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Spooky Actions, Music of Anton Webern
Spooky Actions
Spooky Actions, Music of Anton Webern
Genre: Jazz
 
  •  Track Listings (19) - Disc #1

When Anton Webern was composing his Five Canons on Latin Texts, he probably wasn't thinking very much about American improvised music. Yet formal harmonic structure is the original essential European contribution to the ch...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Spooky Actions
Title: Spooky Actions, Music of Anton Webern
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Muse Eek Publishing
Original Release Date: 11/1/2003
Release Date: 11/1/2003
Album Type: Single
Genre: Jazz
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 648531011722

Synopsis

Product Description
When Anton Webern was composing his Five Canons on Latin Texts, he probably wasn't thinking very much about American improvised music. Yet formal harmonic structure is the original essential European contribution to the character of jazz. And while much of the mainstream of jazz repertoire is still mired in the harmonic concepts of Tin Pan Alley, Spooky Actions, a New York based jazz quartet, have found inspiration in the discipline and muted palette of twelve tone music. In their debut CD Spooky Actions, Music of Anton Webern (MSK 117) the quartet plays through note for note transcriptions of the Five Canons op. 16, as well as the Five Movements for String Quartet, op 5. They then improvise over the pieces. Rather than taking extended solos, the ensemble uses a sensitive and informed interaction to create original music based closely on the spirit and form of the written work. It is astonishing to discover how suited the sonorities of the jazz quartet of drums, saxophone (and flute), electric guitar and bass are for 12-tone music. Indeed, the ears of listeners accustomed to these sounds will find that they are a kind of Rosetta stone; the pristine, compressed structures of Webern's music take on new clarity and attractiveness, making for extremely accessible listening. The band's name comes from the phrase spooky actions at a distance. This was how Albert Einstein described the phenomenon of two seemingly unconnected, disparate objects that nonetheless exert a powerful influence on one another. Spooky Actions, the band, certainly personifies this concept, showing how vivid improvisations can be derived from music that is often thought of as etched in stone.
 

CD Reviews

Fun But Too Short
Karl W. Nehring | Ostrander, OH USA | 07/04/2009
(3 out of 5 stars)

"Here's another Muse Eek release that for a long time was not commercially available, and another strike against it is its length, 25:44. So what we have here is an EP, but what an EP it is! John Gunther (woodwinds) joins with the Release the Hounds trio of Bruce Arnold (guitar), Chris Dahlgren (bass), and Jay Rosen (percussion) to produce a CD that is far different from the free-from soundscapery of that CD. Spooky Actions opens with the quartet's arrangement of Dufay's Vergine Bella, followed by an arrangement of the 2nd movement from Webern's Five Movements for String Quartet, Webern's Five Canons, and then closes with an arrangement of some Gregorian chant.



This is a truly remarkable recording, fully satisfying despite its short duration, the kind of music that would sound right at home on the ECM label. I would love to see these folks double the length of this recording and get it into commercial release."