September 10 | ICP Orchestra |
From the East Bay EXPRESS
THE ICP ORCHESTRA At Mills College Concert Hall, Oakland, Sunday, September 10. By Derk Richardson If an earthquake had leveled the Mills College Concert Hall last Sunday night, the world would have lost one of its premiere avant-garde ensembles, and the East Bay would have bid good-bye to the creative music scene as we know it. Of the two hundred listeners present for the Bay Area debut of Amsterdam's pioneering ICP Orchestra, at least half seemed to be musicians and/or presenters on the local improv circuit. As it was, both the building and the listeners withstood the musical temblors generated by the radical nine-piece band, but no one was left unshaken. At the epicenter of the raucous turmoil (relieved by moments of chamber-music-like delicacy) was 58-year-old Dutch drummer Han Bennink, who cofounded the ICP-Instant Composers Pool-in 1967 with 65-year-old Kiev-born pianist Misha Mengelberg. With his small drum kit set up in the middle of the stage, the athletic, shorts-clad Bennink pulled out all his percussive tricks: tossing cymbals on the ground, resting his foot on or throwing a towel over his tom-toms, beating on a board. To his left, trombonist Wolter Wierbos, trumpeter Thomas Heberer, clarinetist/tenor saxophonist Ab Baars, and clarinetist/alto saxophonist Michael Moore offered strange harmonies and a variety of logic-stretching solos. To his near right, the string section of violinist Mary Oliver, cellist Tristan Honsinger, and bassist Ernst Glerum provided sometimes velvety, sometimes scratchy textures not typically associated with jazz; and to Bennink's extreme right, Mengelberg hunched over a grand piano and plunked out jagged chords and runs in a style owing to both Thelonious Monk and Cecil Taylor. In two 45-minute sets, the orchestra tangentially touched base with modern classical composition (a new Honsinger work and a Charles Ives piece), swing and bebop (Ellington-Tizol's "Caravan" and Herbie Nichols' "Spinning Song"), Afro-calypso (a segment of the ICPO's own "Jubilee Varia" suite), and much more. Born from the same collectivist aesthetic that spawned Chicago's Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), the ICP (along with the more overtly comic Willem Breuker Kollektief) epitomize what critic Kevin Whitehead has called "New Dutch Swing." But going back to 1964, when Bennink and Mengelberg recorded with Eric Dolphy, its members have always been rigorously internationalist in their collaborations, and their borderless music has consistently transcended provincialism. The orchestra may never rock the world of commercial music, it's capable of bringing down the house every time it plays.
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