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HIGHBROW HAMBONE
de Volkskrant
door Bela Luttmer, 2006
En toen klonk plotseling die frisse muziek, dwars door het (...)


Richmond Times-Dispatch, september 15, 2005
By Clarke Bustard

Three questions come up, more or less simultaneously, when eighth blackbird performs: What's that sound? Where's it coming from? And what's it about?

The answers promised to be more straightforward than usual in "Lucid, Inescapable Rhythms," last night's opener to the contemporary music sextet's second year in residence at the University of Richmond.

It's all about rhythm, and rhythms come from rhythm instruments, right?

Yes, but in this set of seven compositions, also from strings and winds and in two pieces, from hands. Mayke Nas' "DiGiT #2" (2002-03) was a kind of highbrow hambone, a rhythmic fantasy growing out of children's hand-patting and clapping games. Percussionist Matthew Duvall shared the Steinway with pianist Lisa Kaplan as they alternated tone clusters with intricately patterned clapping.

"Musique de Tables" (1987) by filmmaker-composer Thierry de Mey was a whimsically choreographed exercise in rhythms produced by rubbing, scratching and knocking on three tabletops. Duvall, Kaplan and Matt Albert (normally the group's violinist) played de Mey's intricate rhythms with precision, flair and humor.

Jennifer Higdon's "Zaka" (2002) was a more conventional and substantive piece of rhythmic music, with fast sections full of slashing accents and curiously woozy tension, surrounding a slower section that seemed to evoke a lazy twilight.

The concert featured two premieres: Ashley Fure's "Inescapable," an almost formless succession of rarified tones that the composer likens to "a brittle eggshell cracked open to reveal its bright, viscous yolk;" and Marcus Maroney's "Rhythms," which sounds like a series of melodic refrains with percussive commentary.

To mark its 10th anniversary as a professional troupe, eighth blackbird reprised two of its "standards." Fred Lerdahl's "Fantasy Etudes" (1985) was the most "formal" piece of the evening. The musicians visually represented its sectional structure in stylized, symmetrical stage movements. David Lang's "Cheating, Lying, Stealing" (1993) grows out of an industrial-strength, pounding motif. In its dark heavy-handedness ("ominous funk," the composer terms it), the piece might be a pas de deux for the Terminator and his Terminatrix.


modlin.richmond.edu
NRC Handelsblad
door Kasper Jansen, 2006
En zo klonk tijdens het getakel en gesjouw de wereldpremière (...)


New York Times
by John Parales, 2006
The Dutch composer Mayke Nas's "La Belle Chocolatière," played (...)


Brabants Dagblad
door René van Peer, 2006
De vier zangers van het Egidius Kwartet staan midden voor op (...)


Trouw
door Anthony Fiumara, 2005
Met vegen tenslotte had het stoffig-frisse 'I Delayed (...)


Richmond Times-Dispatch
by Clarke Bustard, 2005
Mayke Nas' "DiGiT #2" (2002-03) was a kind of highbrow (...)

Paris Transatlantic Magazine
by Guy Livingston, 2004
Highlights of the Aleph show included trumpeter Lutz (...)


Irish Times
by Helen Meany, 2004
Watching somebody type may not sound fascinating but in this (...)