Folio

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BARRY GUY
Folio
Maya Homburger (baroque violin) / Muriel Cantoreggi (violin) / Barry Guy (double-bass) / Manchener Kammerorchester / Christoph Poppen (conductor)

[ ECM Records / CD ]

Release Date: Sunday 12 March 2006

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Folio” is a major statement from Barry Guy. Over the last three decades the British bassist/composer/improviser, weaving between the genres with characteristic unflagging energy, has uniquely made an impact on jazz, free improvisation and contemporary composition and been a key figure in the early music movement, a multiple distinction shared, to our knowledge, by no other musician.

Founder/leader of the London Jazz Composers Orchestra (established 1971) and the Barry Guy New Orchestra (established 2000) he is the author of many pieces for large jazz ensembles, and a virtuoso player who has changed the language of free music. He was for many years in the forefront of the early music movement, playing baroque and early classical music on historical principles for more than a decade with Christopher Hogwood's Academy of Ancient Music. He has held principal bass positions in orchestras including the Orchestra of St. John's Smith Square, the City of London Sinfonia, the Monteverdi Orchestra, the Kent Opera and the London Classical Players. And he is an outstanding composer of new music. Pierre Boulez premiered Guy's piece "D” for strings back in 1974; in 1991 he won the Royal Philharmonic Society Award for Chamber Composition, later in the decade enjoying a valuable association with conductor Richard Hickox. In recent years, Christoph Poppen has been an ardent supporter. Poppen and the Munich Chamber Orchestra gave the German premiere of Guy's "After The Rain” in 2001; the recording of "Folio” is also an important chapter in the ongoing collaboration between ECM New Series and the Orchestra, of which Muriel Cantoreggi is first violinist.

ECM has long presented Barry Guy in a range of roles. In the last decade for instance, he joined the Hilliard Ensemble in a performance of his "Un coup de dés” on "A Hilliard Songbook”. He has played extensively with John Potter's Dowland Project (see "In Darkness Let Me Dwell” and "Care-charming Sleep”). He has been a major contributor to Evan Parker's pioneering Electro-Acoustic Ensemble (see "Toward The Margins”, "Drawn Inward”, and "Memory/Vision”). Patrick and Thomas Demenga recorded his "Redshift” on their album "Lux Aeterna”. And Guy has featured on his own album "Ceremony”, together with Maya Homburger. (Going still further back in label history, Guy participated in Barre Phillips's four basses project "For All It Is” in 1971 and recorded with John Stevens, Trevor Watts and Howard Riley on "Endgame” in 1979).

Since he began working closely together with Swiss-born baroque violinist Homburger – they met on an Academy of Ancient Music tour in 1986 – Guy has been bringing his musical interests closer together. Once kept distinct and separate, they are now allowed to spur each other, to alternate, or intermingle. In its November 2005 issue Down Beat magazine notes that "Barry Guy's collaborations with baroque violinist Maya Homburger create a conduit through which music from the 17th century and earlier can mingle effortlessly with contemporary music that privileges improvisation”. Nowhere is this truer than on "Folio”.

As Irish poet/novelist/dramatist Brian Lynch writes in the liner notes: "The bringing together of forms and the fusion of composition and improvisation are cooperative ventures. At their nexus lies the composer's partnership with Homburger. Her baroque sensibility brings to the music a disciplined yet joyful severity and, above all, a powerful propulsiveness. This sense of purpose, driving but also driven, is shared by Muriel Cantoreggi, whose modern violin may be heard as the voice of modernity itself. Between the violins there are exchanges of the deepest subtlety and tenderness. The Munich ensemble responds in kind – in music of this intensity there is no room for mere accompaniment – supplying as it were the ground for the intuitions of the soul….”

"Folio” was initially inspired by Nikolei Evreinov's play "The Theatre of the Soul” and it explores, via musical analogy, the interrelationships and interpenetration of the rational, emotional and subconscious aspects of the human mind. Bridging the 'old' and the 'new' are Guy's variations on a piece of music by Diego Ortiz (1510-1570), incorporated into his multi-layered 'Folio'. The composer illuminates the concepts behind his interlacing of the diverse strands of "Folio” in his own notes in the CD booklet and – musically – in his extraordinary double bass improvisations that act as "commentaries” on the unfolding musical action.

Tracks:

Improvisation
Prelude - Ortiz I - Postlude
Improvised commentary
Folio Five I
Improvised commentary
Folio Five II
Improvised commentary
Folio Five III
Improvised commentary
Folio Five IV
Improvised commentary
Folio Five V
Memory
Ortiz II