Where Music Goes
The Great American Music Hall, San Francisco, CA; December 18, 1988
ROVA PreEchoes Ensemble: Bruce Ackley, soprano sax; Dave Barrett, alto sax; Larry Ochs, alto sax; Jon Raskin, alto & baritone sax; Chris Brown, piano; J. A. Deane, trombone, electronics; Jon English, bass; Jon Jang, piano; Bill Horvitz, electric guitar; BlK lion, guitar, electronics; Kash Killion, cello; Kaila Flexer, violin; Hal Hughes, violin; William Winant, percussion
Conducting is no longer a mere method for an interpretation, but an actual part of the process of composition. Conduction is a means by which a conductor may compose, (re)orchestrate, (re)arrange and sculpt both notated and non-notated music. Using a vocabulary of signs and gestures, many within the general glossary of traditional conducting, the conductor may alter or initiate rhythm, melody, and harmony; develop form and structure; and instantaneously change articulation, phrasing, and meter. Conduction is a viable musical tool for the improvising ensemble. —Butch Morris
“Testament challenges not only conductors’ orthodoxy but the very vitals of music and music-making-no tradition is left untouched.... When the musical history of the 20th-century comes to be written, Testament will provide one of its most essential chapters.” —The Wire
“The breadth of colors and compositional styles which Morris obtains from these various ensembles is breathtaking-Xenakis-like string textures, the haunting melisma of a single Turkish flute, a roaring tangle of Sun Ra horns, pointillistic atonal rainfall, a tapestry of cloudy orchestral chords.... The individual personality of each ensemble shines through-no two sound the same.” —Pulse!