Stress Position


Three days remain in the Kickstarter campaign for the Drew Baker/Marilyn Nonken CD Stress Position, soon to be released by New Focus Recordings.

Baker, an accomplished pianist himself, infuses his virtuosic compositions with a specifically political perspective; the title track itself was inspired by forms of torture that were revived by American forces at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay. In his notes for the CD, he explores the complex relationship between art and culture, particularly musical culture, and how they have evolved in his music through the last decade:

Pianists spend lifetimes alone in small rooms with antique instruments. This intimate scenario is defined by an atmosphere of confinement as well as an overt physicality. The piano receives the weight of the body and disperses sound.

These simple and rather obvious facts regarding intimacy, physicality and space are essential to my piano works. Whether addressing extra-musical and political topics or simply existing as “absolute music,” every piece on this recording attempts to lay bare the visceral intensity that directly results from the act of playing. …

Watching the process of interaction is also central to the title track of this recording, Stress Position. Here we return to the aforementioned intimate physicality embodied in the relationship between pianist and piano. In the case of this piece, however, that relationship is taken to an extreme and even perverse level. The insistent and unrelenting rhythmic repetition, coupled with an ever-increasing mass of pitches and dynamic intensity, creates a scenario whereby the piano becomes a torture apparatus. Virtuosity in this case is defined by the ability to endure. To a large extent, perfection in the most basic sense (avoidance of wrong notes and rhythms, command of tempi) is impossible given the manner in which the pianist must marshal all strength and concentration in order to merely continue. …

To a large extent, Stress Position makes the notions of confinement and physicality the focus of the piece. However, one may rightly note that the confinement of the practice room or concert hall stands in direct opposition to the brutality and inhumanity of the torture chamber. Within this stark contrast lies one of the central political themes. As humans, we are capable of remarkable civility and the most base, animalistic behavior. The piano, a historical technology of great innovation and beauty, reveals these conflicting human capacities when turned into something that physically compromises the player.

The recording also includes Baker’s Asa Nisi Masa, Gray, Gaeta, and National Anthem. You may sample some of these compositions here; but, better, make a Kickstarter contribution to support the work of these fine artists. Below is a promotional video for the album.

Stress Position

Marilyn Nonken and Drew Baker. (Photo of Nonken by Sharka Bosakova)

Stress Position: The Complete Piano Works of Drew Baker, performed by new music champion Marilyn Nonken, is a collection of fine work by this American composer, spotlighting the political and social concerns as well as virtuosic vision of Baker’s music — and now you can support the work of these fine musicians by contributing to a Kickstarter campaign to complete production of the album. Baker writes on the Kickstarter page for this collection:

In addition to testing the physical limits of pianist and piano alike, the pieces on this recording wrestle directly with political themes. The title track refers to an ancient form of torture recently brought back into the public consciousness following the atrocities at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo. With arms spread to the far ends of the piano, the performer must play continuously with ever increasing volume and energy. Another featured work, National Anthem, transforms the “Star Spangled Banner” into a hypnotic, dirge-like requiem.

It is through Marilyn’s incredible interpretations that these works come alive and with your help, we will be able to proudly present a body of work that has been years in the making.

Your personal individual support of this album is urgent, especially during times like these when support for this fine work becomes increasingly hard to come by. You can make a contribution in amounts from $10.00 to $1,000.00 here, and each pledge level features a premium, from a remix track to a free copy of the album to signed copies of the score (as well as dinner with the composer and pianist, and let me tell you, it’s worth it for that). You can hear a little of Baker’s music in the promotional video for the album below. Do well by doing good, and support Stress Position today.

Marilyn Nonken at Le Poisson Rouge tomorrow night

Marilyn Nonken. Photo: Sharka Bosakova.

After her triumphant sell-out appearance at Le Poisson Rouge earlier this year with Sarah Rothenberg in Olivier Messiaen’s two-piano Visions de l’Amen, Marilyn Nonken returns to the Bleecker Street venue tomorrow night, Tuesday 9 November, in a solo performance of Miguel Chuaqui’s Blues en el Corazon (2009) and Frederic Rzewski’s The People United Will Never Be Defeated! (1976). She played both pieces just last week in Santiago, Chile, as part of the centennial celebration of that nation’s independence; tomorrow night she plays them for New Yorkers. When she last played The People United … in New York in 2005, The New York Times said, “Ms. Nonken’s playing was the victory of a survivor who had met every mood and outburst head on and with style, outlasting every obstacle.”

Tickets are available here; the doors open at 6.30pm for the 7.30pm performance. We’ll look forward to seeing you there.

Upcoming: Nonken plays Rzewski and Chuaqui at (le) Poisson Rouge

Marilyn Nonken. Photo: Sharka Bosakova.

On Tuesday 9 November at 7.30pm Marilyn Nonken returns to (le) Poisson Rouge, 158 Bleecker Street, to perform Frederic Rzewski‘s epic The People United Will Never Be Defeated! (1975) and the North American premiere of Miguel Chuaqui‘s Blues en el Corazon (2009). Tickets ($20.00; students $15.00) are available here; doors open at 6.30pm.

The People United Will Never Be Defeated! is a lengthy work of 36 variations on “El Pueblo,” a protest song by Sergio Ortega and Quilapayun; Rzewski (pronounced SHEV-sky) composed it as a tribute to the leftist Chilean cultural movement “Unidad Popular” under Salvador Allende. (Marilyn will be performing both the Rzewski and Chuaqui pieces in Santiago, Chile, on 2 November as part of the Chilean bicentennial celebrations.) When she last played The People United … in New York in 2005, The New York Times said, “Ms. Nonken’s playing was the victory of a survivor who had met every mood and outburst head on and with style, outlasting every obstacle.”

There is more about the Rzewski piece, including a short essay by American composer Christian Wolff, at the LPR Web page for the event. For a brief taste, here’s the composer himself playing the first five minutes or so of The People United … in March 2007 at the Miami International Piano Festival:

“Spellbinding”

Those who missed Marilyn Nonken and Sarah Rothenberg’s fine performance of Olivier Messiaen’s Visions de l’Amen on Monday night at Le Poisson Rouge lost out on a brilliant evening. Allan Kozinn in The New York Times this morning praised the pianists’ “clarity and power”:

Ms. Rothenberg, in her notes for the Bridge recording, points out that at the work’s premiere, Ms. Loriod played the first-piano part, which is more detailed and virtuosic, and more rhythmically complex. Ms. Nonken took that part on Monday and moved easily through the filigree in “Amen du Désir” and the alternately dramatic and hypnotic writing in “Amen des Anges, des Saints, du Chant des Oiseaux.”

Ms. Rothenberg played the second-piano part, which Messiaen performed at the premiere and which includes many of the work’s most striking themes, as well as its solid bass writing.

And Ronni Reich, writing for nj.com, called the performance “spellbinding,” and noted that “the performers seamlessly laced together the most delicate cushion of sound, their contributions flawlessly integrated, giving the impression of a single performer. They were equally game as the work heated up, building to emphatic, jazzy constellations that spiraled upwards only to fall back and repeated chords that escalated in fervor.”

Those who missed the concert, have no fear: the new Bridge recording is available for sale at the Superfluities Redux bookstore.