complaining forever that the audience for concert music are too old… I’m not going to be delusional to think that these people waited in this line for hours to get the best seats to see an Arvo Pärt Symphony premiere. But they did see it, and the general vibe was open, curious, and excited. Its hard for me to put into words how thrilling it is to get a chance to do what I do for this kind of audience. Back in December, Line C3 got to introduce Steve Reich and John Cage to a couple hundred Kieran Hebden fans on a Wordless show at LPR… what could be more natural than moving between glitchy minimal electronica and Reich’s Drumming or a John Cage Construction? It just happens to be one of these amazing moments when everyone is learning from everyone and the possibility of a real scene has emerged. Moral of story: colleagues and friends are slowly learning about and experiencing first hand what’s happening and it was great to bring Mr. Milarsky (who most of us have worked with in very different musical contexts) into the fold.

Timps during MONOThe venues, specifically Le Poisson Rouge, are also part of the story and what is making it work so well. Galleries are great and I’ve done plenty of contemporary music concerts up in them, but when music is challenging, I think the whole experience benefits from making the environment more relaxed, not less. Sunday night the Wordless Orchestra did two more performances of the Pärt Symphony at LPR, opening with 4 of his riveting string quartets and one work for solo vocal and 2 strings, performed by ACME. A generally warm review in the NYTimes Monday did mention the usual complaints about this kind of music played at a club, but could have told the whole story: a lot of people are excited about the new audience and new approach that inherently comes with playing at a venue like LPR. 

Takada and Ruki at Umino IeCompletely blissed out, we took the rock stars to Umino Ie and devoured stingray fin, monkfish liver, and pork belly. Rapture. 

Upcoming at LPR:
Alarm Will Sound plays Derek Bermel in June and Aphex Twin in July!

ACME shares a Wordless Music show with Johann Johannsson .

In other classical/rockstar pairings:  Stay tuned for ACME with Craig Wedren (of Shudder to Think) playing Jefferson Friedman’s Love Songs at Joe’s Pub in August.

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