A Notion in Perpetual Motion

A Notion in Perpetual Motion

by Vienna Art Orchestra
A Notion in Perpetual Motion

A Notion in Perpetual Motion

by Vienna Art Orchestra

CD

$22.99 
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Overview

A live recording by the Vienna Art Orchestra is always an event. A band this well rehearsed performing in the controlled environs of the studio, where multiple takes and overdubs are standard practice in order to realize "perfection," are, sadly, standardized "business" practices. But on the road, the Vienna Art Orchestra show just how well rehearsed they are in all the unusual ways. Certainly they play Mathias Rueegg's compositions and charts with precision and feeling, but more than that, they take them in, each member realizing the composition as a part of a musical whole that carries within it the entire history of jazz, but also the playfulness of the sports music of Erik Satie and the European circuses that instill wonder as well as laughter in the hearts of viewers. And the Vienna Art Orchestra is a circus in the same way that the Duke Ellington Orchestra was a circus: a survival unit built for the road and any circumstance it might encounter. There are obvious parallels here: Hannes Kottek's Cat Anderson feel in his solos, smattering notes like jelly on bread; Herbert Joos, emulating the playful tender spirit of Cootie Williams; and Roman Schwaller's empathetic Johnny Hodges read. But Rueegg is not merely imitating Ellington's verve and spirit, he is extending it to move through the end of the 20th century and encompass all that jazz has brought to the fore since Ellington's passing in the '70s. The other part, as a composer, is a composer in a league of his own; one listen to the brassy stomp of "Sights From South Carolina" with Wolfgang Pusching's saxophone solos carrying on in the whirlwind takes the breath away. Lauren Newton's careening croon in "Lady Delay" matches the timbral balance of the orchestra pitch for pitch in an off-meter dance to the death. And then there's the perversity factor on "French Alphorn" with Joos playing the ancient alp instrument that is longer than a pair of stacked refrigerators. It's a grandfather to the trumpet with a limited range that resonates only in overtone settings. With Harry Sokal's soprano sax playing foil, the Alphorn playing it's deep, muted jazz and attempting to squeal through notes it can't reach, it sounds like the Dorsey Brothers trying to get it on with "C-Jam Blues." But the most notable thing abut the Vienna Art Orchestra is its stage presence: Rueegg knows how to create drama and surprise and his musicians are more than up to the challenge, clearly delighting themselves in the process. A Notion in Perpetual Motion is as close to a "perfect" live recording of the VAO as you are likely to find. ~ Thom Jurek

Product Details

Release Date: 04/12/2010
Label: HATHUT RECORDS
UPC: 0752156067924

Tracks

  1. Sighs From South-Carinthia
  2. Woodworms in the Roots
  3. Voices Without Words
  4. Life at the Dead Sea
  5. Lady Delay
  6. Romana
  7. A Natural Sound
  8. Round Midnight
  9. French Alphorn
  10. H.M. Blues

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Vienna Art Orchestra   Primary Artist
Harry Sokal   Sax (Tenor),Sax (Soprano),Flute
Roman Schwaller   Sax (Tenor)
Christian Radovan   Trombone
Hannes Kottek   Trumpet
Lauren Newton   Vocals
Joris Dudli   Drums,Percussion
Woody Schabata   Marimba
Uli Scherer   DX-7,Piano,Fender Rhodes
Karl "Bumi" Fian   Trumpet
Jon Sass   Tuba
Wolfgang Puschnig   Flute,Piccolo,Sopranino,Sax (Alto),Sax (Sopranino)
Herbert Joos   Alphorn,Trumpet,Flugelhorn
Heiri Kaenzig   Bass

Technical Credits

Mathias Rueegg   Composer
Pia Uehlinger   Producer
Ecke Bonk   Graphic Conception
Bhumibol Adulyadej   Composer
Bernie Hanighen   Composer
Werner X. Uehlinger   Producer
Thelonious Monk   Composer
Art Lange   Liner Notes
Cootie Williams   Composer
Peter Pfister   Engineer
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