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CD Review
Greg Howard's "Ether Ore"
It's been seven years since Greg Howard took us on a flying tap to the
moon with his first solo Stick release of live improv. "Water on the
Moon" planted a flag for exploratory Stickists in a spot where few
others have quite yet landed. Howard has blasted off again, this time
for somewhere beyond the known stars.
"Ether Ore" is a minimalist gem, an example of maximum restraint within
sonic spaces as wide and tempting as faraway galaxies. These live
performances do have their moments of contained outburst and percussive
inventionsistic counterpoint. But they are foremost a striking lesson
in how to create so much and so little at the same time, using so little
of what much could have been used.
How does this work? Imagine that you have a large toolbox filled with
dozens of tools. With them you could build anything, from a crate to a
cabinet to an elaborate villa. Now imagine that out of all those tools
you choose only three, maybe four. With them you build something more
beautiful than all the tools combined could have created.
This is "Ether Ore's" large step for high-tech Stickist-kind. With a
rack of digital processing and a floor strewn with a cockpit's worth of
ground controls, a boundlessly capable player like Howard might have
rendered chaos like a supernova. Instead he slips a hammer and
pliers -- i.e., a few nice effects presets -- into his strapped-on
rocket pack and comes back to Earth with eerie morsels not quite known
to man. Howard notes that there are no static looping devices (only
long-lingering delay regenerations), something at times hard to fathom
given the richness in texture and the endlessness of impression that
fill the ears and brain. This minimalist approach, in hardware and in
thought, gives these tracks a coherence and focus often missing from
gadget-laden seat-of-the-pants performance.
Aurally, this is a vivid and liquid headphones recording loosely in
the orbit of Pink Floyd's haunting and crystalline "Whish You Were
Here" or Vangelis' creaturistic and earthy "Soil Festivities" --
electric and electronic in body but airy and acoustic in spirit. The
production mood is a bit ECM with a touch of early Windam Hill. At
times Howard's superb tapping technique and the crisp yet warm
recording give his Sticks (both 10-string and Grand) the woody pop
of a perfectly plucked classical guitar. At other moments, the pings
are more precious metallic, closer to the zing of a glassy dreadnought.
Within that range, his tone remains refreshingly distinct, avoiding the
trench of instantly recognizable or clichéd Stick timbres. While this
is undoubtedly a Stick album, the ambient passages are truly
transcendent. It hardly matters what the instrument is. The music is
there.
It's also here and now, as "Ether Ore" crosses the rarely traveled
bridge between live performance and studio craftsmanship. While the
album's speaker sparkle could hang with that of any good sound-room
concoction, the music is as charged and organic as its creator's blood
and bones in the heat of the moment. If ever the creativity cynics
thought recording and live improv were inherently at odds, Howard may
have proved them wrong. Time will test the longevity of his ideas, but
their sonic and tactile effects here are timeless, spaceless, and
otherworldly. Composer Benjamin Boretz once said, "In music, as in
everything, the disappearing moment of experience is the firmest
reality." Boretz evidently never heard Howard in the moment, and
"Ether Ore," now alive and kicking for digitized eternity, might have
revised his perception of firm musical reality.
"Ether Ore" is largely consonant and harmonically transparent, making
it more accessible than its extraterrestrial itinerary might have you
expect. This is greatly to Howard's credit, as he exhibits an uncanny
ability to, on the fly, weave vast familiar influences into a singular
sound all his own. No telling what courses through his veins these days,
but he spins my memory through John Abercrombie, Michael Brook, Pat
Metheny, Mike Oldfield, Tangerine Dream, Steve Tibbetts, the "Train of
Thought" side of Ralph Towner, and, at his extreme outer reaches, the
earliest buzzings of the confounding and subterranean Biota.
Back to Earth now. This album is also a great deal. For the usual price
of a CD, you get a companion DVD of Howard live in a performance that is
as educational as it is inspiring. The discs are packaged in familiar
NASA file images, and the 13-minute video adds a more memorable visual
dimension to the journey. (The bold and popular cosmic shots work well
here, though custom art as fresh and nuanced as the music would have
added a nice touch).
Even closer to home for us tappers, Howard has achieved another notable
feat. Whether he intended to or not, he has forever resolved the
discussion over which is "better": 10 strings or 12. This perennial
question, sustained largely by newcomers mulling their first Stick
purchase, now has a clear answer: Buy this CD and you'll hear for
yourself that the deep sky's the limit with either. His Sticks are also
tuned differently, with the Grand in Matched Reciprocal and the 10 in
Baritone Melody. Again, Howard finds no limits with either. The tracks
roughly alternate between the two instruments, and Howard blends them
such that the most advanced tappers will be hard-pressed to tell which
is which. While you likely won't discern the string counts and tunings,
you will detect the difference in pickups (ACTV-2 Block on the Grand,
hybrid Stickup-EMG on the 10), which makes the album an excellent
showcase for these technologies.
"Ether Ore" exhibits the most exciting type of musical and sonic
exploration, the kind that invites the world to watch when anything
could go wrong. Fortunately for us, the pilot is perfectly trained and
equipped. We get all the excitement and none of the risk.
Commencing countdown. Engines on. The voyage begins at
www.greghoward.com.
John
johnedmonds.net
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