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Alexander Hawkins Ensemble


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  • 1 year later...
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Yes - indeed, same band, but now with violin - I just felt it needed one more voice!

Re that title - if you scroll down here, they've actually pinned some notes I wrote for the session when we were producing it...there's a Greenland connection, but I think it's fair to say you're not missing anything obvious :)

p.s. if anyone can still be tempted to have a listen - it's still available online here until Monday night - then, to paraphrase Mr Dolphy, it's 'gone in the air'...

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Excellent session, Alex. A real sense of moving through a wide range of textures and moods. Wrong to single out players but the drumming had my ear throughout (cymbals especially, maybe it was the car stereo!); and I loved the guitar playing. And that piano solo 2/3rds through was gorgeous.

Really appreciated the explanations about the music before (and after!).

Hopefully it won't be long before we hear these pieces on disc.

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Terrific music, Alex, thanks very much. Thanks, A Lark Asending, also for bring it up. I hope to have another listen before it goes bye bye.

The Crispel/Dresser/Hemingway piece was interesting also. Something else that will go on my "buy list". Sadly my music budget doesn't keep up with my wants.

Thanks again.

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Thanks everyone for the kind words!

Bev - really interesting you should single out the cymbals - as we mixed it, that was one of my first comments to the engineers - how beautifully they captured the cymbals.

NIS - I really appreciate it, thank you. I know the feeling, budget-wise: that said, I'd really recommend the entire album...:)

Allen - I would dearly love to...sadly visas to the US are phenomenally difficult to get...I think a festival gig is the only real solution, so I should get on the case...

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A bit late to the party but various things have stopped me getting this off my DAB radio and onto a CD so I can listen to the session properly rather on my bedside radio !!

Great session with immaculate playing by all. Bass clarinet is always appreciated and I like it here against the jabbing violin and piano. Certain figures and parts seem to recall bygone styles of swing. A shuffling grooves are hinted at yet never materialise. There is a forward rhythmic thrust which appears to rush each track by, as different configurations of what each instrument is tasked with doing continually seems to vary. My choice of words is poor but for those unlucky enough not to hear the session its sort of like Monk meets Bang meets Frisell meets ...AEC.

Great sound too, pity I wasn't savvy enough to record the Hi-Res broadcast on the web because the 192bit R3 DAB broadcast sounds lustrous and suggests that it would sound even better in HD or vinyl for that matter :ph34r:

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  • 5 months later...

For anyone interested, I was recently commissioned to write a 50-minute work by the BBC, as part of their 'Baroque Season'.

It's being broadcast for the first time tomorrow evening on Jazz on 3 - would love for you to check it out if time! And of course, it'll be on the iPlayer for the next week...

Anyway, although there are only 8 musicians on stage, there are a lot of 'doublers', so it really I think feels like large ensemble music...so it's something of a rare foray for me...

The band:

Peter Evans - trumpet

Percy Pursglove - trumpet/double bass

Byron Wallen - flute/euphonium

Oren Marshall - tuba

Pete McPhail - flute/alto flute/sopranino/alto/baritone saxophones

Chris Cundy - bass clarinet/contrabass clarinet

Hannah Marshall - 'cello

Mark Sanders - drums/percussion

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For anyone interested, I was recently commissioned to write a 50-minute work by the BBC, as part of their 'Baroque Season'.

It's being broadcast for the first time tomorrow evening on Jazz on 3 - would love for you to check it out if time! And of course, it'll be on the iPlayer for the next week...

Anyway, although there are only 8 musicians on stage, there are a lot of 'doublers', so it really I think feels like large ensemble music...so it's something of a rare foray for me...

The band:

Peter Evans - trumpet

Percy Pursglove - trumpet/double bass

Byron Wallen - flute/euphonium

Oren Marshall - tuba

Pete McPhail - flute/alto flute/sopranino/alto/baritone saxophones

Chris Cundy - bass clarinet/contrabass clarinet

Hannah Marshall - 'cello

Mark Sanders - drums/percussion

New compositions or arrangements of oldies. I've always wanted to hear your music in larger settings but there's no harm in leaving listeners wanting more and using their imagination. It must be more daunting working with a larger ensemble. Do you have to be familIar with each instrument ( ie do all this in your head) or do you somehow map things out using software to see if the combined sounds are what you're looking for?

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Thanks for the interest!

This is all new music...the parameter I set myself was that I wouldn't use anyone from my current working bands, in order to help try to make something distinctive from my sextet writing. I suppose it's true to say that there are a couple of structural models at various places which I've played around with with other groups - but substantively, it's all new material!

As for the instrumentation/arrangement - personally, I only use software for presentation/legibility purposes...I always work in manuscript first; usually, although not exclusively after working at the keyboard). I never use software compositionally - I suppose one small exception being that if there's a passage which I just can't play at the keyboard (e.g. too many lines/too many rhythmic layers), then I may listen to it after scoring it out on the computer...but for me, there's a risk with composing at the computer that you 'do' because you 'can'. Also, I'm sufficiently basic with my software that the built-in sounds are fairly awful, so you can't really get the sense of what instrumental blends sound like. For me, I have these in my head, with reference points being recordings I know, or scores of works I know, etc. For example, there's a passage which floors me in the latest Threadgill/Zooid, where the bass flute and trombone are in unison, and make a wonderful sound...so this was a guide for me in a passage in the last movement of this piece, where I paired alto flute/euphonium.

The other thing I'd say about software is that it's tyranically accurate, in terms of tuning and rhythm. I suppose it's obvious that living, breathing musicians inflect things, pull them around, get them slightly wrong even - but the more I hear computers, the more I realise how indispensable this is to the performance!

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