- Clara de Asís
- >
- Clara de Asís - Without (Erik Carlson / Greg Stuart) (HD)
Clara de Asís - Without (Erik Carlson / Greg Stuart) (HD)
SKU:
$10.00
$10.00
Unavailable
per item
Digital HD FLAC 24bit/96kHz
elsewhere 004
Clara de Asís wrote a piece 'Without" for Erik Carlson (violin) and Greg Stuart (percussion) in 2018, which was performed and recorded by Carlson and Stuart in July 2018. Cover photography by David Sylvian, design by Yuko Zama.
*Please make sure your audio playback software can handle 24bit FLAC (iTunes does not support FLAC.)
For CD format, go to this page.
For Lossless Digital AIFF (16bit/44k), go to this page.
TRACK LIST
1. Without (2018) 43:10 (released October 10, 2018) CREDITS
Erik Carlson - violin Greg Stuart - percussion composition by Clara de Asís recorded by Erik Carlson and Greg Stuart at Conrad Prebys Music Center, UCSD, La Jolla, CA on July 9, 2018 mixed by Erik Carlson cover photo and inside photo by David Sylvian design by Yuko Zama produced by Erik Carlson, Greg Stuart, and Yuko Zama p+c 2018 elsewhere music |
Clara de Asís composed the piece Without for the duo of Erik Carlson (violin) and Greg Stuart (percussion) in 2018. In this 43-minute piece, de Asís gave a precise framework for the position and the duration of each sound section and each silence, as well as a rough outline for the texture and the volume of each sound, the use of tone or noise (or tone-noise), and the materials for the percussion, but a large part of the score was open for the two performers' freedom.
In the realization of this piece, Carlson and Stuart brought out the unique voice of each instrument by applying various use of bows on violin and various percussive materials (metal, wood, ceramic, clay, glass, etc.) with their attentive, virtuosic skills and great sensitivities for the sound and silence. Moving along in parallel, Carlson and Stuart showed their individual musical personalities while creating an organic flow, with an exquisite balance between preciseness and openness. The duo’s introspective approach to the sound and silence in this piece evokes the tranquility of a Zen garden while showing a clean contemporary edge, highlighting the simple yet intense beauty of de Asís's minimal composition. David Sylvian’s cover photograph of the small stones, each of which has a unique color and texture, faintly illuminating in the pitch-black background, echoes the mysterious depth and the lucidity of de Asís's piece. REVIEWS
Marc Medwin, Dusted Magazine What is the allure of absence? Why are those taken with what we’re still calling the avant-garde, demonstrating a startling lack of precision, regularly confronted by what we equally sloppily still call silence? Maybe the sonic overload faced daily by many, the onslaught of timbral information bludgeoning perception from morning exit to evening reentry, has re-radicalized the notion of a place of something approaching and approximating a space for reflection. As demonstrated in the 43-minute Without, the fourth release on Yuko Zama’s Elsewhere label, Clara de Asis writes music that might be described as inhabiting such a space, one where possibilities flourish as realized potentialities, the place where sound constantly wends its way toward silence, or where the silence is just on the point of transformation into sound. The soundstage is simply set. Two musicians, violinist Erik Carlson and percussionist Greg Stuart commence on opposite sides of it and slowly reverse positions as the music unfolds. Its trajectory contrasts bowed, struck and plucked sounds of varying length and brevity, solo and in tandem, but, characteristically of Asis’ sound worlds, each is luminously clear, and many are rife with overtones, especially Carlson’s translucently bowed pitch that begins and concludes the piece. Even the multivalently breathy and sometimes steamily sibilant timbres Stuart conjures from bowing or caressing who knows exactly what objects emerge with stunning clarity and intricate detail. To assert that the music is performed by a violinist and percussionist, while accurate, would constitute an inadvertent feeding of misinformation to the unsuspecting. The players form a small and sonorously fluid ensemble rather than anything approaching a conventional duo. Anyone who knows Carlson and Stuart’s work, either together or in other contexts, will be aware of their attention to each sonic moment and the vast array of technical and imaginative prowess they bring to each event. To my ears, what holds the music together, and it coheres remarkably well despite a steady juxtaposition of disjuncture and recurrence, is the trajectory of each sound in its surrounding space. The scoring seems, from a listener perspective, to foster such precise placement of sonority that even its sometimes lengthy absences take on shape, an almost pictorial form. they are neither the stratified silences of AMM nor the alternately expectant and contemplative places of semi-repose that Antoine Beuger or Jurg Frey might offer, or rather, they don’t serve exactly the same purposes. It could be that Asis’ silences are closer to the poignant understatement Harold Pinter really wanted in his pauses, anticipating, implying if not directly embodying motion. Via a wonderfully evocative title and her excellent choice in performers, Asis allows absence and presence their starkly defined and deeply poetic symbiosis. (10/31/2018) Peter Margasak, Bandcamp Daily Clara de Asís is a Spanish guitarist and composer living in Marseilles, France, and her music explores sound in its purest, most abstract forms. She’s a prolific performer, but she wrote Without for two excellent American experimentalists: violinist Erik Carlson and percussionist Greg Stuart, both of whom possess deep affinities for her concerns, the instrumental vocabulary to bring them to life, and the improvisation flexibility to flesh out her schematic score. The composer provides a detailed framework for the musicians, mapping out the placement and duration of specific passages, with looser indication of textural ideas, volume, and percussive materials, but in its execution both Carlson and Stuart are required to make many of their own choices. Over the course of 44 meditative, opulently grainy minutes, the musicians carve out extended passages of elusive long tones and weighty silences. Stuart deploys bows on a wide variety of objects of metal, wood, clay, ceramic, and glass, constantly altering the timbre and bite of his frictive machinations—whether high-pitched sine-like tones or swirling rustles—creating both collisions and synchronicities with Carlson’s meticulously pitched violin. There are a few fleeting noh-like moments where instruments are plucked and struck. The musicians impart a dazzling sensitivity to the piece, moving through the score with unhurried grace to arrange the compelling studies into a beautifully austere, moving experience. (10/30/2018) John Eyles, All About Jazz Following closely on the heels of the Clara de Asis release Do Nothing (Another Timbre, 2018), Without is an ideal complement to that recording as it highlights different facets of de Asis' music and gives a more detailed picture of it. In particular, where the earlier album consisted of six shorter tracks performed on guitar and percussion by de Asis herself, Without is very different, just featuring the forty-three-minute title track, which was written in 2018 for and performed by the duo of Erik Carlson on violin and Greg Stuart on percussion. This realisation of the piece is characterised by the togetherness of Carlson and Stuart's playing, which itself owes a debt to the precision of de Asis' composition; by all accounts, she "gave a precise framework for the position and the duration of each sound section and each silence, as well as a rough outline for the texture and the volume of each sound, the use of tone or noise (or tone-noise), and the materials for the percussion." Of course, Carlson and Stuart are experienced players, not androids, so their own inputs are as important as those of de Asis; in other words, credit is due equally to each of the three. For the listener, the end result is a slowly-evolving but varied soundscape in which every note from both players can be heard perfectly throughout; it makes for relaxing listening which can be repeated time and again without ever becoming stale. A collective triumph. (12/7/2018) Brian Olewnick, Just Outside Prior to this release, I'd known de Asís as a guitarist but here she's in the role of composer. Violinist Erik Carlson and percussionist Greg Stuart offer a reading of her 'Without', a piece that strikes me as more complex and, to me, more difficult than I would have guessed at first blush. 'Without' is made up of a number of sections which, I think one could say, generally move from grainier and more abrasive to less so, though not in an obvious path and by no means always. It leaps right in with the violin offering high, needle-like harmonics with what sounds like numerous objects being roughly rubbed and tossed on a bass drum. Four minutes in, this abruptly shifts to a low vibraphone pulse; there's some other, obscure activity, probably ancillary sounds made by Stuart. Carlson entires, again pitched high but somewhat cleaner, a kind of Tony Conrad line weaving through the vibraphone cloud. This is followed by solo violin, a single note, held for about eight seconds, repeated by itself until joined by a clear, high bell, the pair heard in an irregular series with a decent amount of silence. I have the impression of an object with two main aspects being viewed from various angles, in differing light conditions. There's relatedness but a certain amount of apartness. This, for me, creates something of a challenge in hearing the piece as a whole, but it's a very enjoyable challenge, surely more an issue for these ears than anything amiss on the part of de Asís. Some 32 minutes in, there's an especially lovely sequence with vibes and lower, though still sandpapery, violin that serves as a kind of oasis after a demanding journey. This merges into isolated, low plucks on the violin, soon accompanied by clear wood block strikes, a pattern similar to that of the violin/bell sequence heard earlier. The blocks accompany a sustained violin tone very similar to that which began the work, closing it out. Rigorous, spare, only occasionally luxuriant, 'Without' is a fine, demanding recording. (11/12/2018) |