Mutations Vijay Iyer
Album info
Album-Release:
2014
HRA-Release:
25.02.2014
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
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- 1 Spellbound and Sacrosanct, Cowrie Shells and the Shimmering Sea 07:39
- 2 Vuln, Pt. 2 04:34
- 3 Mutation I Air 04:13
- 4 Mutation II Rise 02:45
- 5 Mutation III Canon 05:47
- 6 Mutation IV Chain 05:26
- 7 Mutation V Automata 06:32
- 8 Mutation VI Waves 03:00
- 9 Mutation VII Kernel 05:59
- 10 Mutation VIII Clade 01:35
- 11 Mutation IX Descent 05:17
- 12 Mutation X Time 04:00
- 13 When We're Gone 03:30
Info for Mutations
Mutations is Vijay Iyer’s first album as a leader for ECM, and a recording that will widen perceptions of the pianist-composer’s work. At its centre is “Mutations I-X”, a composition scored for string quartet, piano, and electronics. A major piece built out of cells and fragments, it veers through many atmospheres, from moment to moment propulsive, enveloping, lyrical, luminescent, and strangely beautiful. Through thematic interactivity, the interweaving of acoustic and electronic sound-textures, and some decisive improvisational interventions in notated music, Vijay Iyer has created a multi-faceted suite whose very subject is change. Iyer gives a positive value to the concept of ‘mutation’ in this music, and variously appears in it as an interpreter of notated elements, as an improviser, and as “a sort of laptop artist, mixing in noise and different sounds,” encouraging the transformative processes:
“A mutation process drives each of the suite’s ten episodes,” Iyer explains in the liner notes. “In some sections, minute variations or fluctuations in a recurring figure ultimately elicit a structural transformation; in other movements, real-time acts governed by competing directives yield an emergent, spontaneous order. These ten coexisting entities are linked either genetically or by a kind of symbiosis.”
The suite is framed by three solo statements: 'Spellbound and Sacrosanct, Cowrie Shells and the Shimmering Sea”, a solo piano reading of one of Iyer’s early compositions, and “Vuln, Part 2' and 'When We're Gone', pieces created in summer 2013. The newer compositions put the piano in counterpoint with electronically generated rhythms and textures which extend the aura of the suite. The arc of the whole album is a journey over changing terrain.
Mutations was recorded at New York’s Avatar Studio in September 2013, with Manfred Eicher as producer, and casts new light on Iyer’s creative range. In recent seasons Vijay’s personal approach to jazz and improvising has resonated with both press and the public, and multiple poll wins and awards including, most recently, a MacArthur Foundation fellowship, have raised his international profile. Yet important aspects of his work have remained undocumented on disc. Over the last ten years Iyer has written music for chamber ensembles of various formations, much of which “involves different approaches to improvisation as well as notation. I’m happy to have this chance to let it be heard alongside other work I have been doing that’s more in a jazz vein, or more connected to the jazz community.”
For Iyer working with ‘classical’ instrumentation is less a departure than a continuation. “I studied violin for 15 years and played in string quartets and orchestras. The sound of the string quartet has been in my head for as long as I can remember. Some of ‘Mutations I-X’ was written on violin, some of it on piano, some of it on the computer.” I also wanted to put a certain amount of agency in the musician’s hands to get them feeling like they could stir things at times and contribute something to the musical landscape. Basically to help them to feel like it was theirs as much as it was mine.” A key question here and in other works of Iyer’s: “How do you set people free inside the form that you’ve created?”
“Mutations I-X” was written and premiered in 2005 and has been rebuilt and effectively revised with each subsequent performance, by “working with the same notated elements but pushing the real time element more and more.” At Avatar the musicians “had a kind of a breakthrough, particularly apparent in ‘Movement VII’, which itself is a kind of sculpted, open improvisation. The string players are given a set of instructions and what I call a gesture palette, a palette of notated material that they can draw from spontaneously. They can dip into and grab a fragment of it and interpret it. So, what I decided to do in these final moments when I was with them in the studio was to do a take where – instead of using that one page of notation – I used the entire piece as a sort of palette. All the material that they had been playing constantly for that period was now in their heads and in their bodies and they could express it in different ways, incorporate it into the active listening, and build something with it. It was great to hear and experience that, because it became something new that I didn’t even foresee.”
Vijay Iyer, piano, electronics
Miranda Cuckson, violin
Michi Wiancko, violin
Kyle Armbrust, viola
Kivie Cahn-Lipman, violoncello
Recorded September 2013 Avatar Studios, New York
Engineered by James A. Farber
Produced by Manfred Eicher
No biography found.
Booklet for Mutations