Conrad Winslow Releases 'Perfect Nothing Catalog' 11/17 on Innova
By: BWW News Desk
The Perfect Nothing Catalog, the debut album by Alaska-raised and Brooklyn-based composer Conrad Winslow, comes out November 17 on Innova Recordings. With the dizzying half-hour title work as its centerpiece, it features three instrumental electroacoustic pieces commissioned and recorded by Cadillac Moon Ensemble (flute, violin, cello, and percussion), then transformed by producers Aaron Roche and Winslow. Rounding out the disc is Benediction, a guitar and piano duo for Roche and Winslow.
To mark the release, Cadillac Moon Ensemble and Roche will play music from the album, including two world premieres (new versions) on Thursday, November 16 (7:30 pm) at NYC's intimate 1 Rivington space. Admission is $20, or $25 with a copy of the CD; watch this space for ticketing details. Winslow is rapidly gaining notice as one of the most original and accomplished composers to emerge on the Brooklyn scene. He has been commissioned by Alarm Will Sound, Carnegie Hall, the American Composers Orchestra, the Albany Symphony Orchestra, the New York Youth Symphony, New York City Ballet's Choreographic Institute, the Juilliard Orchestra, the New Juilliard Ensemble, and others. His work combines a Borgesian sense of play with a striking ear for color and a sure sense of pacing.
As a guitarist, Roche has performed with Sufjan Stevens, ANOHNI, R. Stevie Moore, Lower Dens, and Flock of Dimes, among others. As a producer, he brings his unique voice - straddling the worlds of notated music and folk music - to illuminate hidden facets of Winslow's compositions with electronic production elements and sound design.
A B O U T T H E A L B U M
Composed in 2014, The Perfect Nothing Catalog's title work comprises 50 miniatures, each lasting less than a minute. Each is "cataloged" by its compositional approach: "tunes" are single melodic lines that modulate and harmonize themselves, "materials" are musical textures that do not develop, "devices" are rhythmic contraptions that contain additive/subtractive procedures, or are beat-oriented, "controls" explore variations on a single parameter, and "coda" layers the music from the other movements in new ways.
Formally, TPNC was inspired by Caryl Churchill's 2012 postmodern play Love & Information, in which a large thematic arc is drawn by tiny scenes with no repeating characters. It is also inspired by artist Frank Traynor's award-winning installation and shop of the same name, which interrogates the power of creation and restricted control in the making of things. Traynor has created original artwork for the album package, evoking the precise yet ragged tone of the title piece.
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