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                dante boon  
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            dante
                boon 
                 
            
              
                
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                  EWR
                      2304 
                      CD  
                    dante boon 
                    antoine beuger (whistling), dante boon (toy
                      piano, various objects, voice, piano), sasha elina
                      (voice), rene holtkamp (guitar), marianne schuppe (voice,
                      piano), sytske van der ster (various objects, voice) | 
                 
                
                    
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                    dante boon 
                    duos 
                       
                     
                    01         
                    ruht nicht aus (2015) 
                    02         
                    lied (je slaapt) (2012) 
                    03          duo
                    (guitar) (2018) 
                    04         
                    duo: table & books (2020)  
                    05          20
                    / 21 (2021) 
                    06         
                    alone (2021) 
                     
                     
                    performed by (amongst others): 
                        antoine beuger (whistling) (5), dante boon (toy piano,
                        various objects, voice, piano) (2, 4, 5), sasha elina
                        (voice) (6), rene holtkamp (guitar) (3), marianne
                        schuppe (voice, piano) (1), sytske van der ster (various
                        objects, voice) (4) 
                     
                     
                     
                    audio excerpt:  
                     
                    ► 
                      lied (je slaapt) (15:16) 
                     
                    ► 
                      20/21 (09:10) 
                     
                      
                      
                     
                       
                       
                    A manner of counting together: this could be one definition
                    of meter. Counting together so as to be “in the same
                    time”. Even when making music solo, you’ll be
                    together in this sense, if only with some projected
                    listener, or with yourself. 
                     
                    Meter is not just measuring time, as it was in a lot of
                    advanced music from the past century that featured complex
                    time signa- tures or polymetrical techniques. Complementary
                    to this, meter is also variable intensity and plasticity of
                    time. Getting a tango, a waltz or a mazurka right –
                    how a downbeat is different from an upbeat, how each meter
                    will have its own little lilt, its inner shifts that make
                    counting together live. 
                     
                    The most fundamental platform for meter is the duo. In a
                    duo, counting time really is a relation to one literal
                    other. A minimal codependency. Two people providing one
                    another with the space to shape temporal intensities. 
                     
                    In the pieces of this disc, Dante Boon shows himself to be a
                    deep thinker about meter among composers working today, as
                    part of the tradition of John Cage – specifically of Two2,
                    a duo for pianists in which Cage was influenced by Sofia
                    Gubaidulina’s remark that “there is an inner
                    clock”. In that piece, two pianists play chords freely
                    but still depend on each other’s decisions for the
                    timing of every unit, instead of depending on a stopwatch as
                    in most of Cage’s Number
                      Pieces. To that tradition of free interdependence,
                    Dante adds a sensibility from more traditional music, of
                    embodied counting and stress, nuanced patterned intensities,
                    meter as life form. 
                     
                    The pieces on this disc all feature expanded notions of
                    counting and togetherness. Players can be “in the same
                    time” even when not being measurably synchronized.
                    Rather, the same time is an emergent composite of two
                    individual, non-identical, but inter- related counting
                    processes. You could say, an unmeasurable synchronization. 
                     
                    Remarkably, many of these duos are notated on a single
                    staff. One notation, interpreted differently by each of the
                    two players. In Lied (je
                      slaapt) for instance, two players play the same
                    measures, but counting them differently: for every measure,
                    the (toy) pianist choosing to use four, six or eight counts
                    per note, and the clarinetist choosing five, seven or nine.
                    The result is a togetherness that can never synchronize
                    strictly. Instead, bar by bar, spontaneous tempo canons
                    result. This openness of time even bleeds into the form
                    itself – the piece has five sections like a rondo,
                    with the two instruments starting every measure together in
                    the odd sections. In the second section, however, the
                    pianist enters later, in the fourth one, the clarinetist
                    enters later. But the score does not indicate where the next
                    section will begin; that, too, is up to spontaneous player
                    decisions. The result is a freely shifting mosaic of varied
                    togethernesses. 
                     
                    In Duo: table & books
                    performers similarly decide section boundaries. For example,
                    the first part of the piece begins with two sounds from
                    performer I always alternating with one sound from performer
                    II. Halfway through, however, performer II will decide to
                    invert these roles by making a sound following the first
                    sound of performer I – and then following with a
                    second sound. From that moment, it will always be two sounds
                    from performer II alternating with one from performer I. So
                    there is a two-one “meter”, but as the roles
                    shift, the intensities are redistributed as a subtle
                    variation in metrical personality. This is a
                    “meter” for a specific situation – two
                    people, sitting at a table, each reading their own book. At
                    first they make sounds while reading that are
                    “non-intentional in nature” as the score says,
                    later they read single words from their books out loud,
                    creating fleeting verbal encounters between two different
                    inner worlds. 
                     
                    On this disc, ruht nicht
                      aus and Duo
                      (guitar) are two mirroring commentaries on
                    duo-ness. The guitar piece is a duo, but for a single
                    player. Here, the main section actually is on two
                    conventional staves linked by barlines. However, the
                    guitarist is to play the top and the bottom voices freely,
                    as if two interdependent players in the manner of Two2.
                    Other sections are interwoven into this, involving other
                    forms of polyphony: dyads, or laisser
                      vibrer tones overlapping with new attacks. The
                    result is an ambiguous listening experience, generally
                    sounding like a single compound melody but always also
                    suggesting two underlying streams. Conversely, ruht
                      nicht aus for voice and instrument – here
                    also performed by a single performer – notates the two
                    voices only as dyads that are to be played strictly together
                    – though of course, the beginning and ending of a note
                    means some- thing quite different for a voice or a piano.
                    Yet the two need to negotiate what “together”
                    means for such different sounds. In both these performances
                    on this disc, a single interpreter splits themself up and
                    must negotiate time with this inner other. Are we hearing
                    one voice, two voices, or some spectral in-between? 
                     
                    Alone and 20/21
                    take the rethinking of togetherness the furthest, by playing
                    with togetherness in various forms of full separa- tion. In
                    Alone for voice and piano, a poem by Nikki Giovanni is sung
                    twice, with piano accompaniments. Both song and piano are
                    notated on the same staff, but are performed separately in
                    alternation, with maybe some overlap. Yet still, a
                    “bar” unites them in togetherness: the staff on
                    which both parts are written. In the second half, the order
                    of piano and voice entries on a single staff switches
                    around, creating new relations, while maintaining the same
                    underlying “bars”. The two remain separate
                    (“lonely”), but separate together (“with
                    you”). 
                     
                    If Duo: table & books
                    was a situation of reading together, 20/21 is a lockdown
                    situation in the pandemic. Just as in Alone, the two parts
                    are played separately – but then edited together to
                    form a duo. Metrical togetherness is achieved in an
                    ingenious way: the flute player will listen to the recording
                    made by the pianist, but pause it halfway through, then
                    record half of their part, then listen to the rest of the
                    piano recording, and record their second half. Later, the
                    recordings are edited to overlap. This way, the
                    pianist’s choices of tone, tempo, and metrical feel
                    may influence the flutist’s playing, occasioning a
                    shared sense of counting and a togetherness while being
                    completely separated in space and in time. 
                     
                    Two people, across their distances, counting together,
                    interdependent, yet free, creating rich new time. 
                     
                    Samuel
                        Vriezen 
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
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