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Put your hands on the remote! browse music »Hhhh by the Cortet
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fave it Free Jazz | Experimental
5 tracks | 49 minutes
Released May 2005
on UNSOUNDS
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- sample lyrics "album only" 05:07 HL lyrics "album only" 05:07 HL lyrics "album only" 05:07 HL
- sample lyrics "album only" 02:59 TH lyrics "album only" 02:59 TH lyrics "album only" 02:59 TH
- sample lyrics "album only" 24:11 HN lyrics "album only" 24:11 HN lyrics "album only" 24:11 HN
- sample lyrics "album only" 10:40 RH lyrics "album only" 10:40 RH lyrics "album only" 10:40 RH
- sample lyrics "album only" 06:39 CH lyrics "album only" 06:39 CH lyrics "album only" 06:39 CH
acoustic/electronic improv
Editorial review
The Cortet is a project led by Dutch pianist Cor Fuhler. It focuses on what could be called misleading improvisation, i.e., free improv in which it is often impossible to determine who plays what and how such sounds are achieved. The line between acoustics and electronics is particularly thin. HHHH is culled from two concerts at the Bimhuis in February of 2003 and May of 2004, plus a studio session the day before the first live date. The Cortet's lineup is an impressive roster of cutting-edge improvisers and their coming together is at least equal to their individual worth. Each player here has pioneered new techniques: Fuhler's piano preparations extend beyond the usual objects laid out over the strings of the instrument to include mechanical devices and E-Bows; Rhodri Davies has not so much reinvented the harp as he has created a whole new instrument by close-miking it and playing it with an array of unorthodox implements; John Butcher's close-miked feedback, strangled-tonguing technique, and breath-based sounds make him the most innovative sax player since Evan Parker; and Thomas Lehn plays the EMS Synthi-A analog synthesizer in ways that are much closer to acoustic improvisation than anything related to the electronic realm. HHHH is full of intelligent, complex interaction. Despite some of these improvisers' preferences for very quiet settings, this album is actually quite dynamic, with plenty of loud, dense moments to balance out the sonic minutia of other passages. The opening five-minute piece, "HL," offers an excellent overview of the group's capacities, with an exquisite finale to boot. The 24-minute "TH" contains several highlights, including some menacing moments during which Lehn seems ready to escalate things without end. "CH" is the noisiest offering, the harp screeching (yes, screeching) uncomfortably before the quartet grinds to a halt. One of 2005's best free improv surprises and another classy production from Unsounds. ~ Fran?ois Couture, All Music Guide
Bio / Background
A quartet of unique and unconventional improvisers explore worlds of complex sonic textures demonstrating ensemble playing of the highest order. The sound world that is conjured on this CD owes as much to electronic music as to the free improvised music styles from which the musicians hail from, and although three of the four instruments are purely acoustic, it is perhaps the aesthetics of electronic music which have had a clear influence on their combined sound. Textures reminiscent of early synthesizer music and jagged sounds that could have originated from digital processing are replicated and transformed through purely acoustic and analogue means, whilst always retaining the fluid form of an improvised structure.
John Butcher who has pioneered a unique sound and technique on the saxophones, creates tones and resonances that reminds one of the crackling and sputtering of analogue synthesizers.
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Rhodri Davies, using various metal objects, such tambourine cymbals on a closely miked harp, brings to play his trademark abrasive sound world that functions more like a subterranean noise generator than the celestial associations that the instrument provokes.
The highly prepared piano style of Cor Fuhler, which makes use of various electro-mechanical devices (including 12 ebows), makes the piano sound like never before ,at times like a sine-generator/overtone-cluster at other times like an electric zither, and every now and again perfectly timed chords on the keys that remind us of the orginal function of the instrument.
The only real electronic instrument, Thomas Lehn's EMS synthi A , a classic analogue synth with a very rich sonic palette, as well as an archaic sounding spring reverb, is played with the gestures and expression of an acoustic instrument.
The resulting music always retains a lightness and transparency of texture, sharp unexpected corners ,a quickness of communication between the musicians, and a cohesiveness as a group that blends so well together, that one is sometimes left wondering who exactly is playing what and how.
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