Dohee Lee

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Home The News Kihnoua article in Moscow newspaper

Kihnoua article in Moscow newspaper

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The unity of opposites

Ethno-garde project "Kihnoua" in "School of Dramatic Art"

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Despite the fact that the ensemble "‘Kihnoua’" played between the May holidays, the hall "Manege" in Sretenka was full, since the initiator of the project saxophonist and composer Larry Ochs known to us since 1983. In that year  one of the two   Saxophone Quartets which were wxisting at the time (ROVA), by some miracle  managed to play Moscow  and Leningrad joining a group, of  peacekeepers, or just foreign tourists. In mid-1980's quartet ROVA  hosted in California, our trio Ganelin - Tarasov - Chekasin and then in 1989 came to  Russia  for an ‘official’ tour. At the beginning of this season  Ochs’ trio Jones, Jones (with the aformentioned Tarasov and Mark Dresser) dated the presentation of their  debut CD ( the Moscow label SoLyd Records) at the 3d d Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art.

 

And now a completely new project of  Ochs ‘Kihnoua’ tours the Old World to promote the album Unauthorized Caprices («Unauthorized Capriccios", or "unlawful whims")?which is published  not anywhere, but again in Eastern Europe, by the Polish avant-jazz label NotTwo, which  as our SoLyd, does  not bend under any difficulty. Thus, the increased attention  to our new jazz  community  to Larry Ochs work, is, so to say, mutual.

 

  Kihnoua is nasically international. In a press release Ochs says that Kihnoua is  an ancient Greek term meaning "difference". Or rather, something like a dialectical "unity of opposites". Consequently, these opposites should attract. Namely: on the one hand, oral traditional ethnics, on the other – new jazz  spontaneity. Or in general: objective  nature of writig creativity  versus personal  nature of improvisation. Ethnic in Kihnoua - it pansori, street Korean monoopera (traditionally a duo of two wandering performers – she-singer and drummer). Cinema fans should know  a movie Sopyonje by the patriarch of the South Korean  Im Kwon-taek.

 

For the roles  of the pansori  singer  there are   a real Korean Dohee Lee and a  drummer  (and also electronic wizard) Scott Amendola. The leader saxophonist acts both as a moralist in a classicist piece  and also inpewrsonating sort of  a demiurge. Ochs originally wanted  at least one local professional musician  to join ‘Kihnoua’ broad profile, including improvisation. Long before the tour, he sent a request to find him on the spot a cellist, an improviser,  but "preferably not limited by the jazz tradition." The CD Disc Kihnoua recorded Joan  Jeanrenaud – the ex-member of the legendary Kronos Quartet, but it seems that Ochs  have not found  a musician of the same caliber, so he had to ask for new jazz bass players.  The Dutchman Wilbert de Joode joined Kihnoua  in Europe and was replaced by the one and only Vladimir Volkov in Russia.

 

The resulting quartet showed in the "School of Dramatic Art" six pieces (three  for each set ) – both from Unauthorized caprices and brand new ones, even yet untitled. Explicitly programatic titles seem to be important for Ochs, he names  pieces  in the sort of traditional Eastern  ethnic fashion: "Weightless", "Less than a wind", "A sudden gust of wind" (in English – just one syllable Slat) and "Flutters".

 

I won’t call Dohee Lee’s natiral voice of a perticular brightness, but  her skills let her do at least three things quite professionally, that are 1/recitative-patter of the Korean opera  origin (for thosw ho do not know Korean  it sounds like a jazz scat or hip-hop rap)2/ rapid transition to  broad cantilena melody and shamanistic incantations, sort of  horror screams and growls. It dos not make sense to compare Dohee Lee with our avant-garde Tuvan Sainkho or her young Canadian rival Tanya Tagaq (who, incidentally, has worked not only with Bjork, but with Scott Amendola as well). But  it is  the stage acting where  Lee clearly would win.

 

Unlike  Sainkho, whose stage presence tends literally  to suppress everybody on stage thing, Dohee Lee  clearly observes 'mutual responsibility' of improvising collective. And this is accurately what Ochs needs for rendition of his works.that is  carefully notated thematic material for improvisation and precise instructions, to whom, how and when to develop it . However, the first part of the concert gave the impression of almost spontaneous collective improvisation, despite the fact that there were allusions to the classic free-jazz of the 60s, may be  John Coltrane and/or Pharoah Sanders (in  Slat). As a result, the first part  was like a prelude to the second  part. Dohee Lee’s sparse  theatrics,nevertheless,were  not just part of her vocal performance, but sometimes served as a   counterpoint to her own singing.  Her voices became even more prominent when Scott Amendola switched to his Kaos pad. His electronics showed attrtacted the  opposites  impersoinated not only by the singer, bur also by Vilkov’s bass and the leader’s sopranino sax.  Amendola’s  soundscapes, particularly during the second part, also represented the unity of opposites:   sounds of nature, corresponding to the   names of pieces, but simultaneously he created "otherworldly" effects,  not that primitive "space" sounds, but the sounds of which theatre directors of  pre-electric era  dreamed imagining the appearances of Ghost of Hamlet’s father. We do not have   this  unity of technology, tradition and  ethnics in our new jazz at all. . It is therefore understandable why the second part of the concert was met with  loud cheers.