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The
Electric Performer
MUSIC
OF PRISCILLA & BARTON McLEAN
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Price:
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$14.00 |
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Catalog
Number:
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CPS-8637 |
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Audio
Format:
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Stereo,
DDD |
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Playing
Time:
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73:57 |
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Release
Date:
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1997 |
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Cover:
David Scharf & Priscilla McLean
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Track
Listing & Audio Samples
Need Help with Audio?
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Priscilla
McLean |
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The
Inner Universe |
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1. |
Landscape
of a Coleus (5:40) |
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2. |
Sweet
Alyssum/Victoria Spring (4:44) |
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3. |
Mosquitoscape
(5:03) |
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4. |
Flower
Power (4:00) |
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5. |
Salt
Canyons (7:47) |
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Priscialla
McLean, amplified prepared piano, with stereo tape |
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6. |
Where
the Wild Geese Go (14:07) |
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Gerald
Farmer, Bb clarinet, with stereo tape |
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Barton
McLean |
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7. |
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David
Burge, piano, with stereo tape |
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8. |
Dawn
Chorus (13:53) |
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Barton McLean, soprano
recorder and clariflute
with digital processing and stereo tape
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9. |
Dimensions
III (6:36) |
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Albert
Regni, alto saxophone, with stereo tape |
Also
Available on Capstone
Related
Links & Contacts
Reviews
"One might think that composers of electroacoustic music have much in
common with nuclear physicists. Plenty of forbidding images arise -- for
example, those of "mad scientists" in clinically spotless labcoats
speaking a language that only they can understand, and cackling over
projects whose merits one needs to be equally brilliant to comprehend.
After all, "fun" is not the first word that comes to mind when one thinks
of this musical genre.
Then one becomes aware of the work of Barton and Priscilla McLean, a
husband and wife team based in Petersburgh, New York, whose
electroacoustic music is . . . well, different. Together, they are known
as "The McLean Mix," and their literature describes them as an
"Electroacoustic Music/Media Duo." Bringing their work to a
non-traditional (that is, a non-concert-going) audience is important to
them, and they promise "sounds and sights so unusual that you the
audience will want to get up and perform and dance and paint . . ."
Disney's Epcot Center was never like this. The McLean Mix can recreate a
jungle in Borneo, a rainforest, or a desert spring in a small performance
space; participants can play acoustic and electronic instruments, sing on
a sound processed microphone, immerse themselves in slide and video
images, and move their bodies in response to the rich banquet of sights
and sounds. As you might have gathered by now, the description
"environmentalists" also belongs to Priscilla and Barton McLean, although
they might not explicitly identify themselves as such. To "Save The
Rainforest" is a noble goal few would argue against, but it is too
abstract to mean much to most people. The McLeans' interactive multimedia
performances bring rainforests and other vulnerable environments to the
audiences, and, if the music alone is anything to go by, it would be very
difficult not to become emotionally involved in the spaces that are so
vividly evoked. Truly, there are universes in the compound eye of a bee,
the McLeans seem to be telling us.
These four CDs are always surprising and provocative. They contain
several types of sound. First, there's straight-ahead acoustic
performance, as in the sound of a clarinet, saxophone, or human voice.
Sometimes, the instrument will be manipulated during performance;
Priscilla McLean "prepares" the piano in the style of John Cage with
wedges, washers, credit cards (!), and other timbre-altering objects, and
the inside harp may be played as well as the keyboard. A good example of
this is in The Inner Universe, a suite inspired by electron micrographs
of plants and animals. Fantasies for Adults and Other Children (a set of
songs to texts by e.e. cummings) makes even more dramatic use of a
prepared piano. Another manipulated instrument is the "clariflute," which
is a soprano recorder with a clarinet mouthpiece; it can be heard in Dawn
Chorus, Earth Music, and in other works on these four discs. The McLeans
don't use electronics gratuitously, then; in Wilderness, Priscilla McLean
(who has a fine soprano voice) adds reverberation to her voice with
nothing more high-tech than an empty mayonnaise jar. She, it must be
said, is a brilliant practitioner of what sometimes is called "extended
vocal technique." Her whoops, shrieks, mutters, and palette of noises,
guttural and otherwise, will endear her to anyone who loved Cathy
Berberian's virtuosic performances of extreme 20th century music
(particularly Luciano Berio's). Fans of Meredith Monk will be comfortable
here too.
The McLean Mix frequently accompanies "live" instrumentalists or
vocalists with pre-recorded stereo tape. In the funny and frightening
Where the Wild Geese Go, the tape contains samples of the clarinet
soloist's own playing, and so a virtual duet for one is made possible.
The tape also contains samples of animal sounds (birds and bees) and
percussion samples. In Barton McLean's Dimensions, the pianist
(Dimensions II) or saxophonist (Dimensions III) plays along with
pre-recorded piano or saxophone samples that have been processed,
sometimes - as in the case of the piano in Dimensions II - past the point
of recognition. Priscilla McLean's Dance of Shiva incorporates
pre-recorded samples of everything from Buddhist chants and Hildegard von
Bingen to bumblebees to evoke the Hindu deity Shiva. In concert, multiple
slide projections depict "volcanoes, landslides, glaciers, storms, [. .
.] peoples and animals appear, flower, and disappear in a continuous
lifeflow cycle, on and on forever." (It is time for The McLean Mix to
consider a DVD of their work; to a certain extent, perhaps these CDs are
already outdated!) Further multicultural ambitions are revealed by In the
Beginning. In this work, one of the most recent on these four CDs,
Priscilla McLean reads creation texts from Babylonia, Greece, and
Chaldea, and also draws upon Hindu, Arunta, Zuni, and Occidental
cultures. This work contains some of the most complicated manipulation of
live and pre-recorded material. As she sings "live," her husband alters
her voice with echo- and delay-processing. The tape that is played
simultaneously contains almost nothing but her voice, but extensive
manipulation via the ASR-10 synthesizer dramatically alters its range and
the timbre, even creating choral textures.
These are not the only unusual sounds to be heard on these discs. In the
joint composition Rainforest Images, the McLeans have written for
didgeridoo, the wind instrument created by Australia's indigenous
peoples. The spokes of a bicycle wheel are bowed and struck with dampers
in On Wings of Song, which also gives wonderful prominence to the
pre-recorded "voices" of mosquitoes and bees. Even ancient glacial rocks
are found to be highly musical; they are struck with mallets in Earth
Music.
Lest the impression be given that this is New Age music for softy-eared
tree-huggers, I need to say that the McLeans don't seem to feel any
obligation to make traditionally pretty noises. This is not music to be
lulled by or to fall asleep to. I admit that one afternoon I tried dozing
off to one of these CDs, and woke up startled by the challenging sounds
that were coming out of my speakers: did my house need an exorcism? Again
and again, The McLean Mix comes up with awesome sounds and textures - and
I mean "awesome" quite literally. Even though this is modern music that
places communication with a non-specialist audience high on its agenda,
listeners will get no free rides from it. They'll have to put aside their
prejudices and hear it for what it is.
These discs have a refreshingly homemade quality that is in tune with
the music that they contain; they are professional but hardly slick. The
recordings - some of them in concert settings -- were made over decades
and in many different locations. Nevertheless, the four programs hold
together, and the engineering is just fine. If I were to pick just one
(and I'm glad I don't have to), I would choose Capstone CPS-8637, which
bears the title "The Electric Performer." It strikes me as being the most
representative of the four."
Twentieth Century Music
- February 1999 - by Mark Alburger
Priscilla and Barton
McLean are uncompromising performer-composers with their own personal
musical vision. Often this vision is directly related to actual
images, as in the case of Priscilla's The Inner Universe, a
work in five movements that opens their Capstone release, The
Electric Performer. This composition for amplified piano using
"soft" preparations (super-balls, piano wedges, coffee
mugs, covered metal washers, light chains, books, guitar picks)
buzzes, perks, and glissandos along in response to electronic-microscope
slides of David Scharf -- at times Cageian and Crumbian Priscilla's
Where the Wild Geese Go is another busy bee in its samples
of wild animal calls (Canadian geese, bald eagles, American bittern,
loons, owls, honeybees, and bumblebees), clarinet (Gerald Fanner),
bottle drum, and tabla.
Barton checks in with Dimensions II, a piano and tape composition
excitingly performed by the well-known David Burge, who no doubt
found his experiences recording the Makrokosmos cycle of
George Crumb able preparation for this varied essay. Barton's neoprimative,
haunting and spacious Dawn Chorus finds the composer as performer
on soprano recorder and clariflute (a hybrid clarinet/recorder)
through the sophisticated machinations of digital processing enriched
by stereo tape. The album comes to a shrieking and ominous conclusion
in Dimensions III, with alto saxophonist Albert Regni.
Priscilla and Barton bill themselves as The McLean Mix on two other
Capstone releases, and indeed their compositional voices are more
thoroughly entwined. Barton's Earth Music, the first selection
on Gods, Demons, and the Earth, finds the composer on keyboards,
clariflute, digital synthesizers, samplers, and digital processors,
complimented by Priscilla as vocalist, ocarinist, and percussionist
on ancient glacial rocks struck with mallets. Wilderness flips
the responsibilities with composer Priscilla as extended vocalist
to Barton's flexatone percussion supplemented with "animal
[one assumes this means "mammal"], bird, insect, and surreal
instrumental sounds (using digital sampling and synthesis) on stereo
tape. The two more discrete compositions on this disc are the Visions
of a Summer Night (Barton) featuring the mysterious wolfish
sparkling light console on the third-movement "Fireflies,"
and Dance of Shiva (Priscilla), which adds sampled Buddhist
Chant, music of Hildegard von Bingen, and precipitous glissandoing
instrumentals to the mix.
The duo's continuing interest in natural and high-tech sounds is
well shown by a third CD Rainforest Images. The jointly-composed
title work, in five continuous movements, features voices, violins,
wooden records, clariflute (here characterized as clarinet mouthpiece
with recorder body), didgeridoo, wolf howls, monkey cries, birdsong,
and ominous sustained vocals. Priscilla's vocals are allied with
Barton's amplified bicycle wheel and insects (mosquitoes and bees)
in On Wings of Song and Barton closes with a studio solo Himalayan
Fantasy, a wonderful assemblage of recordings of Tibetan singers
and instrumentalists organized into a large composition featuring
synthesizers, sona, and harp-like sounds. This is one of the more
convincing Fast-West syntheses since Philip Glass's music for Kundun."
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