Review, October 13

November 9th, 2013

One of the first reviews written about us, from our October 13 performance

Thomas and I went to the Chicago Bass Ensemble performance the Sunday before the wedding.  It was truly wonderful, four basses playing together and the music reaching deep inside.  The musicians looked dapper, each with a shirt of different colors.  Jacque performed a remarkable and what seemed to be a difficult solo with virtuosity that I would not mind hearing again.  It was both an artistically nurturing afternoon and an occasion to have a pick to a side of Jacque that, because of the distance, might not be very well known and or experienced.  I recommend that you arrange your next trip to coincide with a performance.  Go, Chicago Bass Ensemble, Go!!!

Okay, full disclosure … that review is written by my mother-in-law, who I adore. But I couldn’t resist sharing it.

Updates

We’ve begun working on Harrison’s Clocks, a recent work by Tony Osborne, for our January 11 appearance at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater bass festival.

I’ve also committed to co-commissioning a piece for marimba/percussion with six basses, which will be premiered on March 31 in downtown Chicago and will feature Matthew Coley. I’ll write more about this later.

Catching Up

October 31st, 2013

As usual, it’s been a while since writing a post for this blog. Here’s a very quick entry about what’s going on and what’s next.

We had our performance at North Shore Baptist Church on the 13th of October. While the turn out was a little light, it went well. The organizer, accompanist and piano tuner Randall Fleer, seemed pleased; and we agreed that part of the reason was probably the fact that it was a holiday weekend. A group from the Breakers retirement community was in attendance, and I was tickled when one of them told me “I never would have come to this if it was violins!”

One of the things low on my to-do list–not because it’s unimportant, but because so much else is on the list–is to get programs from the October 13 performance out to composers and publishers of the pieces we performed. *mock sigh* One of the hazards of playing music by living composers! Thank you to all of you for writing music for double basses!

As I began to play François Rabbath’s Pucha Dass, I had a moment of internal panic, wondering if the seniors in the crowd would be disgusted and horrified by this moody and dramatic modern piece. But it went well and received solid applause. On reflection I realized that the people we call ‘seniors’ today were in early adulthood or early middle age when the piece was written and when composers like Stockhausen, Feldman and Subotnick were achieving prominence. This isn’t foreign music to these people. If they were music lovers at that time in their lives, they might have attended performance of works that are considerably more avant-garde than this one. Understand your audience!

Next, we’re on tap for the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater bass festival (last year’s page is still up as I write). A different set of players this time: Julian Romane–who played so brilliantly on Armand Russell’s Ultra Rondo, Josh Harrison–a participant in many of our reading sessions, and John Tuck–one of the first “Four Js” who performed at UW-W many years ago. I’m waiting for bios and vehicle information from some of these guys, keep an eye out for updates.

And we’re hoping to pull together Frank Proto’s bass quartet for the next Chicago Bass Festival on Feb 2, 2014. This is part of an excellent plan that is receiving mediocre execution. I confess, it’s my inaction that needs to change!

As I write this, I’m very pleased to see that instead of just leaving last year’s web page in place, the MYA has created a placeholder page for the next festival that has current information. Thank you, MYA! It will be much easier to tell students and colleagues about the festival with that page in place.

Those of you with the ability to read the English language have no doubt grimaced more than once about the switching of voice (from first person singular to first person plural) throughout this, and all, my blog posts. We’d love to read your criticism of my linguistic style in the comments!

Cheers!
Jacque Harper

January 11, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater Bass Festival

October 24th, 2013

We’ll perform on the program at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater Bass Festival on January 11, 2014.

More details to come! Don’t hesitate to sign up for our mailing list in order to get updates delivered.

We’ll perform Tony Osborne’s Harrison’s Clocks, which I’ve been wanting to get to for about a year now. In addition, we’ll perform

  • Danny’s Bass Camp, an arrangement by Patrick Neher of a familiar melody
  • Quand mon mari, one of Orlando Di Lassus’ Chansons arranged by Michael Cameron, and
  • Dance No. 2 by Teppo Hauta-Aho

Performers this time ’round:

Quite a few years ago, we played at this festival when Jason Heath was running it. This is close to the same personnel as played then, and we were four Js then as well!

Old Friends

September 10th, 2013

On Sunday, John, Anton, Hans and I began rehearsals for our performance on October 13.

When I get a new performance opportunity, my gut instinct is to find a whole new program – music we’ve not performed before. I don’t know exactly where this impulse comes from. Perhaps it’s from my earliest training, in elementary and high school, where the three or four times per year concerts were always done with new repertoire.

Of course, that made complete sense in context. Our dedicated audience consisted primarily if not exclusively of our parents. And the ostensible reason for the music program in the first place would have been to expose us to different composers, styles, et cetera.

But does that approach make sense in the context of an ensemble like this one? Unlike in school, we don’t (yet) have a dedicated/exclusive audience. Each new series that books us brings in their own audience, and we bring along what audience we can (are you on our mailing list?). This means that, probably, the majority of the audience at any one concert has not heard us or our music before.

And so, relieved of the burden of complete originality, I have set a program for October 13 that is 80% the same as our performance on March 10. This means that these pieces, rather than being oh-my-god-what-is-happening-here exercises in learning notes, are old friends to us.

Playing through the list (see the post promoting October 13 performance), I enjoyed the feeling of recognizing what I was doing, of hearing the harmonies clearly, instead of the muddled-up confusion that often accompanies our first readings of things.

Yes, I do feel a twinge of guilt at this. There’s still something in me that wants to demonstrate my readiness for a challenge, the challenge of mastering something new. And it is also the case that when Michael Hovnanian left the group, he expressed frustration at always working on the same material. (And no offense to Michael, we were a bit stuck in a rut at that point. It’s one of the reasons I invested a good chunk of cash in repertoire the following year.)

But there exists also the fact that “mastery” is not necessarily achieved at a first performance. Assuaging my guilty feelings, I set a new challenge, that we will play these old friends better than before.

I would love to hear from those of you who perform regularly in your own groups: what’s your philosophy for adding or changing repertoire? How important, how often, HOW? Please leave a comment!

October 13, North Shore Baptist Church

September 5th, 2013

We’re on the schedule for a performance October 13, 2013 at North Shore Baptist Church in Chicago

ssslogoNorth Shore Baptist Church
5244 North Lakewood Avenue
Chicago, IL 60640

2:00 pm, with a reception following.

This program is part of North Shore Baptist’s Second Sunday series. Visit North Shore Baptist’s page for the series for more information about this concert and others in the Second Sunday Series.

Program:

  • Dan Armstrong’s “Wildebeests and Warthogs”
  • O magnum mysterium from “Three Spanish Motets” by Tomas Luis de Victoria, arranged by Michael Cameron
  • Teppa Hauta-Aho’s “Why?”
  • O vos homnes from “Three Spanish Motets”
  • Telemann’s Concerto #2 in D for four Violins — arranged for four basses in G
  • Jan Alm’s “Quartet #1”
  • O quam gloriosum est regnum from “Three Spanish Motets”
  • François Rabbath’s Poucha Dass (solo bass)
  • Lee Kesselman’s Basses Three (trio)
  • Paul Ramsier’s “Lullaby”
  • Tony Osborne’s “Rocket Man”
  • “A Night in Compostela” by Simon Garçia

People (alphabetically by third letter of first name):

  • Jacque Harper
  • John Floeter
  • Hans Peterman
  • Anton Hatwich

Proto Recording on MySpace

August 18th, 2013

Just discovered this partial recording of the Proto Quartet on MySpace. The group is called “Bass Pride 4tet” and is from Macere, Lazio, Italy.

There are three soundfiles of the Proto, they seem to correspond to two large sections of the first movement and one from the second movement. (I’m guessing that it was a live performance, and these are the parts that they felt were good enough to share?)

There is also a recording of Arvo Pärt’s Pari Intervallo that sounds pretty good. I don’t know the piece well enough to know if it’s complete.

There is even less information on this group’s MySpace page than there is on the Chicago Bass Ensemble’s MySpace page, and that’s saying something. A quick search doesn’t turn up any more information about them.

If you know anything about this group or the players, please leave a comment!

Make No Little Plans

August 16th, 2013

Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir men’s blood and probably will not themselves be realized.

I’ve decided to take this famous quote from Daniel Burnham (1846-1912) to heart.

For too long, this ensemble has been built on little plans. Mostly, the plan has been to wait by the phone for some arts organization to call, inquiring about fees or offering a performance. This has not proved a productive way to get lots of performance opportunities. When a performance has arisen, I’ve scrambled to pull together some repertoire and assemble a cast of players (drawing on a group of familiars).

While I’ve been basically satisfied with the results, it’s not the ultimate goal.

I hesitate to state the true ultimate goal, for fear of sounding insanely over ambitious, but maybe in a future post.

Back to the subject at hand: bigger plans! I have decided that I need to prepare a program that is ambitious and interesting, in advance of any planned performance. I need to find the players that can execute it, and then schedule several performances, as a goal or target. And then work like the dickens to make a great show of it. And really, I’d like to record the result and make it available for sale.

(I’ve spent a fair amount of time at this, with not a whole lot to show for it. A recording would be handsome documentary evidence of the work I’ve done.)

And I want to pick ambitious, challenging and interesting repertoire for this endeavor. At the moment, I am trying to decide between two pieces as the anchor for the performance:

There is a third possibility, Bjorn Berkhout’s Rise, which we have performed in the past, but I feel a need to acknowledge some of the ‘history’ of the double bass quartet.

The program would be rounded out with some lighter fare, probably one of Tony Osborne‘s recent compositions, perhaps some transcriptions.

Or perhaps there is some epic work for bass quartet that I’m not aware of.

I would love to hear what you think in the comments. Which is the work more in need of a current playing? Which would you rather hear, or buy a copy of? (And if you’re a member of the strings subgroup of the Professional Musician’s Network on LinkedIn, I’ve created a poll there asking the same question.)

 

 

Reading Session Wrap Up and The Amazing Mr. Bastow

August 2nd, 2013

We had a reading session Tuesday night — an opportunity to play through some of the music I’ve collected and get a sense of how it sounds and where it might be useful. Joining us for this session was Jarrett Bastow.

So first, the reading session. Josh Harrison, Hans Peterman, Jarrett Bastow and I got together Tuesday evening. For reasons of little interest to anyone but myself, my preparation for this session was lacking. It’s nice to get music out to people a little bit in advance, so we aren’t truly sight-reading, but that didn’t happen this time. As a result, well, I’ll be honest, much of the evening didn’t sound very good.

And I’ll emphasize sound very good, because I mean no slight to the players involved. It’s just that sight-reading in a group reinforces everyone’s little intonation or rhythm problems: if I can’t quite tune that shift properly, then you can’t rely on my pitch after the shift to tune your note and so perhaps you either hurry past it or figure that you’ve gotten ahead–because boy, does that sound odd–and maybe you slow up to try and figure it out. But you play strongly, because that is one of the best ways to overcome that creeping lack of confidence. But add to that the fact that we were in a very, very resonant room. The sound we were making was just not conducive to brilliant sight-reading: very boomy and muddled.

So, my impressions of the pieces I’m going to list are indeed colored by all of that. Composers and arrangers who stumble across these notes, take heart. I’ll give your pieces another chance in the future! I publish these notes 1) for my own benefit in keeping track and 2) in the interest of hearing other people’s comments or experiences.

  • Diego Ortiz Madrigal, Cancíon e Recercada, transcribed for Double Bass Quartet by Klaus Stoll. Music from the sixteenth century requires a fair amount of study and familiarity before you can really make it ring out beautifully. We’ve worked on pieces like this before, and it’s not until you’ve played it through several times that you start to understand where the music lies. No exception for these pieces. The lack of tempo indications–since they would not have been given in the original–combined with a lack of research on my part gave us an opportunity to experiment a bit, and yes, these will sound better at a brighter tempo than the lugubrious pace we set. We noted a missed accidental in the third bar of Bass III – that should almost certainly be an f-sharp.
  • J. S. Bach Contrapunctus No. 1 from “The Art Of the Fugue” transcribed and arranged by Joel Di Bartolo. The fact that this is a fugue highlighted the sound problems described above: we couldn’t make it clear to each other where the fugue subject was. In performance that would be a fatal flaw; in sight-reading, it’s sad-and-promise-to-do-better-next-time. As with some other Di Bartolo transcriptions, it seems like this one is set too low in the bass register, introducing the low interval limits problems that your arranging textbook warned you against. Possibly the arranger was thinking of basses in solo tuning, and that would help. Here too, a brighter tempo helped out when we read through a second time.
  • For some time I’ve been wanting to have a go at Ron Wasserman’s Pieces for Basses for Five Double Basses. With four players present, we decided to tackle the fourth movement (written for four players) and the third movement (for three players). The writing in the suite is fairly virtuosic: a half-written/half-improvised solo in the high voice in the fourth movement, and solos for both voices 1 and 2 in the third movement. The impression I have is that this will be a good piece to work on and to present to audiences: a more modern flavor, challenging and interesting. The difficulty I have always had when considering this piece is the instrumentation. Each of the five pieces in the suite calls for a different number of players. I always wonder…what should I do with the other players while they wait, what will the audience think. It’s a very minor quibble, though.
  • Classical/Romantic Collection for Double Bass Quartet arranged and edited by Carolyn White. Five selections, some sight-readable, some not (at least not by us last Tuesday). I’ll admit to a little struggle with such short arrangements of such popular pieces; they do little more than flash a grin into the ear’s mind “oh, look basses can play that.” While clearly offering opportunity for improving technical skills, as performance pieces, I’m saving them for encores. Boy I hope we get to play some encores!
  • Finally, we summoned up our courage and our sense of “oh, what the heck” to attempt a sight-reading of Frank Proto’s 1964 Quartet for Basses. Like the Gunther Schuller quartet, this is a serious work, a true addition to the canon of music for the double bass. As a sight-reading, we of course slaughtered it, but all of us who were present agreed that it will be an interesting and rewarding challenge to work on it. But it’s not sight-reading material, not by a long shot.

All in all, it was a fun evening, if not a huge musical success. One of the reasons I hold these sessions is to meet players who I don’t know, and at this one I had the pleasure of meeting Jarrett Bastow. Unfortunately for me, Jarrett has recently become the King of Bass Freelancers South of the Mason-Dixon Line, and as a result will probably not be making an appearance with the Chicago Bass Ensemble any time soon.

In the last month or so, Jarrett has been named principal bass of the Symphony of Northwest Arkansas, third chair in the Tulsa Symphony and section bass in the Fort Smith Symphony. And he’s gotten himself on the sub lists for the Amarillo symphony, Topeka symphony, Wichita symphony, Enid symphony, Arkansas Philharmonic, signature symphony, and Shreveport symphony. (If I’m scoring correctly, that’ll be Texas, Kansas, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, don’t-know-where, and Louisiana.) I was very happy to see that Jarrett owns a recent-model-year VW Golf. He’ll be putting some miles on, for sure. Good luck Jarrett – don’t be a stranger!

When I lived in California, the freelancers who drove from orchestra to orchestra saw all the same faces at each rehearsal, no matter which symphony ‘name’ was on the program, and called themselves the Driving for Dollars orchestra (after a long-ago afternoon movie gimmick on KTVU called “Dialing for Dollars” where the host would randomly call people out of the phone book and if they were watching the movie, they would win a small cash prize–the small cash prize was a parallel to a freelancer’s net paycheck as well).

 

“Pre-Gaming” for a Concert

July 12th, 2013

I overheard a conversation discussing “pre-gaming” before a concert – activities before going to see Bob Dylan perform live at a venue capable of holding up to 28,000 attendees. The concert-goer in question said he was nervous about his “pre-gaming” activities, because at the same time he was to be meeting his girlfriend’s parents. I took this to mean that he was intending to get drunk–or more–as preparation for the concert, and he realized that he might make a bad impression on the potential in-laws.

Now I’m going to be opinionated and cynical.

Leaving aside the blatant lack of willfulness expressed (you don’t have the self-control to put off your boozing during the time you’re meeting your girlfriend’s parents?), what is it about going to a concert that requires getting loaded in advance? What is it about a concert that requires mind- or mood-altering substances at all? For people who do this is music, even the music of a 20th-century legend, only a backdrop to schmoozing, socializing and ‘partying?’

Shouldn’t a concert, the music itself be mind- or mood-altering?

Is getting drunk before the concert a way of hedging your bets, planting the seeds of an excuse?

  • If you don’t enjoy the concert, but it’s well-reviewed by others, you can say “oh wow, well, I was totally wasted” and be absolved of the guilt of not knowing good from bad?
  • Or if the concert is panned by your friends but you had a good time, the same excuse “dude, I was partying so hard, it was awesome” (with “it” left a indeterminate referent: was “it” the music or was “it” the bacchanalian* excess…) gives you permission to have a different opinion?
  • Is it the possibility that a Bob Dylan concert might turn out to be a colossal waste of $60 or more, and the best way to have a good time is to chemically lower your barriers to being entertained? Could the same question be asked about Wilco and the Richard Thompson Electric Trio, the undercard on the concert?

I certainly hope that my audiences don’t feel that their experience of my concert isn’t complete unless they’ve partied beforehand. I suppose if I knew the audience was going to be drunk or high, it would be easier: all that practicing would be unneeded. The mere appearance of four bassists alone on a stage, able to stand next to each other and not fall over would bring howls of appreciation.

(Is Bob Dylan in 2013 a colossal waste of time? I note with irony that the page promoting the concert here in Chicago features a 50-year old picture of the artist. Is a concert like this, in reality, a nostalgic trip akin to hearing the Chicago Symphony Orchestra play Strauss waltzes? Can I offend both pop music fans and classical purists by suggesting that both concerts would be a complete waste of time and money? They certainly would be for me.)

So, how about you: do you “pre-game” before a concert? Is it an essential part of the experience? How does it add to your enjoyment of the music?

* by using the term “bacchanalian,” of course, I attempt to raise my blogging to the erudite level of Jeremy Denk.

The Master’s Old Clothes

April 19th, 2013

Oof, it’s been way too long since I put on my white tie and tails.

“Really?” you ask “isn’t wearing fancy dress like that just a throwback to the old days when the servants wore the old-fashioned clothes that the masters had discarded when they moved on to more modern styles?”

Well, yeah, maybe that is the case. But I have to admit that I get a kick out of dressing up once in a while.

Today (and tomorrow) it happens to be for concerts of the Chicago Sinfonietta, taking place at the Harris Theater downtown Chicago and at Wentz Hall in Naperville.

  • Mozart, Overture to Il Seraglio
  • Shaheem, Oud Concerto in C minor
  • Dawson, Negro Folk Symphony

And yes, the tailcoat, pants, shirt, bow tie . . . they still fit. I’ll check on the shoes later.