AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

Alibi.(Review)

Computer Music Journal

| March 22, 2001 | Rubin, Anna | COPYRIGHT 2001 MIT Press Journals. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Compact disc, 1998, empreintes DIGITALes IMED 9842; available from DIFFUSION i MEDIA, 4850 avenue de Lorimier, Montreal, Quebec H2H 2B5, Canada; telephone (514)526-4096; fax (514) 526-4487; electronic mail info@electrocd.com; World Wide Web www.electrocd.com/

The recent Jacques Tremblay compact disc, Alibi, includes six pieces dating from 1990-1995. Mr. Tremblay is a young composer who explains in the program notes that he began as a guitarist and encountered electroacoustic music as a "revelation." Further, he grounds his work in the use of concrete sound, both vocal and ambient, and favors a rich, dark sound palette. The "typical" sonic makeup of the first three pieces, in particular, are so varied and rich, yet oddly similar to each other, that listeners may prefer to listen to the CD in the following order: tracks 1, 4, 2, 6, 3, 5.

The first work, Heresie ou les basreliefs du dogme (1990), is a relatively long 21-min piece, which includes extended recordings of an American fundamentalist Christian preacher along with snippets of Frank Sinatra and Muslim and Gregorian chant. The extended "rant" of the preacher is countered with French dialogue which I could not follow, but which another reviewer characterized as "papal posturing." Most of the quoted speech is enmeshed in a rich stew of repetitive, mechanical sounds, and long stretches of bell-like overtones emphasizing upper partials over repetitions of tonic and dominant. Occasional stretches of Tibetan horns and Gregorian chant (sung by a woman, yet another heresy!) gradually distort and slither away. The religious spirit is perhaps viewed here through the lens of those dark, Spanish baroque paintings, all blood, fire, and damnation, although religion itself is viewed as the evil. The piece inscribes a long 18min arc, pauses, and then has a 3-min coda of similar material. I am not altogether convinced by this large-scale form, but certainly Mr. Tremblay has a feel for climactic intensity and gnarly sounds which get under your skin.

Oaristys (1991) is described as following "the stages of a hypothetical night of love," and is divided into six movements: Call of Desire, Approach, Embraces and Sensuous Delight, Animal Urges, Scattering, and Inflection. This work is highly sensual, but ominous as well. But then, great passion is often companion to a sense of danger, of vulnerability before the beloved other, even as union occurs. Mr. Tremblay draws from both these ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Chinese Nuo and Japanese Noh: Nuo's role in the origination and formation of...
Magazine article from: Comparative Drama Tian, Min September 22, 2003 700+ words
...West. While a fair amount of research on the origins of Japanese Noh drama has been done in the West, no historical investigation...also attempts to trace the origination and development of Japanese Noh drama (2) from the Chinese Nuo rite and other sources...
TROUBLED SOULS FROM JAPANESE NOH PLAYS OF THE FOURTH GROUP.(Review)
Magazine article from: Asian Theatre Journal RATH, ERIC C. September 22, 2000 700+ words
TROUBLED SOULS FROM JAPANESE NOH PLAYS OF THE FOURTH GROUP. Translated by Chifumi Shimazaki. Ithaca: Cornell East Asia Program, 1998. xvi + 342 pp. Cloth...
Trance and Transformation of the Actor: Japanese Noh and Balinese Masked...
Magazine article from: Asian Theatre Journal Foley, Kathy September 22, 2005 700+ words
TRANCE AND TRANSFORMATION OF THE ACTOR: JAPANESE NOH AND BALINESE MASKED DANCE-DRAMA. By Margaret Coldiron. Studies in Theatre Arts 20. Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 2004...
"Between Two Worlds": the Dybbuk and the Japanese Noh and Kabuki ghost plays.
Magazine article from: Comparative Drama Serper, Zvika September 22, 2001 700+ words
...dramatic genre. In spite of these differences, however, a comparison between various elements in The Dybbuk with those in Japanese Noh and Kabuki (traditional popular theater) ghost plays can provide a better comprehension of the various aspects of both...
Japanese Noh and Kyogen plays: staging dichotomy.
Magazine article from: Comparative Drama Serper, Zvika September 22, 2005 700+ words
The Noh and Kyogen forms of Japanese theater were perfected during the Muromachi period (1336-1568) and (combined as Nogaku) they comprise the Japanese traditional aristocratic theater still being performed today. Although they evolved alongside each other, sharing various theatrical elements and
Figures of Desire: Wordplay, Spirit Possession, Fantasy, Madness, and Mourning...
Magazine article from: Asian Theatre Journal Scholz-Cionca, Stanca March 22, 2004 700+ words
By Etsuko Terasaki. Michigan Monograph Series in Japanese Studies, No. 38. Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies, The University of Michigan, 2002. xvii + 329 pp. $60 As the stream of recent publications demonstrates, Western scholars' interest in Japan's old art of no seems unbroken. This
Image/music/Shakespeare.(Editorial)
Magazine article from: Literature-Film Quarterly Walker, Elsie M. April 1, 2008 700+ words
...of creation that are influences on Grigori Kozintsev's Russian adaptation, Karol Lier: architecture by Le Corbusier, Japanese Noh theatre, and Gordon Craig's Lear sketches. Catania also rightly emphasizes the interpretive importance of Dimitri Shostakovich...
TUCK, PAD, COLOR, WHITEN: HOW TO CHANGE YOUR LOOK WITHOUT SURGERY FAKING...
Newspaper article from: Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Seattle, WA) Phinney, Susan January 16, 2003 700+ words
...Ottenberg says. In other cultures it can mean other things. Stark white makeup is used to mask the features of an actor in Japanese Noh theater and on geishas to emphasize their doll-like qualities. What does our use of makeup, grooming techniques and body...
For more facts and information, see all results
©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA