Hubert S. HOWE (b. 1942)
Clusters (2010) [8:33]
Inharmonic Fantasy no. 2 (2007) [6:32]
Timbre Study no. 7 (2008) [10:25]
Pi (2011) [3:20]
Macro
Structure 2 (2006) [7:06]
19-tone Clusters (2010) [9:33]
Groans
(2007) [8:50]
RAVELLO RR7817 [53:43]
Hubert Howe. was born in Portland, Oregon and brought up in California. Among
his teachers at Princeton was Milton Babbitt. He researched computer music and
soon found himself appointed Professor of Music and Director of the Electronic
Music studios at Queens College of the City University, New York. He taught
at Juilliard (1974-1994). He also held senior academic posts at the University
of Alabama and the Aaron Copland School of Music at Queens College. He directed
the first non-European-based ISCM World Music Days. His music has, it seems,
been recorded by Opus One and Capstone. He provides the commentary for this
disc - who better.
Clusters is an evolutionary electronic score emulating resonating quasi-bell
sounds produced through computer synthesis. It’s sensitive and quite accessible
- like a magical science-fantasy landscape. There’s the impression of
a gleaming silvery snow-scape in Inharmonic Fantasy No 2. Timbre Study no.
7 features less of the bell sounds and more slow fizzing and buzzing. Pi
was the result of the annual Pi Day celebration competition in 2011. The mission
was to write a composition on pi lasting precisely 3:14 minutes. It’s
another glittering mysteriously warbling rhapsody. Macro Structure 2 -
tingles and snarls when it is not buzzing with white noise. In 19-tone Clusters
we encounter a metallic tam-tam resonance. The sounds are high and ‘spacey’
with occasional discreet metallic harpsichord and bell sounds. This is music
for contemplation or backdrop. Groans is at one level more of same but
because it is slower still it is somehow more tender and kindly. There’s
the same buzz and tizz but occasional deeply groaning incursions [provide incident
and punctuation. The predominance, as with all the other pieces, is on high-lying
material. Howe makes good use of the spatial dimension to achieve a measure
of fairly subdued drama and variegation - even conjuring the image of a slowly
swirling galaxy. The spirit of science-fiction à la ‘Forbidden
Planet’ (Louis and Bebe Barron) floats up unbidden fairly often. Whether
this is due to the hackneyed mindset of this listener or to the music itself
hardly matters.
For those who like their electronic music and like it mysteriously evolutionary.
Rob Barnett
For those who like their electronic music and like it mysteriously evolutionary.