Tomorrow (Saturday) Decibel are doing a repeat performance in Brisbane, and you can guarantee that nothing will be the same. The maverick may be dead but his music is reborn every time it is performed.
Here is my review from the Perth concert:
CONCERT
Decibel Ensemble
Hackett Gallery, WA MuseumReview: Rosalind Appleby
First published theWest Australian March 2012
Decibel ensemble has compiled John Cage’s series of eight
Variations (1958-1967) into one program – the first time this has been done.
The group have recently returned from touring the program through Europe and
their performance on Wednesday night showcased the group’s affinity for Cage’s
playfully provocative music.
The ensemble made good use of the old Hackett Gallery library
with musicians and audience spread around the hall. In Variations I and II bass
clarinet, violin, alto flute and cello sounds floated from the balcony. Thanks
to modern technology it was possible to follow on screens the various
permutations of Cage’s graphic scores. The score of Variation III was a series
of overlapping circles, interpreted with delicate detail by Stuart James on
drum kit.
In Variation IV the score was superimposed onto a floor plan
of the concert venue and directed the performers where (but not what) to play.
The members of Decibel disappeared through various doors and the result was a
distant, surround-sound experience of whistling, radio noise and thuds. Cage’s pointed comment on the need for
improvising artists to draw from within but also get out of the way is just as
pertinent today.
Decibel used proximity antennas and light sensitive devices
(technical wizardry Cage would have loved) to aurally trace the movements of
four dancers in Variation Five. The ensemble also added their own stamp to Variation
VI which featured guitars leaning against amps which were manipulated and
controlled through effects pedals. In Variation VII electronic communication
tools including laptops and iphones created a chaotic buzz of noise. Variation VIII
gave satisfying closure with a ‘performance’ by the room itself, using a
feedback system that listened to the resonant frequency of the room. The drones
and humming resonated peacefully through the space and tuned our ears to the
world of sound around us. This was a thoughtful, stimulating and polished tribute
to Cage on the 100th anniversary of his birth.
ENDS
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