Label:
Gramavision – R2 79487
Format:
2×CD, Album, Gallery edition / Country: US / Released: 1993
Style:
Experimental, Avantgarde, Blues, Minimal
Cover,
Typography [Calligraphy], Design – Marian Zazeela
Lighting
Director – Marian Zazeela
Liner
Notes – La Monte Young, Robert Palmer
Product
Manager [Design] – Marika Blossfeldt
Mastered
By – Chris Muth
Photography
By, Cover – Jim Conti
Recorded
By, Mixed By – Bob Bielecki
Matrix
/ Runout (Disc 1): 3 R2 79487-2.1 SRC#01 M1S1
Matrix
/ Runout (Disc 2): 3 R2 79487-2.2 SRC#01 M1S1
American
premiere performance series, The Kitchen, New York, January 14, 1993.
01
CD-1 - Young's Dorian Blues In G (Part 1) ................................
61:54
02
CD-2 - Young's Dorian Blues In G (Part 2) ................................
60:23
Composed
By – La Monte Young
LA
MONTE YOUNG – Korg Synthesizer in just Intonation
JAN
CATLER – Just Intonation and Fretless Guitar
BRAD
CATLER – Just Intonation and Fretless Bass
JONATHAN
KANE – Drums
"Just
Stompin' " was released as a two-CD set from Gramavision Records. It
consists of just one piece--"Young's Dorian Blues in G"--recorded
live at the January premiere of the piece at the Kitchen in New York.
An album of
instrumental, roadhouse blues may seem something of a departure for Young, a
revered original, the seminal influence on both minimalism and the Fluxus
movement and creator of a highly personal body of work. It makes, however, a
clear, relatively compact and accessible expression of his obsessions with
extended durations and just intonation, the acoustically pure tuning based on
the natural harmonic series. It is also music with a long gestation period,
going back to his student days in Los Angeles.
_1
Young
has played alto saxophone since he was 7, with his father as his first teacher.
He went to John Marshall High School here, studied with William Green and then
went on to Los Angeles City College, where everybody told him he should play in
the dance band. The first-saxophone chair there was already tied up, but he
auditioned and beat out Eric Dolphy for the second-chair position.
He
and Dolphy became friends, and both played clarinet in the orchestra, where
Dolphy was first chair. Other jazz musicians Young performed with in clubs and
sessions at that time included Billy Higgins, Don Cherry, Ornette Coleman and
Don Friedman.
At
the same time, he was studying with Schoenberg disciple Leonard Stein at Los Angeles
City College and became extremely inspired by Webern. From the terse,
pared-down creations of Webern to Young's own long-spanned music seems quite a
reach, but he finds a credible evolution there, where his early music became
"like Webern in augmentation."
Augmented
indeed. He usually takes five to six hours to perform his solo piano piece
"The Well-Tuned Piano," and he confined "Young's Blues" to
two hours only because that was the length of the DAT tape available then.
"I
think, in addition to my unique piano style, the just intonation and the Dorian
mode, ("Young's Blues") is different because it is a very long,
complex, evolved form--really very compositional in structure, not just song
forms," the composer says. "I'm totally disinterested in short song
forms. I'm interested in evolved structures in extended time formats."
"There is no doubt a short work can be profound and very strong," he says, "but a long work has the potential in the end to be much, much more."
"There is no doubt a short work can be profound and very strong," he says, "but a long work has the potential in the end to be much, much more."
Young
learned the importance of silence from both Webern and the contrast between the
clarity of the rural sonic environment he knew as a child in Idaho and the
noise of the big city he discovered when his family moved to Los Angeles. It
figures in his idea of "eternal music," but not so much anymore in
actual performances.
"I
have these enormous silences between performances," Young says ruefully,
"so when I get a chance to play, I seem to want to fill it up with
sound."
Young
is willing to play pieces such as "The Well-Tuned Piano" only under
very special and expensive circumstances. He insists on three months on
location, one month exploring the acoustical environment and tuning, followed
by two months giving weekly performances. With his Theater of Eternal Music Big
Band, he had 23 rehearsals before the first concert.
"This
is the way I really want to perform, but very few people can afford to present
it," Young concedes. "The blues band is a way I can perform without
compromising my principals and still fit into the one-night format.
"This
blues setting, with these young musicians, is a way I can show off my
compositional skills and improvising, in a way that's more affordable for more
concert presenters." (The Forever Bad Blues Band consists of Jon Catler on
fretless and just-intonation electric guitars, Brad Catler on similar basses
and Jonathan Kane on drums, with Young himself playing a synthesizer in just
intonation.)
(By John Henken, special to the LA Times, 1993)
(By John Henken, special to the LA Times, 1993)
http://articles.latimes.com/1993-09-04/entertainment/ca-31590_1_la-monte-young
_2
"I
consider much of my music... to be blues-based," claims La Monte Young,
the acknowledged father of minimalism. This might not seem so bizarre
considering his early collaborations with jazz musicians and the undoubted
minimal qualities of blues pioneers like Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters. Like
many of his works, Young has been developing the piece here, "Young's
Dorian Blues in G," since its inception in 1960, including his work with
his Theatre of Eternal Music ensemble with John Cale and Tony Conrad. Here the
piece is presented as a two-hour live performance which he did at the Kitchen
in New York in 1993 with a guitar/bass/drums line-up headed by Young's
synthesizer in his "just intonation" tuning. Beginning with an
elegiac opening, the piece soon evolves into a rollicking, driving,
gradually-evolving epic featuring Jon Catler's searing guitar runs and Young's
keyboard mimicking a barrelhouse piano -- because the two of them trade solo
spots so effectively, this never gets tedious or drawn-out. With its extensive
liner notes, Just Stompin' serves an excellent introduction to the work of one
of the most important composers of the 20th century, especially for anyone
interested in Young's work but frightened off by the scope of the 5-LP The
Well-Tuned Piano.
(Review by Jason Gross)
If
you find it, buy this album!