Fremantle Arts Centre's inaugural offBEAT Festival made a solid imprint on the WA music scene over the weekend, using unexpected collaborations to present rhythm in fresh ways.
The WA Academy of Performing Arts’ percussion
ensemble Defying Gravity opened the festival on Friday night with a performance of John Luther
Adams’ Inuksuit, a piece inspired by the stone navigation markers used by the
Inuit in the Arctic. Ensemble director Tim White and 22 black-clad
performers stood around a tree in the arts centre garden gently blowing through paper cones – the sound barely
discernible above the wind in the trees. Gradually the players dispersed to
various corners of the garden to form instrumental ‘sculptures’. Musical themes
were passed between performers: the haunting call of conch shells and other
horn-like instruments, the deep thudding of drums and the metallic chiming of
bells and cymbals.
The audience - adults and children alike - moved
around the garden with unguarded inquisitiveness. The immersive effect was
extraordinarily effective. I’ve never been so aware of the physiological impact
of music: conch shells pushed air against me, bass drums thudded in my chest
cavity and standing in the centre of the garden as the drums thundered from
every side my skin was shivering from the vibrations. The aural acupuncture
gradually faded and the performers regathered at the tree, drawing our
attention back to the music of the wind in the leaves.
(listen below to Inuksuit presented by Make Music New York and Colombia University's Miller Theatre)
On Saturday night 200 fans crammed the inner
courtyard to witness three leading WA electronic artists collaborate with Josh
Hogan’s percussion ensemble The Wheel Turns. The four-piece percussion group
added beats to the moody folktronic pop of Joni in the Moon, gave a hypnotic
edge to electronic duo Rockwell & Groom and an aural assault to MC
Mathas' intellectual hip hop.
This review copyright The West Australian 2015.
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