

![Laubrock, Ingrid: Purposing The Air [2 CDs] (Pyroclastic Records) Laubrock, Ingrid: Purposing The Air [2 CDs] (Pyroclastic Records)](https://www.teuthida.com/productImages/misc4/35639.jpg)
Drawing on poet Erica Hunt's sixty-part "Mood Librarian," composer Ingrid Laubrock presents a stunning 2-CD song cycle of miniature vocal duets — performed by an extraordinary ensemble including Fay Victor, Theo Bleckmann, Sara Serpa, and others — each piece a poetic and sonic fragment brought vividly to life with precision, emotion, and profound collaboration.
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Ingrid Laubrock-composer
Fay Victor-voice
Mariel Roberts-cello
Sara Serpa-voice
Matt Mitchell-piano
Theo Bleckmann-voice
Ben Monder-electric guitar
Rachel Calloway-voice
Ari Streisfeld-violin
Click an artist name above to see in-stock items for that artist.
UPC: 198846719085
Label: Pyroclastic Records
Catalog ID: PR 38/39
Squidco Product Code: 35639
Format: 2 CDs
Condition: New
Released: 2025
Country: USA
Packaging: Cardboard Gatefold 3 Panels w/ booklet
Recorded, edited and mixed by Ryan Streber at Oktaven Audio, except tracks 16 - 30, recorded by Charles Mueller.
Tracks 1 - 15 recorded June 6th and 7th, 2024.
Tracks 16 - 30 recorded December 11th and 12th, 2022.
Track 32 - 45 recorded December 16th, 2023.
Tracks 46 - 60 recorded July 28th and 29th, 2022.
"I grew up in a literary household with parents who paid close attention to the written word. My father was a Goethe scholar, and my mother often read to us, pointing out the beauty of the sound of words. I have always felt an affinity for poetry. I appreciate its emotional power to move us and to make us think less literally.
Miles Davis stressed the importance of knowing the lyrics to standards, and I've always believed that understanding the meaning of the words provides an added dimension when improvising over them.
In my formative years as a musician in London, my first band was Nóis 4, a collaboration that included Brazilian singer Monica Vasconcelos. We played original songs as well as our arrangements of works by Brazilian masters. Mônica is a journalist and a great lyricist in her own right, and she only sang songs whose lyrics she loved. We often discussed the meaning of the words, and I learned Portuguese to delve deeper into the music.
I prefer playing original music by living composers and composing for musicians I know personally. When choosing the text for this project, I decided to follow the same approach. I met Erica Hunt at a party in 2019, and we had a fascinating conversation about her poetry. So her work immediately came to mind when I started looking for a text for this project. The poem, "Mood Librarian - a poem in koan' in Erica's collection Jump the Clock stood out to me. It's a collection of sixty micro poetic fragments-cryptic, intuitively relatable, sometimes funny, and, true to the nature of koans, open-ended.
I began setting the words to music in February 2021 as part of a master's degree in composition. The first duo I composed for was Duo Cortona: mezzo-soprano Rachel Calloway and violinist Ari Streisfeld. I initially found this instrumentation daunting, as I thought the limited low range and polyphonic possibilities would be a challenge. However, I discovered that the violin has nearly limitless orchestration potential, and working with musicians of Rachel's and Ari's caliber revealed rich possibilities. Once I had composed a handful of pieces for Duo Cortona, the seed for the rest of the album was planted.
Apart from Rachel and Ari, I knew all the other musicians on this record before embarking on this journey. I have worked with Sara Serpa on two of her projects and love the purity and unpretentiousness of her voice. Out of the four singers, her voice is closest to mine, which made the compositional process quite natural, as I could sing her songs myself. Matt Mitchell is a pianist with razor-sharp time and he can play polyrhythms with the degree of accuracy and ease I needed for some of the songs. I heard Sara and Matt perform a duet as part of Sara's group Intimate Strangers, and I knew I wanted them to be one of the duos.
I have long been a fan of Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder's partnership, as well as of their work as individual artists. Their duo music is refined and deep, with a dark edge. In 2021, I played opposite them on a double bill. Listening to their set prompted me to reach out to them soon after.
Fay Victor and I have worked together on several occasions. In 2023, we performed with Patricia Brennan as part of double bassist Mark Dresser's and trombonist Michael Dessen's bi-coastal Telematic Project: Widening the Embrace. We all brought in arrangements of our tunes, and as I was working on Erica's koans at the time, I arranged three of them for this larger group. I loved what Fay brought to the pieces, and as her voice and delivery is also closest to the poet's own, the choice felt right.
Mariel Roberts and I first worked together when she was part of Mivos Quartet and Bojan Vuletić invited me to be a guest soloist for his composition "Recomposing Art VI: Guernica". We have since performed together in projects such as Nate Wooley's Mutual Aid Music and with the Wet Ink Ensemble. I featured her in my composition "Fight Flight Freeze" for Wet Ink. Mariel is a virtuoso contemporary classical cellist and a profound improviser. Fay and Mariel were the only duo of the four that hadn't played together before, but they seemed to have an immediate understanding of each other's approaches.
The poem's title, "Mood Librarian" aptly describes my compositional process for this project. Writing anywhere and everywhere, it took me three years to complete this song cycle. Composing the music became like writing a travel journal or diary, influenced by fluid and malleable circumstances. The margins of my printed copy are packed with scribbled notes such as: 22 - Distortion of time: from short and spacious to languid, a sense of reversal; 18 - Spacious! Information overload-make room for original thought; 46 - tender: harmonics, grace notes, pedal tones, movement in melody; 5 - Violence/domination-squeeze strings together with left hand and violently bow with right.
Still confined by the pandemic in 2021, I composed the first dozen songs at home. This changed when we were able to travel again. Looking through my notes: I wrote four at an artist residency at Ragdale House near Chicago, and two more in Ucross, Wyoming, where temperatures sank to -24 degrees Fahrenheit and I had only bison, eagles, and deer for company. Four more were composed at Sylvie Courvoisier's house while cat-sitting. I wrote three on off days in Vienna, and three more during a winter hurricane in January 2023, trapped in the concert hall in far-north Bodø, Norway. Some of the songs for Theo and Ben were written at my mum's house in Münster, Germany, which is near where Theo grew up and Fay cut her teeth as a blues singer. I wrote while sitting in parks, while walking and while riding on trains, singing into my phone's voice memo. Feeling that something was missing during the previous day's final rehearsal, I penned the very last slice of the last piece while on the way to Fay's and Mariel's recording session on June 7, 2024.
I assigned the poems to the duets guided usually by whose voice I heard in my head, rather than by instrumentation. While some choices changed, I usually had a clear idea of who sings which song from the outset. These selections were intuitive and quick, sometimes prompted by a single word or fragment, and in one case, a little tongue-in-cheek: after ecstasy, laundry had to go to the married-couple duet-Rachel and Ari. The words politic rage in reminded me of a conversation I had with Sara about her parents' political activism during Portugal's dictatorship years, as well as her own political activity. Sometimes, the sound of the words themselves prompted the assignment of a duet or a musical treatment. For example, the 'er' sound in the words verbs everywhere seemed a great vehicle for Theo's extraordinary overtone singing. Walking briskly, pulling each other by the hand suggested urgency and tight rhythm, as did the sun sprints across the year. The words open up restless brick and swallow evoked an electronically enhanced swallowing of words by Ben Monder's long-reverberating guitar sound and a treatment with Theo's loop setup. Catch the ball, and now I throw it suggested hocketing, where the singing and cello parts are never played simultaneously until the whole lyric is revealed. I use the natural speaking rhythm of the full line to create a rhythmic hook, while the cello part continues to wobble around it, occasionally syncing up rhythmically. Broken glass suggested Fay's and Mariel's high-pitched, spiky improvisations. My idea for fit time to place, even the middle was for Rachel's and Ari's parts to share the same pitch, but in independent tempos, with extreme changes in tonal color on almost every note. The line is repeated three times, with each iteration speeding up, before both unify in the final phrase. Waiting to be worded careful required time to develop as a musical thought, whereas noisy ice as the mind races suggested the opposite - ice cracking under one's feet, the mind racing for a survival strategy.
Like most performer-composers, I tend to compose for ensembles that feature me as a performer. However, in the past five years, I have begun to compose for groups in which I don't play. When I began writing this music, I briefly considered either being a duet partner myself or transforming some of duets into trios, but I didn't hear saxophone on this record. It was refreshing to direct from a conductor's perspective, or as if I was in the audience. As a performer within a group, it's much harder to get an objective sense of what the music sounds like as a whole, since part of your attention is focused on playing your instrument.
The songs are discrete miniatures, each focusing on one or two ideas. Working with this self-imposed limitation helped focus my thinking. Although I had written a few songs during my Nóis 4 days, I'd never written this many songs before and had to dig deep for ideas. Working on this project for three years became a grounding factor in my life, which involves a lot of travel and constant movement. It was enriching to collaborate with singers from such varied backgrounds, and I often checked back with them to see how I could modify the songs to make them more rewarding to sing, and therefore more expressive. I wanted the music to feel like clouds floating in and out of a field of vision, and when my producer David Breskin (who's also a poet) suggested Purposing The Air as a possible album title-modifying a line from the penultimate koan on the record-it was a perfect fit.
For musical reasons, I reordered the poems from their original sequence in the book. The track numbers on the poster correspond to the order of the songs on the record.
I am grateful to Erica Hunt for allowing me to use her beautiful words, and I feel blessed that the musicians on this record embraced my music with so much energy, commitment, and love. Thank you to Isabel Breskin, Sylvie Courvoisier, Gregg Belisle-Chi, John Mallia and Roger Zahab. I also want to acknowledge the team behind me: none of the music could have been realized without the recording, editing, and mixing engineer Ryan Streber, a genius I trust completely; Charles Mueller, who stepped in for Ryan when he had Covid; Scott Hull, who breathed life into the recording during the mastering process; all eight amazing performers; Kris Davis and Pyroclastic Records for releasing it; and last but not least, co-producer David Breskin, who has supported my projects in ways I never imagined possible.
A special thank you to Tom Rainey, who may have had to listen to the music on this record one too many times and is an incredible source of strength in my life!"-Ingrid Laubrock, November 21, 2024 Brooklyn

Artist Biographies
• Show Bio for Ingrid Laubrock "Originally from Germany, Ingrid Laubrock resides in Brooklyn, NY. Between 1989 and 2009 she was active as a saxophonist and composer in London/UK. She performed and/or recorded with: Anthony Braxton, Dave Douglas, Kenny Wheeler, Jason Moran, Tim Berne, William Parker, Tom Rainey, Mary Halvorson, Kris Davis, Tyshawn Sorey, Craig Taborn, Luc Ex, Django Bates' Human Chain, The Continuum Ensemble and many others. Ingrid's current projects as a leader are Anti-House, Sleepthief, Ingrid Laubrock Orchestra, Ingrid Laubrock Sextet and Ubatuba. Collaborations include LARK,Haste,Paradoxical Frog and Ingrid Laubrock/Tom Rainey Duo.She is a member of Anthony Braxton's Falling River Music Quartet, Nonet and 12+1tet, Tom Rainey Trio and Obbligato, Andrew Drury's Content Provider, Mary Halvorson Septet, Kris' Davis Quintet, Nate Wooley's Battle Pieces and Luc Ex' Assemblée. Ingrid was one of the featured soloists in Anthony Braxton's opera Trillium J. Awards include the BBC Jazz Award for Innovation in 2004, a Fellowship in Jazz Composition by the Arts Foundation in 2006, the 2009 SWR German Radio Jazz Prize and the 2014 German Record Critics Quarterly Award. Commissions include Jammy Dodgers for jazz quintet and dancers (2006), Nonet music for Cheltenham Jazz Festival 2007, SWR New Jazz Meeting 2011 and "Vogelfrei", a piece for chamber orchestra (ACO/Tricentric Foundation). She won Rising Star/soprano saxophone in the 2015 in the 'Downbeat Annual Critics Poll and won the 'El Intruso Critics Poll for tenor saxophone in 2013. Ingrid was Improviser in Residence 2012 in the German city Moers. The post is created to introduce creative music into the city throughout the year. As part of this she led a regular improvisation ensemble and taught sound workshops in elementary schools. Other teaching experiences include improvisation workshops at Towson University, Guildhall School of Music and Drama, Baruch College, University of Michigan, University of Newcastle and many others." ^ Hide Bio for Ingrid Laubrock • Show Bio for Fay Victor "Called "a thrilling improviser" by Downbeat magazine, Fay Victor consistently hones a unique vision of the vocalist's role in jazz and improvised music. Victor's eight (8) critically acclaimed recordings as a leader since the late 90's has seen praise in venerable media outlets such as Downbeat, JazzTimes, The New York Times, The Village Voice, Time Out New York, The Wire, Signal to Noise, Popmatters.com, The San Francisco Chronicle, Time Out Chicago, The Chicago Reader, The New York City Jazz Record and JazzWise (UK). Victor's long standing group, the Fay Victor Ensemble - an expansive and cohesive mix of jazz, rock, blues, new music and free improvisation - released three albums to huge critical acclaim (2009's The FreeSong Suite made it onto numerous year-end lists including The Village Voice, NPR and Popmatters.com). The experimental blues project The Exposed Blues Duo, with FVE guitarist Anders Nilsson delving deep into a variety of blues forms released Bare in 2010. There is Herbie Nichols SUNG, Victor's homage to the unsung be-bop pianist incorporating Victor's lyrics and arrangements in a quintet and trio format. The trio project has been recorded and currently looking for label support for release and 2018 will see Victor release Wet Robots on ESP-DISK, a brand new vehicle for fresh sounds and improvisational approaches in a group called SoundNoiseFUNK. In addition to Victor's band-leading vehicles on record, her voice has attracted esteemed ensembles including Other Dimensions in Music (ODIM), the perennial free jazz outfit joined forces with Victor for 2011's Kaiso Stories on Silkheart Records in 2011, lauded for its impressive fusion of Calypso, the music of Trinidad & Tobago and home to Victor's cultural roots, with free jazz. The legendary and longstanding Dutch outfit, the Instant Composer's Pool Orkest (ICP) led by Misha Mengelberg/Han Bennink invited Victor to tour with them in Europe in 2010 and appear during US tours in 2011, 2014 and 2015. Victor is the first vocalist to work consistently with ICP in it's 50 year history. Victor was one of the vocalists on Trillium E (New Braxton Records 2011) with Anthony Braxton's Tri-Centric Orchestra and Trillium J during the four-day Braxtonian Festival in 2011. Reedist Ab Baars invited Victor and french horn hero Vincent Chancey to celebrate 20 years with his esteemed trio in 2011 including a 15-concert European tour, the first time Baars had written material for voice and specifically for Victor; that work is contained on The Invisible Blow (Stichting Wig 2014). Victor received a presenting commission from Anthony Braxton himself on behalf of the Tricentric Foundation for Neighborhood Dynamics (co-composed with Jochem van Dijk) that was presented during the TriCentric Festival in a double bill with Anthony Braxton's Nonet in 2014. Neighborhood Dynamics is a piece about gentrification and the changing demographic landscape of Brooklyn, NY, where Victor calls home. Over the past four years, Victor's work with esteemed avant-garde trombonist Roswell Rudd has seen a deeper connection appearing on his 2014 Trombone for Lovers(Sunnyside Records 2014) and now appearing on every track of Embrace (RareNoise 2017), a project of re-imagined standards. Victor was part of a voice/percussion/piano duo with MacArthur genius grant recipient, professor and composer/multi-instrumentalist Tyshawn Sorey, with appearances at Constellation in Chicago, IL (2016) and Vision Festival XVVI (2014) amongst their performance highlights. Victor is also out on record as a part of Glorious Ravage, a sprawling song-cycle in honor of Victorian-era female explorers composed by Bay Area bassist/composer Lisa Mezzacappa (New World Records 2017). Mezzacappa and Victor have collaborated frequently since 2011 and the song cycle was originally inspired by Victor's first trip out West to play with Mezzacappa. Finally, Victor is part of ReDDeer a trio of improvisors that met at MusicOmi in 2010 with a record of live duo/trio recordings in New York & Austria called New York - St. Johann (Evil Rabbit Records 2017) and Victor is a featured guest on Marc Ribot's Songs of Resistance, due for release in January 2018. Victor was just awarded a residency at Yaddo Corp. for Music Composition, staying there for 6 weeks to complete a large work on the life and death of her mother, in early 2018. Victor performances has included such luminaries as Wadada Leo Smith, Marshall Allen (Sun Ra), NEA Jazz Master Dr. Randy Weston, NEA Jazz Master Archie Shepp, Roswell Rudd, Nicole Mitchell, William Parker, Myra Melford, Lawrence Butch Morris, Gary Lucas, Dave Burrell, Henry Threadgill, Andrew Cyrille, Jason Moran, Sam Newsome, Darius Jones, Anthony Coleman, Aruan Ortiz, Joe Morris, Vijay Iyer, Matana Roberts, Mark Dresser, Steven Bernstein, Marika Hughes, Mazz Swift, Marty Ehrlich, Melvin Gibbs, Henry Butler, Curtis Clark and the Duke Ellington Orchestra. Victor has graced stages around the world including BAMCafe Live, The Stone (NY), Symphony Space (NY),The Jazz Standard (NY), Jazz at Lincoln Center (NY), National Sawdust (NY), Firehouse 12 (New Haven), The Bimhuis (The Netherlands), Cankarjev Dom (Slovenia), Koln Philharmonie (Germany), Nardis(Turkey), Rostov Philharmonic Hall (Russia), De Loft (Koln), The 55 Bar (monthly residency for over 5 years - NY), Vision Festival XV, XVI, XVIV, XXI, The ArtActs Festival (Austria), New Frequencies Festival (San Francisco) and River to River Festivals (New York)." ^ Hide Bio for Fay Victor • Show Bio for Mariel Roberts ""Trailblazing" cellist Mariel Roberts (Feast of Music) is quickly gaining recognition as a deeply dedicated interpreter and performer of contemporary music. Recent performances have garnered praise for her "technical flair and exquisite sensitivity" (American Composers Forum), as well as her ability to "couple youthful vision with startling maturity". (InDigest Magazine). She holds degrees from both the Eastman School and the Manhattan School of Music, where she specialized in contemporary performance practice while studying with Alan Harris and Fred Sherry. Mariel is a performer of international reach who has played throughout the US and Europe appearing both as a soloist and with ensembles such as Signal, Wet Ink Ensemble, Dal Niente, SEM Ensemble, the NouveauClassical Project, and the Wordless Music Orchestra. Mariel's premeire solo album, nonextraneous sounds, was released on Innova Records in September 2012. The record, consisting of brand new works commisioned by Mariel, received high accolades from sources such as TimeOut NY, TimeOut Chicago, The American Composers Forum, New Sounds with John Schaefer, and WQXR radio." ^ Hide Bio for Mariel Roberts • Show Bio for Sara Serpa "Natural from Lisboa, Sara Serpa is a singer, composer, improviser, that through her practice and performance, explores the use of the voice as an instrument. Recognized by her wordless singing, Serpa has been working in the field of jazz, improvised and experimental music, since moving to New York in 2008. Described by JazzTimes magazine as "a master of wordless landscapes" and by the New York Times as "a singer of silvery poise and cosmopolitan outlook", Serpa started her career recording and performing with jazz luminaries such as alto-saxophonist Greg Osby, and Grammy-nominated pianist Danilo Perez. Literature, film, visual arts, nature and history inspire Serpa in the creative process and development of her music. As a leader, she has produced and released seven albums, (with labels Sunnyside Records, Clean Feed, Tzadik and Inner Circle Music), the latest being a partnership with Portuguese guitarist André Matos, All The Dreams (2016), a successful follow-up to their debut Primavera (2014), which was noted by All About Jazz: "Their music is art at the point where minimalism and cangiante merge, resulting in an otherworldly sound that's utterly enthralling and completely unique." Serpa's collaboration with her teacher/ mentor, Guggenheim and MacArthur Fellow pianist Ran Blake resulted in three recorded albums, providing fertile ground for the singer to explore/ interpret the Great American Songbook along with Film-Noir: Camera Obscura (2010), Aurora (2012), Kitano Noir (2015), the latter described by PopMatters as "wonderfully hypnotic". Sara Serpa is a member of Mycale, an international a-capella quartet commissioned by MacArthur Fellow and avant-garde composer John Zorn, whose newest release Gomory (2015) was praised by The New York Times as "astonishingly beautiful, a high point in the series; it sounds medieval and new at the same time." With literature has a source of inspiration, Serpa released the album Mobile (2011), title that refers to themes of travel and movement, reflects her passion for reading. Inspired by authors from Homer to Melville to V.S Naipaul, and featuring André Matos, Kris Davis, Ben Street and Ted Poor, it was noted as "work of art in motion" by the Chicago Jazz Magazine and outlined by JazzMan Magazine (France): "Serpa's commitment to this special and difficult project works wonders - it would be difficult not surrender to it." Serpa's accomplishments extend beyond the jazz world. Serpa has performed/ interpreted music of contemporary composers such as Andreia Pinto- Correia, Derek Bermel (with the Albany Symphony Orchestra, conducted by David Allan Miller), Aya Nishina (Flora (2014), Guillermo Klein and Joseph C. Phillips Jr. (Changing Same (2015). A New England Conservatory Master of Music (MM) in Jazz Performance, and a graduate from ISPA (Portugal) in Social Work and Rehabilitation, the Portuguese singer completed her Piano and Classical Singing Studies at Lisbon National Conservatory. She later fell in love with Jazz and Improvisation through the Hot Clube de Portugal's school, while working on her research thesis about Refugee Women in Portugal. She relocated to the United States in 2005 to attend Berklee College of Music, followed by New England Conservatory. Serpa was voted as "Musician of the Year" in 2010 by the newspaper O Público, one of the major daily publications in Portugal, and was the cover of the U.S magazine Jazziz in 2012. Serpa has been voted and included by the DownBeat Magazine Critics Poll in the "Rising Star Vocalist" list for three times: 2014, 2015 and 2016. She has performed her own music in Europe, Australia, North and South America, singing at international festivals such as Festa do Jazz, the Panama Jazz Festival, Festival de Jazz de Montevideo, Wangaratta Jazz Festival, Adelaide Festival, or venues like Bimhuis, Casa da Música, Village Vanguard, Jazz Standard, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Kennedy Center for the Arts, among others. Currently, Serpa leads City Fragments, an ensemble featuring three voices (Sofia Rei, Aubrey Johnson), cello (Erik Friedlander), guitar (Andre) and drums (Tyshawn Sorey), which allows her to deepen and expand her passion for vocal music. Serpa has been working on a composition/suite inspired by French philosopher/ feminist Luce Irigaray's writings, to be recorded in 2017." ^ Hide Bio for Sara Serpa • Show Bio for Matt Mitchell "Matt Mitchell is a pianist and composer interested in the intersections of various strains of acoustic, electric, composed, and improvised new music. He currently composes for and leads several ensembles featuring many of the current foremost musicians and improvisers, including Tim Berne, Kim Cass, Caroline Davis, Kate Gentile, Ben Gerstein, Sylvaine Hélary, Jon Irabagon, Travis Laplante, Ava Mendoza, Miles Okazaki, Ches Smith, Chris Speed, Tyshawn Sorey, Chris Tordini, Anna Webber, Dan Weiss, and Katie Young. He is an anchor member of several significant creative music ensembles which integrate composed and improvised music, including Tim Berne's Snakeoil, the Dave Douglas Quintet, John Hollenbeck's Large Ensemble, Rudresh Mahanthappa's Bird Calls, Jonathan Finlayson's Sicilian Defense, Dan Weiss's Large Ensemble, Steve Coleman's Natal Eclipse, the Darius Jones Quartet, Kate Gentile's Mannequins, Mario Pavone's Blue Dialect Trio, Anna Webber's Simple Trio, Ches Smith's We All Break, Michael Attias' Spun Tree, Ohad Talmor's Grand Ensemble, and Quinsin Nachoff's Flux. He is also among the core performers of John Zorn's Bagatelles. Musicians with whom he performs and has performed include Jon Irabagon, Chris Lightcap's Bigmouth, John Hollenbeck's Claudia Quintet + 1, JD Allen, Rudresh Mahanthappa and Bunky Green's Apex, Rez Abbasi's Invocation, Lee Konitz, Kenny Wheeler, Ralph Alessi's Baida Quartet, Dave King's Indelicate duo, Amir ElSaffar, Marc Ducret, David Torn, Vernon Reid, Clarence Penn and Penn Station, Linda Oh, Rudy Royston, Allison Miller, Donny McCaslin, Brad Shepik, and Darcy James Argue's Secret Society. He has taught extensively with the Brooklyn-based School for Improvisational Music, as well as at the New School, NYU, and the Siena Jazz Workshop. He is also a 2015 receipient of a Doris Duke Impact Award and a 2012 recipient of a Pew Fellowship from the Pew Center for Arts and Heritage." ^ Hide Bio for Matt Mitchell • Show Bio for Theo Bleckmann "Grammy nominated jazz singer and new music composer Theo Bleckmann's diverse recorded work includes albums of Las Vegas standards, Weimar art songs, and popular "bar songs" (all with pianist Fumio Yasuda); a recording of newly-arranged songs by Charles Ives (with jazz/rock collective Kneebody); and his acclaimed "Hello Earth - the Music of Kate Bush." Bleckmann has most recently appeared as a special guest on recordings by Ambrose Akinmusire for Blue Note Records and Julia Hülsmann's trio for ECM Records. In January 2017, ECM will release Bleckmann's recording with his new Elegy Quintet, produced by legendary label head and founder, Manfred Eicher. Bleckmann has collaborated with musicians, artists, actors and composers, including Ambrose Akinmusire, Laurie Anderson, Uri Caine, Philip Glass, Ann Hamilton, John Hollenbeck, Sheila Jordan, Phil Kline, David Lang, Kirk Nurock, Frances MacDormand, Ben Monder, Michael Tilson Thomas, Kenny Wheeler, John Zorn, the Bang on a Can All-Stars, and, most prominently, Meredith Monk, with whom Bleckmann worked as a core ensemble member for over fifteen years. He has been interviewed by Terry Gross on NPR's Fresh Air and appeared on the David Letterman show with Laurie Anderson. In 2015, Bleckmann premiered a new work for the American Composers Orchestra at Carnegie Hall, and in 2016 he brings new work to the New York Philharmonic Biennial and the LA Philharmonic. Bleckmann has consistently appeared in the top-five spots in the DownBeat Critics' Polls for Best Male Vocalist, and top-ten spots in their Readers' Polls, and his work on Phil Kline's "Out Cold" helped place that production on WQXR's Operavore "Best Opera of 2012". In 2010, Bleckmann received the prestigious JAZZ ECHO award from the Deutsche Phono-Akademie in his native Germany." ^ Hide Bio for Theo Bleckmann • Show Bio for Ben Monder "A musician in the New York City area for over 30 years, Ben Monder has performed with a wide variety of artists, including Jack McDuff, Marc Johnson, Lee Konitz, Billy Childs, Andrew Cyrille, George Garzone, Paul Motian, Maria Schneider, Louis Cole, Marshall Crenshaw and Jandek. He also contributed guitar parts to the last David Bowie album, "Blackstar". Ben conducts clinics and workshops around the world, and has served on the faculties of the New England Conservatory and the New School. He was the recipient of a Doris Duke Impact Award in 2014, and a Shifting Foundation grant in 2013. Ben continues to perform original music internationally in solo and trio settings, and in a long standing duo project with vocalist Theo Bleckmann. He has appeared on over 200 CDs as a sideman, and has released 7 as a leader: Day After Day (Sunnyside, 2019) Amorphae (ECM, 2015), Hydra (Sunnyside, 2013), Oceana (Sunnyside, 2005), Excavation (Arabesque, 2000), Dust (Arabesque, 1997), and Flux (Songlines,1995)." ^ Hide Bio for Ben Monder • Show Bio for Rachel Calloway "Rachel Calloway brings versatility and compelling insight to stages worldwide. Her work has been praised by the New York Times for "penetrating clarity" and "considerable depth of expression" and by Opera News for her "adept musicianship and dramatic flair." A dedicated interpreter of new music, Ms. Calloway has premiered hundreds of solo and chamber music works. Recent and upcoming premieres include music by Augusta Read Thomas, John Zorn, Robert Xavier Rodriguez, David Garner, Gabriela Lena Frank, Christopher Cerrone, and Annika Socolofsky. She collaborates with premiere ensembles including Third Coast Percussion, JACK Quartet, the Amernet Quartet, and Ensemble Signal. Ms. Calloway and her husband, violinist Ari Streisfeld, founded Duo Cortona, an ensemble dedicated to the creation and performance of new works for violin and voice. She has appeared in concert with the Orlando Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic New Music Series, Charleston Symphony, the New York Philharmonic, Berkeley Symphony, Omaha Symphony, Ojai Festival, San Francisco Girls' Chorus, BAM Next Wave Festival, Bridgehampton Chamber Music Festival, Cal Performances, and Lincoln Center Festival. Ms. Calloway made her European operatic debut as Mrs. Grose in The Turn of the Screw at Opéra de Reims, Athénée Théâtre Louis-Jovet (Paris), and Opéra de Lille. She has performed with the late Lorin Maazel at the Castleton Festival in Virginia, and at Opera Philadelphia, Tulsa Opera, Central City Opera, Gotham Chamber Opera, The PROTOTYPE Festival, and the Glimmerglass Festival. She is also a founding member of Shir Ami, an ensemble dedicated to the performance, discovery and preservation of Jewish music. Ms. Calloway serves on the faculty of the University of South Carolina as Assistant Professor of Voice and Director of Spark: Music Leadership at Carolina. She joined the faculty of the Cortona Sessions for New Music (Italy) in 2014 and Summer Performing Arts with Juilliard in 2016. Ms. Calloway holds degrees from The Juilliard School (BM) and Manhattan School of Music (MM) and can be heard on Albany Records, Tzadik Records, BCMF Records, and Toccata Classics." ^ Hide Bio for Rachel Calloway • Show Bio for Ari Streisfeld "Praised for his "dazzling performance" by the New York Times, violinist Ari Streisfeld has quickly established himself as a leader in contemporary classical music. In addition to his work with JACK, he frequently performs with today's leading contemporary music ensembles, including Ensemble Signal and Worldless Music Orchestra. Streisfeld is also a member of Shir Ami, an ensemble dedicated to the performance and preservation of Jewish art music. Hailed as "imaginative" by the Los Angeles Times, Streisfeld's arrangements of madrigals and motets for string quartet by Machaut and Gesualdo have been performed to acclaim both at home and abroad. A recipient of the Morton Gould Young Composer Award, Streisfeld most recently premiered his arrangements for voice and violin at The Stone (New York) and the Cortona Sessions for New Music (Italy) alongside critically acclaimed mezzo-soprano Rachel Calloway. A passionate and committed music educator, Streisfeld serves on the faculty of New York's Special Music School, Face the Music, and the Cortona Sessions for New Music (Italy). As a soloist, he has performed with the Kennett Symphony Orchestra and the Northwestern Philharmonia. Streisfeld performed the Berg Violin Concerto with the Boston University Symphony Orchestra as winner of the 2006 Boston University Concerto Competition. Streisfeld attended the Eastman School of Music (Bachelor of Music), Northwestern University (Master of Music), and Boston University (Doctor of Musical Arts). He has recorded for Mode, Albany, Carrier, Innova, Canteloupe, and New World Records." ^ Hide Bio for Ari Streisfeld
4/23/2025
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4/23/2025
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4/23/2025
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4/23/2025
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4/23/2025
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4/23/2025
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4/23/2025
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4/23/2025
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4/23/2025
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Track Listing:
CD1
1. Koan 28 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 03:15
2. Koan 13 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 01:32
3. Koan 55 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 02:37
4. Koan 15 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 02:30
5. Koan 47 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 01:03
6. Koan 11 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 02:28
7. Koan 18 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 02:18
8. Koan 37 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 00:54
9. Koan 12 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 03:10
10. Koan 38 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 03:30
11. Koan 46 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 01:22
12. Koan 39 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 01:48
13. Koan 43 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 03:16
14. Koan 35 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 01:15
15. Koan 58 (Fay Victor and Mariel Roberts) 01:02
16. Koan 5 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 01:37
17. Koan 3 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 02:49
18. Koan 7 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 01:34
19. Koan 48 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 00:41
20. Koan 29 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 02:19
21. Koan 42 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 02:06
22. Koan 31 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 03:10
23. Koan 36 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 01:56
24. Koan 49 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 02:06
25. Koan 25 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 02:08
26. Koan 56 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 01:55
27. Koan 17 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 02:12
28. Koan 6 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 01:38
29. Koan 20 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 01:13
30. Koan 9 (Sara Serpa and Matt Mitchell) 01:11
CD2
1. Koan 8 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 01:52
2. Koan 23 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 01:09
3. Koan 10 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 02:06
4. Koan 24 (Theo Bleckmann and BenMonder) 02:31
5. Koan 30 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 01:57
6. Koan 32 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 01:27
7. Koan 33 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 01:29
8. Koan 45 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 02:36
9. Koan 40 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 04:07
10. Koan 14 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 02:35
11. Koan 59 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 01:39
12. Koan 60 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 02:36
13. Koan 53 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 01:31
14. Koan 51 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 01:49
15. Koan 54 (Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder) 02:37
16. Koan 1 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 03:05
17. Koan 34 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 01:35
18. Koan 22 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 01:18
19. Koan 19 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 03:09
20. Koan 26 (Rachel Calloway andAri Streisfeld) 00:20
21. Koan 21 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 01:44
22. Koan 57 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 02:05
23. Koan 27 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 01:18
24. Koan 41 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 03:33
25. Koan 50 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 00:33
26. Koan 52 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 02:58
27. Koan 44 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 01:35
28. Koan 2 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 03:21
29. Koan 16 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 01:40
30. Koan 4 (Rachel Calloway and Ari Streisfeld) 01:59

Compositional Forms
NY Downtown & Metropolitan Jazz/Improv
Unusual Vocal Forms
Stringed Instruments
Piano & Keyboards
Guitarists, &c.
Duo Recordings
Trio Recordings
Staff Picks & Recommended Items
New in Compositional Music
Recent Releases and Best Sellers
Search for other titles on the label:
Pyroclastic Records.

