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Two brand new remote recording works by Alameda-based composer Brian Baumbusch are featured on this album release by Other Minds. Commissioned by the University of California Santa Cruz Wind Ensemble, Isotropes was written in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown and consists of a sequence of varied musical fragments chosen and recorded by each participating musician from their respective homes during quarantine. Together, these fragmented recordings combine to create an ambitious 25-minute work for adaptable orchestra. Also featured on the album is Tides, a piece commissioned by the Creative Work Fund in collaboration with video artist Ian Winters and recorded remotely in lockdown following the cancellation of its March 2020 live premiere.
Tides is a chamber work for quintet of harp, piano, vibraphone, violin, and clarinet that reflects on the 21st century crisis of rising global sea levels, and the Bay Area regions that are projected to be affected by this over the coming century. Ian Winters captured video footage while walking a pilgrimage around the Bay and uses this footage together with 3D body-scans of the musicians performing their parts in the virtual production of the piece. Due to the synchronicity between the music and the video, as well as the complexity of the multiple simultaneously varying tempo streams, referred to by Baumbusch as “polytempo,” click tracks were incorporated at the conception of the work to ensure performance accuracy. When the pandemic hit and concerts were cancelled, Baumbusch decided to shift the concept of the piece to a remote recording production. This release marks the first time that this work can be heard since its creation.
Based on an interest in the remote recording techniques that Baumbusch used in Tides, UC Santa Cruz Wind Ensemble Director Nat Berman commissioned Baumbusch to create an entirely new remote-recording piece for his wind ensemble that would explore Baumbusch’s technique of composing with polytempo. After a library of musical fragments of varying pitch ranges, tempos and rhythmic notations was created and made available online, each musician independently selected fragments of their own choosing and submitted their recordings en route to compiling the full piece. Each musician recorded the fragments in their own homes using whatever equipment they had readily available, such as phones or laptops, and a downloadable click track provided by Baumbusch. Once all of the recordings had been assembled, Baumbusch edited the recordings together to produce the final mix. The work received its premiere online in June 2020.
Composer Brian Baumbusch comments: “Isotropes has evolved into a unique composition for the time that we currently live in rather than as a means of getting around the limitations of technology to deliver an approximation of live performance. Not only are composers questioning how we can create art in a meaningful way while concert halls remain shut but also how these works can endure and remain a part of our evolving musical tapestry. Composers throughout history have created great works of art during times of great struggle and I believe that we must all approach our efforts in the same way during these uncertain times, adopting new performance practices rather than adapting or compromising existing ones.”
Praised by the Washington Post as “exuberantly complex, maddeningly beautiful, and as intoxicating as a drug,” composer and multi-instrumentalist Brian Baumbush has written works and collaborated with musicians such as the JACK Quartet, the CSU Fullerton Wind Symphony, Gamelan Makaradhwaja (Bali), and his own Lightbulb Ensemble. In June 2019, Other Minds premiered Baumbusch’s “The Pressure” at San Francisco’s Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, an evening length large ensemble work commissioned by the Gerbode Foundation that draws inspiration from the myriad of works synonymous with the horror genre and is told through live narration synchronized to a mechanical piano and silhouetted images projected on a slide-projector. The premiere was led by Baumbusch’s frequent collaborator, conductor Nat Berman of UCSC’s Wind Ensemble. Baumbusch teaches at U.C. Santa Cruz and resides in Alameda, California.
credits
released December 18, 2020
Isotropes Personnel
UCSC Wind Ensemble Members
Nathaniel Berman - Conductor
Brian Baumbusch - Director
Hunter Bauman - Flute, Piccolo
Mia Balsley - Flute, Oboe
Betsy Brady - Flute
Aya Kitajima - Flute
Bennett Imai - Oboe
Neil Fairbairn - Bassoon
Lam Do - Clarient
Olivia Irons - Clarinet
David Leon - Clarinet
Megan Spitzer - Clarinet
Damien Stoffel - Clarinet
Jacob Riberal - Alto Saxophone
Nick Hidy - French Horn
Nick Uhlig - French Horn
Brina Bodnar - Trumpet
Genevieve Kromm - Trumpets (Bb, C)
Ryan Odou - Trumpet
Daniel Smith - Trumpet
Elad Zohar - Trumpet
David Gatwood - Trombone, Flute, Mbira, misc. woodwinds & brass
Charlie MacDowell - Trombone
Kristopher Curry - Euphonium
Shannon King - Tuba
Nathan Cardenas - Double Bass
Greg Kauffman - Piano
Hari Kuttivelil - Marimba
Andrew Morgan - Glockenspiel, Piano
Michel Nguyen - Glockenspiel, Piano
Additional Performers
Jeffery Anderle - Clarinets (Bb and Bb Bass)
Kyle Bruckmann - Oboe, English Horn
Juliet Hamak - Bassoon, Contrabassoon
Paul Contos - Saxophones (Soprano, Alto, Tenor, Baritone)
Richard Roper - Trumpet
Vanessa Ruotolo - Cello
Brian Baumbusch - Muted Piano, Vibraphone
Mckenzie Langefeld - Vibraphone
Henry Wilson - Vibraphone
William Winant - Glockenspiel, Marimba, Vibraphone
Tides Personnel
Other Minds Ensemble
Brian Baumbusch - Director
Jeffery Anderle - Clarinets (Bb and Bb Bass)
Otis Harriel - Violin
Mckenzie Langefeld - Vibraphone
Jennifer Ellis - Harp
Mergaret Halbig - Piano (recorded in MIDI, rendered on a Yamaha Disklavier)
Both pieces were recorded at the homes of each of the individual performers, in isolation. In the case of Isotropes, recordings took place between March and June of 2020. In the case of Tides, recordings took place between July and August of 2020. On September 17, 2020, the preliminary mixes of both Isotropes and Tides were re-amped into the U.C. Santa Cruz Recital Hall; the recording of that re-amp session was captured and combined with the preliminary mix to produce the final mix.
Charles Amirkhanian – Executive Producer
Brian Baumbusch - Audio Engineering and Mixing; Producer
Andrew Weathers – Producer and Mastering Engineer
Jay M. Arms – Liner Notes
Gretchen Korsmo – Artwork & Layout
Other Minds is a global New Music community where composers, students, and listeners discover and learn about innovative music by composers from all over the world.
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