Showing posts with label tomasz krakowiak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tomasz krakowiak. Show all posts

Friday, November 3, 2023

Recording: Tomasz Krakowiak & Michelangelo Iaffaldano

Artist: Tomasz Krakowiak & Michelangelo Iaffaldano

Song: [5th piece]

Recorded at Wenona Lodge (Track Could Bend #84), October 3, 2023.

Tomasz Krakowiak & Michelangelo Iaffaldano - [5th piece]

This duo pairing moved through some ethnomusicological mystery zones, exploring real folk forms from fake places. Krakowiak, known for his extra-quiet percussion work, was on cello here, while Iaffaldano alternated between accordion and guitar.

You can check out some more from this set over on youtube:

[Track Could Bend is back at Wenona on Tuesday (November 7th) with sets from Ben Grossman and Ozone.]

Saturday, May 4, 2019

Recording: Brian Abbott & Tomasz Krakowiak

Artist: Brian Abbott & Tomasz Krakowiak

Song: [excerpt from first piece]

Recorded at Wenona Lodge (Women From Space Festival – Night 1), March 8, 2019.

Brian Abbott & Tomasz Krakowiak - [excerpt from first piece]

The first Women From Space Festival saw four excellent concerts take place over the course of the International Women's Day weekend. Organized by Bea Labikova and Kayla Milmine, the festival felt like a really savvy gathering, always more than the sum of its parts and showcasing the depth of talent in the city's various creative music streams in a women-centred environment.

This first night saw a couple of the festival's quietest sets, including this one, which takes the prize as quietest of all — no surprise for anything entering the subtle sound-world of percussionist Tomasz Krakowiak. Joined by Brian Abbott on microtonal guitar and banjo, as always these small gestures are sometimes lost under my recorder's noise floor, but you can hopefully get a sense of something from this field recording.

[Brian Abbott will be bringing his microtonal guitar back to Wenona Lodge for the next instalment of Jazz and Otherwise Improvised Musics on Tuesday, May 14th.]

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Recording: Meeks/Liu/Krakowiak

Artist: D. Alex Meeks/Germaine Liu/Tomasz Krakowiak

Songs: [three excerpts]

Recorded at Array Space (Audiopollination 58), January 21, 2018.

D. Alex Meeks/Germaine Liu/Tomasz Krakowiak - [excerpt 1 from first piece]

D. Alex Meeks/Germaine Liu/Tomasz Krakowiak - [excerpt 2 from first piece]

D. Alex Meeks/Germaine Liu/Tomasz Krakowiak - [excerpt from second piece]

The night finished with this spectacular set, in part a celebration of the recent return of drummer D. Alex Meeks to the city's creative music circles. A percussion trio that was as much about tiny gestures as forceful thwacks, this worked up from a quiet rustling to something else entirely, with Tomasz Krakowiak hunched over his single large snare, Germaine Liu bowing and tapping at her vibes and D. Alex Meeks working out some algorithms behind a full kit. What a treat it is to hear these three musicians in action!

Michael Lynn captured this whole night in black and white, so you can view the full set over on youtube:

[Audiopollination returns with the second Del Stephen-curated "Spirit of the Inner Child" show on Friday, February 23rd with spontaneous recombinative sets from Allison Cameron, Bea Labikova, Del Stephen, Jeff Sinibaldi, Julian, Mira Martin-Gray, Simone Baron and Tomasz Krakowiak. The next "self-curated" Audiopollination will be on Saturday, March 10th.]

Friday, September 22, 2017

Recording: A Quiet Little Village

Artist: A Quiet Little Village

Song: [an improvised suite, in three movements]

Recorded at The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge), August 27, 2017.

A Quiet Little Village - [an improvised suite, 1st movement]

A Quiet Little Village - [an improvised suite, 2nd movement]

A Quiet Little Village - [an improvised suite, 3rd movement]

Simply excellent work here from this new trio, consisting of saxophonists Kayla Milmine and Paul Newman with percussionist Tomasz Krakowiak. Frequent playing together on compositions and improvisations in several contexts, Milmine and Newman were in mind-meld territory from the get-go, while Krakowiak contributed his characteristic super-quiet percussive presence. Like a golf ball washer for the soul, this was cleansing stuff.

Saturday, May 20, 2017

Recording: Krakowiak/Sorbara/Zurawinski

Artist: Tomasz Krakowiak/Joe Sorbara/Mark Zurawinski

Songs: Shapes + The Cymbal Speaks [composer: Germaine Liu]

Recorded at The Gardiner Museum (Salon 21: CeramiX), April 21, 2017.

Tomasz Krakowiak/Joe Sorbara/Mark Zurawinski - Shapes

Joe Sorbara - The Cymbal Speaks

This night, presented as part of Soundstreams' Salon 21 program involved collaboration and site-specific space usage in wonderfully-intriguing ways. Not only a collaboration between Germaine Liu (as composer) and three noteworthy local percussionists exploring her pieces, but the night was also a collaboration between Liu and ceramicist Chiho Tokita, whose purpose-built pottery served as instruments and a key part of Liu's creative process. The performance flowed between the three floors of the Gardiner Museum, beginning in the lobby with the cup-scraping "Shapes", and moving into the gallery for a solo performance (by Krakowiak) of the beautiful rings-traced-on-cymbal of "The Tree". The musicians led the crowd to the second floor with "Take Flight", an exercise in keeping a piece of tissue paper aloft by hand-generated breeze alone. (This would be reprised at night's end in a participatory segment after the Q & A).

On the second floor the pair explored "Handle Music", with Tokita's abstracted vases (sometimes containing their own ceramic flower stems) tapped and scratched by ceramic picks. A clapping game again led the crowd up the stairway where Joe Sorbara showed the variety of sounds to be found in a single cymbal (a very Liu-esque gesture of microscopic investigation) before the trio closed with the beautiful "Supper Time Us #2", appearing almost as marionettists, small ceramic picks dangling by wires from their fingers and striking a table full of vases — the symphony of plinking slowing down as Liu slowly moved the pieces away one by one.

[Thin Edge New Music Collective will be debuting more new music by Germaine Liu as part of their "Keys, Wind and Strings Festival", next Thursday (May 25th) at Array Space.]

Sunday, March 26, 2017

Recording: Rhinoceros Saxophone Quartet

Artist: Rhinoceros Saxophone Quartet

Songs: Four Car Pile-up [excerpt] [composer: Brian Abbott] + Tragedy in five acts [edited excerpt] [composer: Tomasz Krakowiak]

Recorded at The Tranzac's Southern Cross Lounge (Somewhere There Creative Music Festival – Show 4), February 25, 2017.

Rhinoceros Saxophone Quartet - Four Car Pile-up [excerpt]

Rhinoceros Saxophone Quartet - Tragedy in five acts [edited excerpt]

This quartet (composed of Kayla Milmine, Bea Labikova, Paul Newman, and Jay Hay) offered a rare glimpse into the creative process at the festival's second afternoon show, holding an open rehearsal before playing a concert. That gave the public a chance to see behind-the-scenes details of how the musical sausages are made, including interaction with composers and the musicians digging their teeth into the details of timbres and transitions within a piece.

The quartet was showcasing some variant approaches, alternating between selections with flurries of notes and slower, more textured works. Resident composer Brian Abbott's selection hewed more to the former, while Krakowiak's piece (one of two premieres on this day coming from an open call for new works) worked more as a lovely soundfields. That piece also pushed things beyond the traditional score, working as much as a piece of spacialized choreography, with the composer "conducting" the ensemble (who were walking in a circle around the audience) with a series of traffic-sign-like-cues directing them to change direction, hold notes, or switch instruments. That was a very wonderful sound to be surrounded by — hopefully the recording gives some sense of that.

Sunday, April 24, 2016

Recording: EAR-CAM

Artist: EAR-CAM

Songs: [two excerpts]

Recorded at The Tranzac (Tiki Room), April 16, 2016.

EAR-CAM - [first set, excerpt 1]

EAR-CAM - [first set, excerpt 2]

Another in an intermittent series of reunions from this longstanding improvising force saw the group's numbers reduced with vocal soundmaker Nobuo Kubota absent. He did, however, make some virtual appearances via Glen Hall's cataRT sound manipulations, which also included some cut up Burroughs vocals. Embroidered by Tomasz Krakowiak's quietly-minimalist percussion, that left Hall and John Oswald's reed work to compete with Christine Duncan's vocal adventures. In the second set there was increased competition for the audience's eyeballs when the freeform music was accompanied by some equally abstract tap dancing.

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Recording: Tomasz Krakowiak & Michelangelo Iaffaldano

Artist: Tomasz Krakowiak & Michelangelo Iaffaldano

Song: [excerpt from second piece]

Recorded at The Tranzac – Main Hall ("Somewhere There Creative Music Festival" – Show 4), February 22, 2015.

Tomasz Krakowiak & Michelangelo Iaffaldano - [excerpt from second piece]

One of the most intriguing sets of the entire festival was a late addition, not even appearing in the program. Tomasz Krakowiak is perhaps the most subtle percussionist in the city, relying on quiet rustlings and rubbings on his drumhead with seeming disconcern for his instrument's rhythmic possibilities, while Michelangelo Iaffaldano is a musical polymath, seemingly able to MacGyver sounds from any instrument or object. He started this set on violin (played resting on his knee) for an exceptional bit of minimalist interaction with Krakowiak; things got louder on the second, longer piece, where Iaffaldano switched to guitar, which he played by bowing a metal rack that was held against the strings. Incredible stuff.

Friday, January 30, 2015

Recording: Tomasz Krawowiak & Holger Schoorl

Artist: Tomasz Krawowiak & Holger Schoorl

Song: [excerpt from an improvisation]

Recorded at Ratio, January 22, 2015.

Tomasz Krawowiak & Holger Schoorl - [excerpt from an improvisation]

In the lead-up to this duo set with percussionist Tomasz Krawowiak, Holger Schoorl wrote a twitter essay that'd probably capture the mood of the thing better than I could, so let's just quote his words: "It should be said to those who haven't hear[d] before him or myself or him and myself together that things can be pretty quiet. [...] In fact Tomasz hangs out perhaps too often in those practically inaudible areas of with fingertip drum rubbing. [...] It is true I play the guitar quietly. I was for some time and perhaps still am fond of Morton Feldman's music (and some other things) [...] Which lead me to enjoy listening to and making sounds that are hard to hear. This is actually quite nice: That listening to music would be a little harder, would require a little more cooperation from the audience, that one would be asked to do [...] More than merely show up. [...] That the music projects itself only so far into the space. [...] Forcing listeners to listen a little harder to make up for the lack of volume. An increased level of attention is therefore required."

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Recording: EAR-CAM

Artist: EAR-CAM

Song: [excerpt from first set]

Recorded at The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge), March 28, 2014.

EAR-CAM - [excerpt from first set]

Full review to follow. Regrouping after a ten-year hiatus, I was familiar with the individual members of this group, but not sure of what to expect from them as an ensemble. Composed of Christine Duncan and Nobuo Kubota (voices), John Oswald (alto sax), Tomasz Krakowiak (percussion) and Glen Hall (laptop, electronics, bass clarinet), this is by design a full-on free-form experience, with electronic textures giving a framework for the chatter of voices and saxophone to bubble (or babble?) along.

I don't know how long this ensemble is sticking together for this time around, but I see that they will be performing again on Thursday (April 17th) at Musideum.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Recording: Rampersaud Shaw Neal Martin Krakowiak

Artist: Rampersaud Shaw Neal Martin Krakowiak

Song: [excerpt from an improvisation]

Recorded at 918 Bathurst, April 9, 2011.

Rampersaud Shaw Neal Martin Krakowiak - [excerpt from an improvisation]

My notes for this set can be found here.

Gig: Barnyard Records Triple CD Launch

Barnyard Records Triple CD Launch (feat. Rampersaud Shaw Neal Martin Krakowiak / Evan Parker/Wes Neal/Joe Sorbara / AIMToronto Orchestra)

918 Bathurst. Saturday, April 9, 2011.

I was glad to get a chance to return to the lovely space at 918 Bathurst St. And with an earlier start, the large hall felt brighter and airier with the day's last sunlight coming through the windows on the north wall. The event was a celebration of the release of three new albums from Barnyard Records, the adventurous local label dedicated to boundary-pushing improvised musics. As I'd learned in the past, they know how to create an occasion1 and there was a positive vibe in the air as an older/Annex-y crowd started filling up the rows of chairs.

Radio host/out music champion Ron Gaskin MC'ed the night, leading off with a round of applause for Jean Martin, who was not only playing in the night's first set, but had a hand in the production of all three albums being celebra ted on the evening. In line with those dual roles, the opening quintet (billed just as the list of names Rampersaud Shaw Neal Martin Krakowiak) had, in fact, started as a recording project, producing the intriguing Halcyon Science130410 album. As captured by Martin on the disc, the music registers as much as electroacoustic environment as "jazz", making excellent use of the space between the sounds.

Live, that didn't register quite as much. In fact, the set started off with a full-on attack of sound, with darting lines from Evan Shaw (alto saxophone) and Nicole Rampersaud (trumpet) while Tomasz Krakowiak added percussive touches with with a single large drumhead and a host of other implements (including, it appeared, an orange).

The first section gave the feeling of tension and conversations stuck at cross-purposes before finding more unity of purpose after a quiet interlude with a nice duet between Wes Neal's double bass and Krakowiak's rubbed cymbal, with droney horns behind.

A second piece worked on similar principles, and again, I found the part where they were cooking less interesting than the quieter, spacious part — perhaps because this was an environment where the less-cramped passages sounded really great. An interesting set, but not quiet as impactful as they managed on the album, which I wholeheartedly recommend you pick up.

Listen to an excerpt from this set here.

As Barnyard has done in the past, the night's special guest was an esteemed Parker — although this time out, it was British saxophonist Evan Parker. I didn't know his work coming into this show, though looking over some of the musicians he's worked with (a rather lengthy list including such luminaries as Peter Brötzmann, Anthony Braxton, Cecil Taylor and John Zorn) gave the impression that this might be a noisy, free-squawking avant sort of set. But seeing him take the stage, the first term that came to mind would be "august". In a black shirt and slacks, slightly stout and a grey beard, Parker had a calm but forceful presence.

He was here to celebrate the release of At Somewhere There, a trio album credited to Evan Parker / Wes Neal / Joe Sorbara recorded on Parker's last visit to the city. Although there was no doubt that Parker was the star attraction, in his introduction Ron Gaskin reminded the crowd that this was a meeting of equals, and indeed, Neal (bass) and Sorbara (drums) weren't just providing rhythms for Parker to solo over — there was a lot of give and take here.

As the set began, Neal provided a rolling bass line to propel things along, but after that sat back for an interlude with Parker improvising to Sorbara's bowed cymbals. Meanwhile, a baby in the crowd was occasionally improvising along, and that fit in, too. Contrary to what I might have guessed, Parker's playing was soulful and meaty. Contained and linear, too — not making radical leaps, but moving as fast as a fascinating conversation.

The first piece, which self-organized into about three crests, went about twenty-two minutes. The second led off with Neal's lyrical bowing swooping against Parker's lines, while Sorbara added bells and shakers before building up into a more chunky rhythm. At the piece's fulcrum, Neal and Sorbara dropped out, and Parker played unaccompanied for about a minute and I felt a big welling-up of joy. This is why one goes to shows — this is why music is important. That was followed by Sorbara and Neal in a duet to respond, as Parker closed his eyes, and nodded his head back and forth a bit, grooving to it before coming back in.

I didn't know Parker at all coming in. I basically came to this show based on Barnyard's track record, but this was an excellent, emotionally-satisfying set, and made me truly glad I had come out for this.

Listen to an excerpt from this set here.

There was an unusual sort of shuffle between sets, when members of the audience started grabbing their chairs and heading up to the stage clutching stands and instruments. Eventually, they would settle into the form of the AIMToronto Orchestra, so thick on stage that I couldn't quite get an exact count — fourteen or fifteen deep, I think. Originally formed from the ranks of the local improvised music community in 2007 to perform a set with Anthony Braxton, the band has continued on to serve as a canvas for some of the more large-scale compositions of its members.

Conducted by Kyle Brenders, the band was playing music in the same vein as their Year of the Boar album. Lush and prickly in equal measures, the first piece progressed with a percussive lurch and the distinctive wordless vocals of Christine Duncan (founder of the Element Choir). The title, given at the end, was "Love", and that fit the befuddled, slightly daffy momentum of the piece.

That shorter aperitif was followed by the more expansive "Gander", another new Brenders composition. It was written for this occasion to be played with Evan Parker, who had heard it for the first time in the afternoon's dress rehearsal and come up with a part, the rest of the group adjusting to his additions — this is, after all, an improvising orchestra. "Gander" had a noir-ish kind of drift and stretched out with an elegant restraint, like fog settling in on a sleeping city where unsavoury incidents unfolded in the backrooms.

That vibe was rather different than the next piece (by guitarist Ken Aldcroft), which began with a squall. Not quite an uncontrolled clamour, but certainly with more things going in more directions all at once before coming into focus with Brenders taking up his sax to play along as well.

The set ended with Justin Haynes' "Circles Over Labrador". Also written for this occasion, Evan Parker again joined the ensemble, and this gave Parker a chance for his most "out" playing of the night in a piece that once again ranged from mildly atonal to lush before pausing for a quiet banjo/group harmonica interlude before ending in pleasant squeal-our.

Listen to an excerpt from this set here.

All in all, an excellent night. Praise is due to Barnyard Records for providing an outlet for adventurous and uplifting music like this. This sort of music — and most of these musicians — can be found playing pretty often at Somewhere There or The Tranzac, constantly working out new ideas, and it's always worthwhile to go see them putting things together in those informal settings. But it's also nice to have bigger shows like this to serve as a summation and a bold statement to go with the recorded artifacts that will linger with us afterward.


1 Speaking of which, the fantastic set by the Element Choir and William Parker that I had seen at the last of these Barnyard flings I'd been to has now been issued by the label, appropriately titled At Christ Church Deer Park.