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From: chrisw@fciad2.bsd.uchicago.edu (chris williams)
Date: Mon, 21 Dec 92 23:48 CST
Subject: Over-looked Kate session in Dec. Pulse
To: love-hounds@uunet.UU.NET
Cc: chrisw@fciad2.bsd.uchicago.edu
Chris here, In the December Tower Records magazine _Pluse_, someone (I forget who) spotted Happy Rhodes' _Warpaint_ bizzarrely listed as one of the ten best "Dance Records" of the year. (Well, you *can* if you *want* to.) But our otherwise sharp-eyed Love-hound missed a Kate reference. Here it is... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Cover up In the tight race toward that late-20th century Holy Grail -- a pop-classical crossover watershed --the Balanescu Quartet has a strong resume in it's favor. Leader Alexander Balanescu left the preeminent Ardditti Quartet a ways back to start an ever more contemporary forum. Ardetti serves up prolific helpings of Cage, Legiti, Hans Werner Henze and other 20th century masters; Balanescu adopts the efforts of Lounge Lizard head John Lurie, jams with Kate Bush and the Pet Shop Boys, and keeps it's experimental edge sharp with composers Michial Nyman and Gavin Bryars. Following a spirted Argo recording of Nyman quartets, Balanescu hits us with _Possessed_ (Mute), consisting half of Kraftwerk covers ("Autobahn," "Pocket Calculater"), half of originals, plus one David Byrne piece. The Kraftwerk tracks are drab, maybe even silly; they play like those half-recognizable Muzak variations which keep us playing guessing games in shopping malls. Balanescu's originals, on the other hand, are pretty interesting. Exceedingly rhythmic and ripe with drama, they draw on pop music's resources internally, often intuitivly. Light percussion, and a rich supply of tasty, cellular melodic motifs and an urge toward cinematic expression drive Balanescu's compositions. Rather than simply play the game the Kronos Quartet did with it's cover of Jimi Hendrix's "Puple Haze" (or the Greene String Quartet with Gun's N' Roses' "Welcome to the Jungle," or the Tango Project with Jefferson Airplane's "White Rabbit" ... when will this end!?), composer Balanescu rewards us with a model for a true crossover: He doesn't need to cover a James Brown song to affirm his gratitude; he just works a variety of musical threads through his far-ranging, satisfying pieces, and leaves the listener to trace the patterns to their sources. (The quartet's adgenda is too large for one label; at presstime a sophomore Argo recording was announced, containing works by Byrne, Robert Moran, Michael Torke and John Lurie -- his _Stranger Than Paradise score, speaking of cinematic urge.) The Kraftwerk misstep aside, Balanescu adapts traditions with an ear for harmony, not publicity. Marc Weidenbaum ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Copyright - who cares! Like I'm going to try to obtain copyright permission for an excerpt from a give-away mag! Sheesh... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ I can't *believe* that he mentioned Kate, and neglected to mention what song Kate appears on. And is "jams" just hyperbole, or does Kate appear here as a musician, instead of as a vocalist? Does she sing on the Kraftwerk covers? "I am the operator of my pocket calculator..." Chris Williams chrisw@fciad2.bsd.uchicago.edu