SAMUEL BLASER
A MIRROR TO MACHAUT

BM007DL
October 13, 2013 (reissue in 2020)

 

SAMUEL BLASER - trombone
JOACHIM BADENHORST - reeds
RUSS LOSSING - keys
DREW GRESS - double bass
GERRY HEMINGWAY - drums

All compositions and arrangements by Samuel Blaser
Artistically produced by Benoît Delbecq

Recorded by Jean-Paul Gonnod at Studio de Meudon, France,
February 19-20, 2013. Mixed by Etienne Bultingaire and Benoît Delbecq at PlushSpace, Paris, April 1-2, 2013. Mastered by Djengo Hartlap at Artlab.


Steinway technician: Bernard Faulon
Samuel Blaser is a XO Brass artist

graphic design and cover art: Sophie MORISSON TANSINI
Picture: Alex Troesch

Produced by Samuel Blaser
℗ & © 2020 Blaser Music

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Mr. Blaser has done a marvelous job of organizing a unique ensemble here
— Downtown Music Gallery
 
 
And I can only encourage you all to listen to it.
— Freejazz blog, Stef

notes for Samuel Blaser Consort In Motion – Mirror to Machaut

In early 2011, Kind of Blue Records released the very first album of Consort in Motion. It featured pianist Russ Lossing, bassist Thomas Morgan and the late Paul Motian on drums. The concept of this first album was to find a way to meld Baroque music with jazz improvisation and we performed pieces inspired by compositions written by Claudio Monteverdi, Biaggio Marini and Girolamo Frescobaldi.

For this second opus, recorded and produced by Benoit Delbecq this time for Songlines Recordings, I decided to work on a similar concept and write music inspired by compositions written by Guillaume de Machaut (c.1300-1377) and Guillaume Dufay (1397?-1474), two major French composers of the medieval era. Like for the first record, my focus was on selecting pieces with melodies, harmonies and rhythms that could be easily modified. A number of the titles here are inspired melodically or rhythmically; therefore it is sometimes almost impossible to recognize the original material. As for the rest of the works, I sought to pay closer fidelity to the original scores.

The line up for this record includes the Belgian reeds player Joachim Badenhorst, pianist Russ Lossing, bassist Drew Gress and drummer Gerry Hemingway replacing Paul Motian. We had the chance to collaborate with producer, pianist and composer Benoit Delbecq who helped me finding my way through the music I was composing for the album.

Included on Mirror to Machaut is a piece called “Introit” inspired from the first movement of the famous Mass of Notre Dame written by Guillaume de Machaut. To re-create the atmosphere of the Gregorian chant while keeping the vibe of a modal jazz tune, I created a bass ostinato and a theme based only on part of the original melody.

I used the same approach with “Hymn” and “Stand Up” both written by Guillaume Dufay and “Liement” and “Cute” written by Guillaume de Machaut. “Hymn” is a beautiful Gregorian melody that I completely re-harmonized. For the improvisation part at the end of the theme, I composed a little isorhythmic repetitive vamp that includes hemioles. Therefore, the rhythmical material gives us the opportunity to play with two different speeds. Hymns were at medieval time text driven, originally written in Hebrew and developed in Ambrosian and Gregorian chant. They were also used to combat heresy and promote sound doctrine. Just portions of “Liement me Deport” were employed and I created with that part a variety of Indian tihai to obtain rhythmical tensions and resolutions, a concept that was also used during medieval times. “Cute” inspired by a ballad written by Guillaume de Machaut has been adapted to a more conventional jazz ballad.

“Complaintes”, “Dame”, “De Fortune” written by Guillaume de Machaut are more conventionally used and haven’t been much modified or adapted to my writing. Those three tunes sound probably different from what you might have heard. But anyway current versions of medieval music are only based on imaginary sounds, so why not interpreting this material in a very personal way?  

“Cantus Planus” is a solo piano piece that I wrote for Russ Lossing. The composition is based on the structure of a plainchant written by Guillaume Dufay. I worked here with a limited amount of compositional material: the rhythm is the same throughout the totality of the piece but used in three different degrees of transformation and speed. Therefore with that idea in mind, I was able to create an acceleration and a deceleration to go back to the initial tempo.

The original ostinato of “Saltarello”, another piece from the pen of Machaut has been completely deconstructed and re-orchestrated within the rhythm section while keeping the same harmony. The melody, largely intact but rhythmically modified, has been transposed in order to create a polytonality.

Thanks to the support of Tony Reif at Songlines Recordings, I was able to record a second album with Consort in Motion. The concept of melding early music with jazz improvisation has always been a center of interest and I am thankful Tony gave me the opportunity to deepen my research in that domain. I hope you will enjoy this record as much as I enjoyed creating and composing it.

Samuel Blaser

Paris / February 2013

Multiple Modernities

Reconstructing the music of the medieval era has been a decades-long project, and as Samuel alludes in his discussion, there is much that goes into the sound beyond written notes. In my opinion, over the years, researchers and performers have gotten closer to how medieval music sounded at the time, based on an iterative process of making an interpretation, comparing it to more sources, revising, etc. This process has taken us past “the notes” into the worlds of tuning & timbre & articulation, and even to the setting. While the many fine practitioners in this field can reconstruct much of the sound with a degree of confidence, what we cannot reconstruct is the other side of the equation transforming sound into music: the listener.

Machaut and Dufay were writing modern music. It might not conform to our own sense of modernity,[1] but it was innovative for its time, and something listeners had not heard before.[2] It was new. So indeed, why not interpret this music in a personal way? A museum-style performance cannot accomplish that vitality, making it modern, creating a new sense of living authenticity. Here we have an interpretation concerned less with the medieval sound than with the modern listener, and somewhere in our maze of mirrors & reflections is the music – it's not sound alone, and it's certainly not writing alone.

The medieval era lasted for a long time, at least four centuries from which we have substantial written music surviving in Europe,[3] longer still in relative silence. There's a tendency, as we look back, to equate the entire era, but of course it included many different developments, many times and places, and in fact Machaut & Dufay were writing about 80 years apart.[4] They were not of the same generation, and they were not living in the same world.

Machaut began his career as personal secretary to John of Luxembourg, followed him to battles, and eventually served two kings of France. Although this recording uses material associated with one of his most public pieces, one of the few with a specific Church connection, an Introït chant to his Mass,[5] much of his surviving writing and music are very personal. Machaut lived in a period when the population of Europe was declining[6] because of disease and disasters, both human & environmental. In this setting, he was able to achieve a synthesis of what had been the academic (or “scholastic”) Ars Nova style with the narrative lyric of the troubadours, mostly around the subjects of love & fate.[7] What had once seemed to be stiff technique, the isorhythm for instance, took on a natural suppleness with Machaut, a success that made him by far the best-known composer of his era.[8]

Although also born in the territory of modern France, about 150 km from Machaut, Dufay first comes to major prominence working at the Vatican. He was one of the principal composers charged with modernizing the Papal repertory after the return to Rome from Avignon,[9] and although he also wrote a substantial number of love songs, Dufay wrote far more liturgical music than did Machaut (two of the three pieces represented on this album). Subsequently, Dufay became a lawyer, a doctor of canon law, and one of the most influential jurists in Europe.[10] Musically, his era saw the creation of a more compact harmonic style, featuring what we would now think of as major & minor chords,[11] inspired by influences from Britain. Dufay was one of the innovators of this style, and wrote a variety of public pieces to commemorate the significant events of his day, as well as more personal music.

Samuel has employed this material more or less loosely on the different tracks, as he describes, and he and his colleagues perform with wonderful technique & passion. For someone like myself, wrapped up in medieval music for so long, the contrast of a rather “straight” entrance of the iconic De Fortune with the more contemporary styles of the extended tracks makes for an exhilarating moment, but it's the transformation of this material into new forms – beginning right off with the series of solos in Hymn, but especially as the album moves on to Linea and Introït – that makes A Mirror to Machaut such a creative statement. Historical art needs this kind of contemporary dialog in order to have vitality, and Samuel's treatments have the harmonic & rhythmic sophistication, plus such a richness of sonority, to foster a conversation among these multiple modernities.

Todd M. McComb
Silicon Valley / May 2013

[1] My title "Multiple Modernities" is taken from Lawrence Grossberg's big question in his recent book, Cultural Studies in the Future Tense (2010).

[2] Nor had they heard the subsequent events of music history. “Listeners” here includes performers, who usually need to listen well, as they do on this album.

[3] Where one places the close of the medieval era varies widely, and is often conceived differently in different arts. I habitually place the beginning of the Renaissance (and so the close of the medieval) with the start of music publishing by Petrucci in the first years of the 1500s. It's typical of USA music history courses, however, to consider Dufay's generation to be the beginning of the musical Renaissance.

[4] Much of Dufay's music was written early in his life, in the 1420/30s, whereas Machaut wrote many of his
best songs in the 1340s or 50s (it's difficult to date precisely), so although these composers were born about a century apart, their music is a little bit closer in time. There were intervening generations who also wrote memorable music, some of it called Ars Subtilior.

[5] Machaut's polyphonic setting of the Mass Ordinary, beginning with the Kyrie, was arguably the first integrated cycle. The context for such a Mass Ordinary would have included an Introït chant, but Machaut did not write one. The present material is taken from the Gregorian repertory, as it would have been at the time.

[6] This was not an unprecedented situation, but was a very atypical one, particularly from our current perspective of exponential growth.

[7] The historian Barbara Tuchman is known as a fine storyteller, and her influential book A Distant Mirror (1978) paints a picture of a 14th century so damaged by catastrophe, that people in Europe adopted an emotional distance to their lives. To the extent that this is true, Machaut illustrates some of the opposite pole, as his writing continued to be highly personal & emotional, including during his own extended illness.

[8] No European composer dominates the subsequent conceptions of his era as does Machaut. Beethoven would be the closest comparison, also because he transfigured the emotional content of his time.

[9] The return came originally in 1377, but the situation wasn't solidified until the Council of Constance (1414-18).

[10] This was a Europe and a Catholic Church not yet eviscerated by the Counter-Reformation or the stunning subjugation and genocide of the American population, a sequence that changed the way people thought about justice. There had been previous injustices, of course, events during the Council of Constance prominently among them, but the turn to instrumentalism and genocide in the sixteenth century was a major break.

[11] Thirds were considered dissonant in Machaut's day, and still technically were in Dufay's, even as they came to dominate the texture. It was expected that they would resolve to fourths & fifths.

Thanks to Tony Reif, Benoît Delbecq, Drew Gress, Joachim Badenhorst, Russ Lossing, Gerry Hemingway, Roy Tarrant, Paul Motian, Thomas Morgan, Mark Helias, Izumi & John Guillemin, Jean-Marc Toussaint, Jesper Graugaard, Gunnar Pfabe, Christian Krebs, Cees Van de Ven, Robert Sadin, Wolf-P. "Assi" Glöde, Wolfgang Barth, Raimund Knösche, Jean-Claude Rochat, Philippe Dubath, Stéphane Portet, Studio de Meudon, Jean-Paul Gonnod, Studio Plush, Mathieu Mastin, John Fedchock, François Houle, Michael Bates, Jacques Henry, Jacques Ditisheim, Julia and my family for their support!

This album is dedicated to Paul Motian.

Blaser shows that a promising career is moving in the right direction
— Kevin Le Gendre

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