Barrett, Richard (b. 1959)
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThat track (n + 2) - x was removed from the Soundcloud page because it became a track on the album FUNCTION released a couple of weeks ago on Bandcamp where it's joined by three related pieces: https://furtlogic.bandcamp.com/album/function
angel on the other hand has NOT been removed https://soundcloud.com/r-barrett/fur...rett/sets/furt
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Interested parties might like to know that the LA-based quartet gnarwhallaby has just posted a video of the piece I wrote for them in 2017:
Brian Walsh- A clarinet and bass clarinetMatt Barbier- tenor and alto tromboneDerek Stein- celloRichard Valitutto- pianoCommissioned by Elizabeth and Justus ...
It consists of four sections, I guess you could call them movements even, each of which is a homage to a different 20th century American composer-performer: Cecil Taylor, Thelonious Monk, Eric Dolphy and Miles Davis respectively. The second is in fact based almost entirely on "Round Midnight" and the fourth adds an electronic part to the quartet of clarinet/bass clarinet, trombone, cello and piano. The performers are Brian Walsh, Matt Barbier, Derek Stein and Richard Valitutto. The last couple of years has seen a considerable increase in the uptake of my work from young US performers - hopefully this will be one of those American trends which eventually finds its way to the UK!
edit: it's a fantastic performance but the cello unfortunately gets a bit lost in the recording...Last edited by Richard Barrett; 19-01-19, 12:56.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI know, I did get that! And not just the piano, plenty of percussive and rhythmic stuff in there from other instruments. But my question is much simpler.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThe piano in relation to the more-or-less-unison between the other instruments and the electronic part is modelled on the way Tony Williams creates a solo around the repeating melody line in Miles's "Nefertiti" (actually a Shorter composition, though I think I'd be correct in thinking that it would have been Miles's idea to perform it as it appears on the album). And in the first part Cecil's concept of the piano as consisting of "88 tuned drums" is expanded to make the whole quartet into a single complex percussion "instrument". If there had been a real percussion setup in the ensemble the music would have been very different because using it in those sorts of ways would be somehow too obvious and predictable, rather than (hopefully) sufficiently oblique to come across as homage rather than imitation. Of course then there's a real bass clarinet in the third (Dolphy) section but there, rather than emulating his style in any straightforward way the music echoes the structure of his solos by changing directions every few seconds.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostSome people here have asked me about my forthcoming book... well, I'm happy to say it isn't forthcoming any more but actually exists! (although I haven't actually had my hands on one yet)
More information here, where copies can also be ordered. (It's a mere £25 by the way.)
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