Montreal's Bozzini Quartet of Clemens Merkel (violin), Alissa Cheung (violin), Stephanie Bozzini (viola), and Isabelle Bozzini (cello) perform two Phil Niblock orchestral works exploring overtone patterns in acoustic instruments: "Disseminate" (1998) and "Baobab" (2011), which Niblock adapted for the quartet by arranging multiple tracks that are mixed into the final work.
Format: CD Condition: New Released: 2018 Country: Canada Packaging: Cardboard Gatefold Recorded at Hotel2tango, in Montreal, Canada, on May 31st to June 2ns, 2017, by Phil Niblock and Thierry Amar.
Originally written for orchestra, Phil Niblocks "Disseminate (1998)" and "Baobab (2011)" were arranged by the composer specifically for the Bozzini Quartet, or rather, for 'multiples' of the Quartet: twenty different tracks are mixed in piece - twenty different instruments, the equivalent of five string quartets. The music is essentially a work on the shifting nature of overtone patterns that arise from acoustic instruments. As composer Robert Ashley convincingly argued, these pieces inscribe themselves with in the "hardcore drone" scene of American electronic music: "Niblock (brings) the orchestra into the electric world".
For "Disseminate" and "Baobob", Niblock scored a distinct set of microtonal intervals, and the players are indicated how sharp or flat they should play. But a certain sense of range is given around each chromatic pitch, so that every boe stroke partly determines the microtones. All 20 "instruments" are then recorded to produce the piece. When mixed, the simultaneous microtonal intervals produced by the Bozzini Quartet(s) come together to create massive sound clouds of extremely rich, beating, and shifting sound. Such a complex signal needs time to unfold, and for the overtone patterns to emerge instruments almost have to display the endurance of electronic instruments, producing long, seamless, sustained tones. As a listener, it is practically impossible to grasp when or how changes in the sound texture actually occur. Our sense of time is confused, and we are drawn deeper into a mode of listening that pays attention to the textural qualities of the "hardcore drone" sound itself."-Emanuelle Majeau Bettez