wp67418c49.png
wped2d7ee4.png
wpd4a3e252.png
wp7e573fbd.png
wpf87d1449.png
wp8b792ade.png
wpfadcd7a9.png
wpd921edc6.png
wpdebdd1bf.png
wpf98a7d44_0f.jpg
wp31878f11.png
wpedd557fe.png
wp20040de9.png
wp92e4f171_0f.jpg
wpb9387e0e_0f.jpg
wp9b915f4b.png
wp7cc202c5_0f.jpg
wp97745a00.png
.
,

The ‘for hugh davies’ project     

 

The ‘for hugh davies’  project was a unique way of paying homage to and celebrating the remarkable music of Hugh Davies.  The resulting cd

was  recorded almost three years to the day after his death in January 2005, and was released in July 2008.   Hugh Davies was one of that  

outstanding first generation of European improvisers who emerged in the mid-1960's.  He played in the Music Improvisation Company (along with

Derek Bailey, Evan Parker and Jamie Muir), and was a founder-member of the legendary ensemble Gentle Fire, a group who – years ahead of their

time – used live electronics and improvisational elements to interpret radical scores by composers such as John Cage and Christian Wolff.

 

From 1964-66 Hugh worked as an assistant to Karlheinz Stockhausen, during the latter’s most radical and fruitful period as a composer.  Hugh

assisted on the production of  Mikrophonie I, a stunning work based on the amplification of sounds produced on a large tam-tam as it is brushed,

struck or stroked by a variety of different objects and materials. In a sense Hugh's music over the next 40 years was a deepening exploration of the

soundworld opened up by Mikrophonie I, again usually using metal objects as a sound source, though far smaller ones than Stockhausen's giant

tam-tam.  Employing what he described as a “do-it-yourself approach to music”, Hugh built instruments from everyday objects such as springs,

egg-slicers and fretsaw blades.  These were rubbed, scratched, beaten or blown, and the resulting small sounds were amplified.  Although thought

of as a pioneer of the use of live electronics in improvisation, the only 'electronics' involved in the vast majority of his instruments was amplification.

 

Hugh continued to refine and develop this soundworld both in his compositions for tape (collected on the cd Tapestries

on the Ants label) and in his improvisations with a wide range of fellow musicians.  He particularly liked playing with other

instrument builders (Max Eastley, Hans-Karsten Raecke), but also had long and fruitful collaborations with a number of

instrumental improvisers with whom he felt an affinity (John Russell, Roger Turner, David Toop, Phil Minton, Evan Parker).

 

for hugh davies uses a number of previously unpublished solo improvisations by Hugh dating from the 1970's.  At the

recording session these improvisations were played back to three musicians who have been deeply influenced by his

work: Mark Wastell, Adam Bohman and Lee Patterson.  The musicians improvised alongside Hugh's recordings,

producing an unusual improvisational situation in which one of the voices was fixed and unable to respond to the playing

of the others.  The musicians had been given copies of Hugh's pieces three months in advance of the session, but in fact

none of them chose to listen to them more than three times, as they wanted to leave plenty of room for spontaneity.  

Silences were inserted into some of the original recordings in order to give the musicians more space to develop their

own sounds.

 

In the recording Mark Wastell plays cello – the instrument with which he emerged as an improviser in the 1990's, but which he has

since largely abandoned.  He chose to play it here because it was the instrument he'd used on the dozen occasions that he performed

with Hugh.  Adam Bohman and Lee Patterson worked from tables full of amplified objects similar to those that Hugh employed in

his self-built instruments.  Both acknowledge Hugh as a major influence, though Adam only played with him on a handful of occasions.  

Lee never played with Hugh, and the one time they 'met' at a conference, Lee was too awestruck to actually speak to him.

 

Ten pieces were recorded of which six have been selected, including two very different responses to Hugh’s ‘Music for Bowed Diaphragms’.  

On the final track the musicians improvise unaccompanied by Hugh's recordings as a joint homage to his memory.

 

for hugh davies:  disc details

hugh davies (invented instruments)   +           adam bohman (amplified objects)

                                                                             lee patterson (amplified objects)

                                                                             mark wastell (cello)

 

1.  2 springs + 3                                                      7:56

2.  3 springs + 3                                                    14:38

3.  invented instruments + 2  (HD + AB & LP)    10:53

4.  bowed diaphragms + 1   (HD + MW)               6:52

5.  bowed diaphragms + 3                                     8:15

6.  for hugh davies  (AB/LP/MW)                          12:48

                                                   total time:             62:37

 

The original recordings of Hugh's music around which the improvisers played are being issued simultaneously

on an ‘another timbre’  limited edition cdr:         

 

Hugh Davies: Performances 1969-77                         1.    Music for 2 springs     (1977)                       7:52

                                                                                                       2.    Music for 3 springs     (1977)                    13:04

                                                                                                       3.   Solo at Ronnie Scott’s   (1975?)               24:20

                                                                                                       4.   Music for bowed diaphragms  (1973)      10:05

                                                                                                       5.   Salad    (1977)                                              13:54      

                                                                              6.  Shozyg I & II   (1969)                                       8:52

 

Tracks 1 to 5 are solos, track 6 is a duo for two shozygs played by Hugh Davies & Richard Orton, a fellow

pioneer and one-time member of Gentle Fire.

 

 

Other cd’s featuring the music of Hugh Davies:      

 

Interplay  (fmr)  trios with John Russell & Roger Turner,  and duos with Max Eastley, Hans-Karsten Raecke & Hilary Jeffrey, recorded 1996/7

The Iceman Cometh (grob)  solos from 2000

Tapestries  (ants)  collected pieces for electronic tape

Sounds Heard  (fmr)  book of texts by Hugh Davies with cd giving numerous extracts & samples of his instruments, published 2001

Music Improvisation Company   (incus)   cd of performances from 1968 to 1971 with Evan Parker, Derek Bailey & Jamie Muir

Klangbilder  (klangwerkstatt)  duos on self-built instruments with Hans-Karsten Raecke, 1985-94

 

hugh davies - performances 1969 -1977
wpd0d27b5f_0f.jpg