Quote of the Week: Rothko’s Red Glare

No one told me Red was a comedy. I caught the play-about-Mark-Rothko yesterday on Broadway, the matinee performance. It’s a two-person show. There’s Rothko, performed with late-1950s urbanite-Manhattan sturm’n’drang self-hating self-aggrandizing ebullience by the irrepressible Alfred Molina, and there is his studio assistant, Ken, played by Eddie Redmayne with just the right amount of ingenue that makes it clear he’s as much an apprentice to Molina as his character is to Rothko. (Redmayne was born in 1982, the year after Molina’s mug made such an impression worldwide in the opening sequence of Raiders of the Lost Ark.)

The New York Times review of Red (nytimes.com) by Ben Brantley noted how Molina “makes us feel the necessity of an overweening, humorless vanity and — to use a word that for Rothko denotes a cardinal virtue — seriousness.” And Michael Billington, reviewing (at guardian.co.uk) the work’s earlier incarnation in London, praised it as “a totally convincing portrait of the artist as a working visionary.”

But for a show about one of the great stoics of abstract expressionism, Red, which was written by John Logan, sure seemed packed with punchlines, as Rothko and Ken went at it. Certainly there was bloodsport to their intellectual and emotional sparring, but the gravitas seemed repeatedly undercut by Seinfeldian laugh-lines. The audience at the performance I attended regularly guffawed, on cue — me as much as anyone else. I laughed along, but with each laugh felt more and more distant from the paintings that are the subject of the show. With each laugh, the character of Rothko became more and more a caricature of the sullen-comic city-dwelling rootless cosmopolitan of Jewish descent (yeah, guilty myself at times). Even one of Rothko’s great pronouncements was treated as a rim-shot moment:

“Silence is so accurate.”

The line was employed in Red as a mock-appreciation by Rothko when Ken — who grows more talkative as their relationship unfolds — for a moment neglects to speak. Let’s just say there was a pause between “so” and “accurate” that owed a lot more to Mel Brooks than it did to Sam Shepherd.

The play centers on Rothko’s creation of works for the New York restaurant the Four Seasons, a commission he completed and then withdrew from. While painting the pieces, he repeatedly employs the word “chapel,” a knowing nod to the Rothko Chapel — the Houston, Texas, mini-museum dedicated to his paintings, and for which composer Morton Feldman wrote one of his best-loved works.

Given Rothko’s association with Feldman and his penchant for playing classical music in his studio, it’s worth noting the use of music and sound in Red. Both were accomplished by Adam Cork, whose score had an ambient brightness that seemed oddly contemporary (i.e., early-21st-century) for a play that otherwise extended significant effort to duplicate gritty late-1950s Manhattan. In that respect, Cork’s glistening drones, augmented by pointillism that at times suggested György Ligeti, provided regular comfort along the lines of the show’s insistent humor — a respite from Rothko’s unfathomably righteous anger.

But Cork’s score wasn’t entirely distracting. One thing he really excelled at was when his score combined with the music that Rothko (and, later, Ken) played on the in-studio turntable — Cork’s electronic tones alternately supplanted the classical music favored by Rothko (as well as one dramatically truncated Chet Baker tune initiated by Ken), and provided a lush base from which it emerged. There was a particularly remarkable instant late in Red when the score, and Ken’s hammering together of a canvas, and the on-set music all combined for a sudden burst of perfect timing.

Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet

  • Few sounds combine the promise of comfort and the threat of bodily harm like that of a fast-moving ceiling fan in a small bedroom. #
  • RIP, the Kinks' Pete Quaife (b. 1943) — no surprise the band's bassist was its peacemaker: http://is.gd/d4XPV #
  • Trying to reconcile my deep affection for San Francisco's fog horns with the not unrelated phenomenon of multi-hour flight delays. #
  • So, @ascap attacks @creativecommons in fundraising letter. It's like attacking the Quakers. Good discussion going at http://is.gd/d2SzC #
  • iTunes challenges Microsoft's cumbersome bloatware: Hour into iOS 4 upgrade, 8gig Touch (gen 2) is 1/40th of way along status bar #cancel #
  • On a good day, using @rjdj in the city can feel like being in an extended sequence from Michael Winterbottom's film Code 46. #
  • Thank you, iTunes 9.2.0.61, for needlessly reorganizing all my iPod Touch apps into alphabetical order when upgrading yesterday evening. #
  • The new @hootsuite (a Twitter-management tool) web interface is great: better use of screen-space plus theming. #
  • Travel rule: don't install new software on laptop the night before a trip. #
  • The album Les Chinoiseries by Onra makes the perfect background music to recent novel For the Win by @doctorow #
  • Emerging from many continuous hours in the King Tubby & Co. channel at @grooveshark #
  • That MC Escher time of the year in San Francisco, when the color of the daytime sky matches that of the street. #
  • Drunk old man on the bus making much noise about preponderance of cellphones, in so many words. I think Roddy Piper played him in the movie. #
  • Wandered outta Matmos/So Percussion show on early side, fascinated as always so many people pay for opportunity to talk through a concert. #
  • The voiceover following today's noon test alarm in San Francisco sounded particularly placid, and thus all the more Orwellian. #
  • While using @rjdj on iPod Touch on bus, didn't realize that some of the audio doubling was a child repeating the automated announcements. #
  • City living means that a slight alteration in the sound of your neighbor's shower suggests that a new nozzle has been purchased. #
  • Tonight: Matmos & So Percussion @rickshawstopsf — very much looking forward to this. #
  • Disappointed iOS4 won't hook gen2 iPod Touch with Bluetooth keyboard. No luck on my G1 either. I could do equivalent 10 years ago on Palm. #
  • RIP, loopers-delight.com founder Kim Flint, aka @kimatorium — via @zoecello & @kingnever #
  • Dryer full, or assault-by-helicopter? #
  • Today I'll listen to albums I permanently borrowed from my dad when I left for college, notably Ornette Coleman's Body Meta. #mydadsmusic #
  • RT @mmaddencomics: RT @ubuweb: Cardew's score for 'Treatise' (1963-67): http://is.gd/cVl2h <- could have been in Abstract #Comics anthology #

“Phat Minimalistic” Hip-Hop Instrumental (MP3)

More great super old-school instrumental hip-hop from the dustedwax.org netlabel — or as the liner notes to the set in question, the 85 Decibel Monks EP Reel to Real, call it: “phat minimalistic.” These are straightforward, layered tracks of beats, effects, and samples, none of them any more dense than the average classic Run-DMC single, but each with its own spin. Take, for example, the distant horn bits that slowly echo and accrue on “Digging for Rocks” (MP3), one of the album’s finest tracks. That horn appears well into the song, following an elephantine beat that emphasizes its own swollen cadence, and some turntablist maneuvers that slowly veer into something resembling nascent techno. At first the horn is little more than a filigree, a tidy little sample that appears on schedule. But in time it becomes more prominent in the mix, the sample increasing in volume and length, summoning up the presence of a proper jazz solo, but doing so using the techniques and self-imposed constraints of hip-hop — which is to say, employing pre-recorded material in a manner that is nonetheless vibrant and suggests compositional development.

[audio:http://www.archive.org/download/DWK059/85_decibel_Monks_-_03_-_Digging_For_Rocks.mp3|titles=”Digging for Rocks”|artists=85 Decibel Monks]

Get the full set at dustedwax.org.

Touch-ing Lough Neagh (MP3)

Perhaps it’s a conscious effort in distributing music via social networks and alternate channels, but the pattern of late for the Touch Music podcast has involved the descriptive text (along with the podcast itself) appearing in its RSS feed well in advance of the material popping up on its touchradio.org.uk website. This time around, the material also surfaced on Twitter, at twitter.com/touchmusic, with no sign at touchradio.org.uk, at least not yet.

The file in question, the 53rd in the podcast series, is the work of Dr. Tom Lawrence, who documented sounds at Lough Neagh, which is described as “the largest water-mass in the British Isles” (MP3). Lawrence uses hydrophones and contact microphones, along with other equipment, to capture the audio around, above, and deep within the lough.

[audio:http://www.touchmusic.org.uk/TouchPod/Radio53.mp3|titles=”Lough Neagh”|artists=Tom Lawrence]

The descriptive text runs as follows:

During 2008/9 while working as a sound recordist for BBC Radio 4 Natural History Unit, sound recordist and composer Dr. Tom Lawrence spent six months recording and documenting the sounds above and below the waves of Lough Neagh, the largest water-mass in the British Isles. This programme is a compelling audio-log of those recordings, featuring breath-taking underwater sounds of beetles, frogs, eels, fish and other life. The programme also presents sounds above the water including migratory birds, industry and evocative soundscapes of forestry and the elements. Recorded and produced by Tom Lawrence Equipment: SQN Mixer, DPA Hydrophone, DPA omni-directional mics, SD702 recorder, Sennheiser M-S rig, Neuman 82, contact mics (piezos).

You’d never know from the audio that Lawrence recorded that the area is, as he puts it, “incredibly industrial.” Alternating with the audio itself, he describes the effort required to gain “a few hours every week” when the mechanical presence was subdued enough for him to capture the non-man-made environment. Neither his description of the environs nor of his effort itself are evident in the pristine wonder of what he has recorded — all bird calls and the quiet motion of water, a postcard augmented by his equally placid narrative. It all just goes to show that audio recording is no more or less real, or true, or free of bias or of authorial intent than are photographic images — Lawrence excels at what he does because he managed to record what he sought out to record, to select and to frame.

More on Lough Neagh at discoverloughneagh.com, from which the above map is borrowed.

Souns MP3, Circa 2004

“Morning Island” is the title of one of two 2004 tracks by Souns recently “unearthed” and posted as part of the Panospria netlabel’s ever-expanding catalog of freely downloadable music. The track (MP3) was taped live during a performance at the Shambhala Music Festival in Nelson, British Columbia. Souns lists the equipment used as “DJ mixer, 2 CDJ-1000s with pre-prepared CDs, a Line-6 loop pedal, DD66 delay, and a microphone.” The track takes raw field recordings (surf, bird calls, small rough noises) and gossamer synthesis into a gentle blend. The real-world noise serves as a sort of backdrop to the generated sounds, though sometimes foreground and background are reversed. The bird calls stand in textural contrast to the slow undulations and ring tones, yet at the same time, their looping (whether by nature, or software) finds a common ground with the man-made elements heard here — a certain dependability, a certain rote-ness, a certain comfortable lassitude.

[audio:http://www.archive.org/download/pan046/pan046-souns-1-morning_island.mp3|titles=”Morning Island”|artists=Souns]

Get the full release at notype.com.