Splitting his time between Portugal and NY, tuba and euphonium player Ben Stapp's association with guitarist Joe Morris and cornetist Stephen Haynes started in 2011, including participating in their Improvisations series, leading to this trio performing Stapp's compositions with musical forms based on the narrative structure of his novel "Mind Creature Sound Dasein".
Format: CD Condition: New Released: 2019 Country: Poland Packaging: Cardboard Gatefold Recorded at Firehouse 12 Studios, in New Haven, Connecticut, on November 25th, 2017.
Personnel:
Ben Stapp-acoustic tuba and euphonium, acoustic items
"When it comes to abstract art, it can be a challenge to escape figurative norms, storytelling, and programmatic signposts. After all, the purity of material, whether visual, sonic, or textual, is a heavy thing to take on its own. Navigating abstraction, or "going to the center" as the late trumpeter Bill Dixon said, requires a massive amount of commitment. But sometimes a guide into these realms is necessary, and tubaist Ben Stapp is not afraid to give equal heft to narrative association and complex free interplay. An international presence since 2007, Stapp's work thus far has culminated in a dystopian psychological opera, Myrrha's Red Book. Stapp has also written a science fiction novel, and often draws imagery from the worlds that occupy his imagination: spiritual, transcendent, yet regularly beset by unnerving and unseating forces.
In this improvised setting, thematics were provided to guitarist Joe Morris and cornetist Stephen Haynes, and the musicians let fly with inspiration. Stapp first began working with Morris and Haynes in 2011 and developed a formidable language of expanded techniques and detailed, rugged interplay. Utilizing a range of mutes, objects, circular breathing, and tonguing approaches, Stapp surges and belches and chortles with the best of 'em, but also has a command of the rhythmic and tonal personality that quantifies his instrument. Coupled to Morris' skittering acoustic vitality (including a range of horizontal scrapes and subharmonic flecks, along with occasional pitch-dividing scumble) and Haynes' narrow screams, they present a range of colors and alien analogues fit for a journey into the center of the mind. Whether one listens with a joyous ear to the sounds' commingling or with pictorial inquisition, the results will stagger."-Clifford Allen
"Jazzarium interview with Ben Stapp by Piotr Wojdat
We are talking to one of the most interesting instrumentalists of the young generation, the tubist Ben Stapp, about a joint album with Joe Morris and Stephen Haynes, his live in Portugal and the United States and we are also trying to find out what Theta Scales is.
How did it happen that you met Joe Morris and Stephen Haynes?
Ben Stapp: Stephen invited me to play in a brass quintet - a joint project with Steve Swell - during the summer of 2011 at the University of the Streets in NYC. I was subbing for Joe Daley. Herb Robertson (who I'd done a record with in 2007 with Alipio Neto's group including Michael T.A. Thompson, Ken Filiano for Clean Feed) was in the group, also the great Mark Taylor on French Horn. I knew Steve Swell from working in his Nation of We ensemble. It was a conventional brass quintet configuration but sounded nothing remotely close. Stephen wrote about the event in his blog. Later that year, Stephen asked me to participate in the new Improvisations series - curated by Joe Morris and Stephen Haynes. The concert was in Hartford (where Haynes lives) and our quartet included violinist Yasmine Azaiez. This was my first encounter with Joe Morris. Stephen continued to bring me up to Connecticut to play in different settings and, in 2013, included me in a new quintet with Joe, William Parker and Warren Smith. We performed at The Stone and at Firehouse 12 - where we recorded the Pomegranate album (New Atlantis Records.
What was the main idea for recording "Mind Creature Sound Dasein"?
BS: There were two main ideas that inspired Mind Creature Sound Dasein (MCSD). The first was my ongoing fascination with fiction and how narratives can be abstracted to create forms in music. This I had explored when I wrote the story to my opera Myrrha's Red Book. The second idea developed in 2015, as I prepared for a solo tuba show on at Cisco Bradley's Jazz Right Now Series curated by archivist/critic Clifford Allen. I had just finished reading the fascinating space opera trilogy, Light, by Jon Harrison. I created a set of twelve movements that represented certain ideas presented in the book. For the sound world, I chose to focus primarily on extended techniques of the tuba.
This synergy of fiction and form captured my imagination! I decided to write my first sci-fi novel: Mind Creature Sound Dasein. The idea was generative: create a narrative work that would serve as a basis for the development of new musical forms and performance/recording projects. The novel is densely packed with hidden meaning - specifically around forms in music, theta harmony, and an invented religion. The concept for the recording rose from the book and the CD shares the title - Mind Creature Sound Dasein. The ten titles on the album correspond to ten levels of consciousness propagated by a nefarious cult in the book. The eleventh track, Epilogue, is a commentary on this troubling spiritual journey. The sound world and forms of each track are based on specific extended techniques of the tuba. The listener may also understand what I am doing as language development leading to a new syntax reflective of the literary source point of the novel.'