Carte Noire in the news

image © Adam Matlock

Carte Noire had the great opportunity to play the Uncertainty Music series at Neverending Books in New Haven last month. The concert was on a tiny stage in front of an equally tiny but appreciative audience. We also had the good fortune being reviewed in the New Haven Independent. Click through to check it out.

One of my favorite quotes from the article:

Chamber music is, at its core, functional. It’s music for staying in, rather than music for going out. As its function has been largely overridden in the age of recording, it’s possible to overlook it. But at its best, it still holds the power to temporarily reshape the room it’s played in.

Carte Noire — a trio composed of Minta White on flute, Chris Cretella on guitar, and Tim Peck on keyboards — wielded such influence at key moments during their performance, acting at times as a conduit between the room and another imaginary space the audience couldn’t see.

Source: Improvised Chamber Music Reshapes Never Ending Books | New Haven Independent

* * mental fireworks * *

Last week I shared an excellent TED-Ed talk about the neuroscience of music making. Though it is only five minutes long, this talk illustrates the gymnastic mental connections activated by instrumental music-making. It makes me want to see my own fMRI scan when improvising with other musicians.

Since sharing that video, I had the opportunity to put all of my neuro-musical skills to the test. By now, you have all read about my experiences with Out of Your Head, Baltimore’s premiere free music collective. I have spent most Tuesday nights at The Windup Space, which is a few short blocks north of my city apartment, and the musical home of the collective. The music is always improvised; the groups are always unique. The following two samples came from a “quartet night” on July 29th.

OOYH bass quartet sample

OOYH guitar quartet sample

After meeting many of the talented musicians in the collective, I finally had the opportunity to perform with them last Tuesday. I received a message in the morning that I would be performing that evening during the late set. I would be sharing the stage with Jon Birkholz (k) & Ben Zurier (dr). As usual with Out of Your Head, we had never played with each other before. As the new man in town, it was my first time even meeting these musicians! The trio consisted of drums and two keyboards & electronics. We played two songs.

I like to think of improvised music as a dynamic conversation. By drawing on years of technical practice, listening skills, emotional perceptions, and their interplay, musicians have an ability to construct a coherent statement to transmit into the world. Though analogous to composition, an improviser must be able to do this at the speed of thought. Like the best dinner parties, great improvisation leaves you feeling engaged and wanting more.

By using the tools of modern science to investigate physical processes, it is possible to see a physical basis for the amazing synergies in a live band. It is really not fair to try and capture this dynamic with short audio samples, as I did above. You can not hear how the pieces developed over time. You can not watch the musicians interacting—or not—on stage with each other. You can not hear the way subtle nudges from one musician propagate through the whole ensemble. What you can hear, however briefly, is the focus each musician is bringing to their corner of the ensemble. Each player gives of him or herself for the good of the other players, and the audience. In the brain, each region combines to synthesize motor, aural, emotional, and temporal impulses. In the ensemble, each player combines rhythms, pitches, timbers, and feels. Many individual parts are massaged into a unified whole. Musicians are constantly training to be empathic collaborators. It seems the latest research only reinforces the importance of exploring deeper collaborations, which excellent musicians have know about all along.

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