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              CD: AmazonUK 
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              Sound 
              Samples & Downloads   | 
           
             Christopher CAMPBELL (b.1977) 
              Sound the All-Clear 
              Sleepless Nights [3:35]  Sunface Streams Moonface [3:40]  All-Clear 
              (1,2,3,4,5) [9:10]  Interlude 1 [1:50]  North Wind [4:46]  Diamond 
              Marimba [1:39]  Imago [10:54]  Interlude 2 [1:10]  Shining Furrows 
              [3:53]  Ritual Waking, Ritual Sleepwalking [10:39]  Home [3:37]  
              Capping Verse [1:33] 
                
              Performers: Christopher Campbell, Michelle Kinney, Jacqueline Ultan, 
              Shannon Wettstein, Todd Hammes, Susie Ibarra, Philip Blackburn, 
              Phyllis Zumach, Serena Mira Asta, Susanne E Smith, Greg Joly, Mary 
              Ellen Erlandson, Juliann Johnson, Cheryl Hodges-Savola, Benta LeMunyon, 
              Phyllis Lindberg, Lora Barstad, Eric Barstad, Flute Force, Meredith 
              Samuelson, Sara Mergens, Laurie R Johnson, Penny Bartz, Don Hogquist, 
              Mark Hirschboek, Carl Samuelson, Brian Towne, Bert Bast, Jameson 
              Jon Baxter, Larry Wilson, Ralph Johnson. 
              rec. No information given. DDD 
                
              INNOVA 750 [56:16] 
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                In post-modern parlance Christopher Campbell is a 'sound 
                  artist' rather than a composer by any traditional definition. 
                  That said, the Innova website does refer to him as a "composer/film-maker", 
                  and he did indeed study composition with, among others, David 
                  Del Tredici. From the first seconds of Sleepless Nights, 
                  which begins with a scratchy LP sample of part of a folk-song 
                  sung by an amateur choir culminating in the inevitable stuck 
                  stylus, it is clear that Bach, Beethoven and Wagner have no 
                  relevance here. Moreover, the CD case lists only 'personnel', 
                  not performers or instruments, who "sing, fidget and groove 
                  to realize Campbell's cunningly-contrapuntal, architecturally-planned 
                  score." 
                    
                  As the blurb further puts it, in contemporary if not altogether 
                  useful terms, Campbell's work "hits the Reboot button 
                  on classical music." The twelve tracks, which form a through-composed 
                  suite of sorts, constitute "a luscious organic ritual that 
                  transcends studio, concert hall, epoch and continent; American 
                  Gagaku for the space age." 
                    
                  Campbell's soundscapes are built up, though never densely, 
                  from "blended essences of voice, piano, music boxes, sheng, 
                  prepared koto, strings, electric guitar, PVC flutes, balloon 
                  bassoons, Aeolian harp, toys, lithophones and other choice sound 
                  sources". Cue much swishing, rattling, twanging, rumbling 
                  and pinging, as well as a deliberate - and successful - attempt 
                  to evoke traditional Japanese gagaku music. The total effect 
                  is quite relaxing, sometimes even mesmerising, the music unfolding 
                  at an andante pace, gentle, often wistful. It’s largely euphonious, 
                  never cacophonous, and there’s little sign of digital interference. 
                  There are plenty of real people playing traditional instruments 
                  in evidence. 
                    
                  Doubtless there will be critics, especially in the U.S., who 
                  say that Campbell 'breaks all the rules' as he 
                  'tears down barriers' in these sonic collages. 
                  Such a view is naive, though - Campbell's rules are his 
                  own, and for every 'barrier' he pulls down, he 
                  erects more as he positions himself musically as a post-modernist. 
                  This is neither crossover, nor pop, nor 'classical', 
                  but something that borrows from all those realms. Fifty years 
                  ago it might have pleased no one. Today it will still find many 
                  happy to reject it as musical charlatanry or hippyish pretentiousness. 
                  It is like something a modern-day Harry Partch or John Cage 
                  might have amused themselves with, if not listeners. 
                    
                  Yet, leaving aside questions of whether or not Campbell has 
                  anything compelling to say here, the pieces somehow contrive 
                  to be musical in a laid-back kind of way. Listener interest 
                  is maintained through an intelligent variation of timbres and 
                  textures, as well as an endearing degree of light-heartedness. 
                  Really there can be no question of mountebankery, because Campbell 
                  is not making grandiloquent statements or trying to be elaborate 
                  in any way. Instead he offers the listener a benevolent, hazy 
                  meander through an ornamental, slightly oriental garden of colours, 
                  sonorities and textures. 
                    
                  The CD case is of the digipak type, and has the look - intentional, 
                  no doubt - of a mass-produced pop album. This impression is 
                  enhanced by the 'battered typewriter' print, and 
                  a complete lack of indication as to what kind of music this 
                  is, what the forces are or who the performers are. These questions 
                  are not wholly answered either by the inside notes, printed 
                  incidentally straight onto the card, or indeed by listening 
                  to the disc! Campbell's quirky notes on individual items 
                  range from the raw - Interlude 1 is "Tons of birds 
                  in a bush!" - to the harlequinesque: Shining Furrows is 
                  "...awe, the light dances and the whole earth is waving. 
                  This one is from a bean sprout or insect perspective." 
                  There are further general notes by George Tsontakis, who, as 
                  Campbell's erstwhile teacher, was always likely to pen 
                  something dithyrambic, and so it proves - but at least his comments 
                  are slightly more illuminating! 
                    
                  Sound quality is excellent, although in fairness to labels recording 
                  musicians in concert halls and churches, these recordings have 
                  been through a mixer; yet the processing has been very skilfully 
                  done, and sampling is unobtrusive. The same music is also available, 
                  by the way, on Innova 749 - not a CD, but a vinyl disc! Innova 
                  certainly is a trendy label. 
                    
                  Byzantion 
                  Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk 
                   
                 
                            
                 
                
             
                 
                 
                 
             
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