“I work in between the cracks,” says vocalist/composer/performance artist Meredith Monk,
“where the voice starts dancing, the body starts singing, the theatre
becomes cinema.” In a way, everything she does is about ecology – that
interconnectedness; those wild vocal noises – and On Behalf of Nature is
a treatise without text, an outcry without words. She wants the work:
“to expand our awareness of what we are in danger of losing”, and she
does that by making music that sounds as if it comes from the earth,
feet planted in the mud, voices erupting and gusting and keening. As a live show
its physical gestures were a bit stilted and obscure; for me it’s more
articulate as music alone. And though Monk’s incredible technical range
is going, the softer stuff is still enthrallingly playful and
ritualistic. Sometimes it feels weird being a bystander to her music:
this kind of elemental rite should involve us all.
(Kate Molleson / The Guardian)
With her latest, multivalent ECM New Series album, Meredith aimed to
address ecology and climate change, she says: "Believing that music
speaks more directly than words, I worked to make a piece with a fluid,
perceptual field that could expand awareness of what we are in danger of
losing. On Behalf of Nature is a meditation on our intimate
connection to nature, its inner structures, the fragility of its ecology
and our interdependence." Voices and instruments have equal weight:
sometimes each is heard alone; sometimes they are blended to form a new,
mysterious sound; sometimes they are combined to create intricate,
layered, yet transparent sonic landscapes.
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