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This page contains postings on compositions, performances and press.


Press : Musical America

In

At Other Minds, Anything (Still) Goes
By Georgia Rowe
MusicalAmerica.com
March 8, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO - Every year about this time, the Other Minds Festival of Contemporary Music brings composers and performers from around the world to San Francisco for a week of residency and three nights of unabashed music-making. The results are always eclectic, and frequently revelatory; under Artistic Director Charles Amirkhanian, this year's edition - Other Minds 16 - demonstrated that new music thrives, and that this city remains a mecca for artists, iconoclasts and free thinkers.

Amirkhanian has an uncanny ability to identify important composers of the future while honoring the past; programs are divided between talent on the rise and new music's established composers. The first two concerts, March 3 and 4 at Kanbar Hall, featured Louis Andriessen and Han Bennink (from the Netherlands), I Wayan Balawan (Indonesia), Agata Zubel (Poland); Kyle Gann, Janice Giteck and David A. Jaffe (U.S.) A third concert, on March 5, offered additional works by Andriessen, Gann and Jason Moran.

A decided high point was the world premiere of "The Space Between Us," Jaffe's tribute to Henry Brant's pioneering work in spatial music. The composer's 20-minute opus places two string quartets - the Del Sol String Quartet, and members of the Left Coast Chamber Ensemble - on opposite sides of the hall, while a percussionist onstage (Andrew Schloss), sends remote electronic signals, via radio drum, to a piano, two xylophones and an array of overhead chimes (the installation was by Seattle composer/inventor Trimpin).

Jaffe's score introduces richly textured, eerily prolonged voicings from the strings, which are interrupted by urgent, rhythmic phrases tapped out by percussion. As the work moves toward a poised, luminous conclusion, the instruments seem to reach out to one another, as if longing for connection. The performance stretched the mind and beguiled the ear.

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Press : Artssf.com

In

A real winner emerged among the contemporary compositions at the Other Minds Festival March 4, more than I had bargained for in an otherwise indifferent program.

The world premiere of David Jaffe’s “The Space between Us” was a felicitous linkage of acoustic/instrumental music with electronic sounds, the most successful we’ve encountered all this season. Like a rising tide, it lifted up the entire festival, which was littered with an array of indifferent pieces and improvisations ranging from predictable to ludicrous.

“The Space between Us” was spatial music, with a phalanx of string players ringing the audience, countering the electronic sound on stage coming from electro-percussionist Andrew Schloss, who made the piano play---look, no hands!---just by waving a wand over a sensor across the stage.

Watching a disclavier piano play by itself, without keyboardist, is disconcerting, to say the least. If there was a ghost in the house, it was that of the late Henry Brant, the spatial composer par excellence, to whose memory the work was dedicated. In the spatial mode, a chamber orchestra’s worth of string players was scattered all about the audience at Kanbar Hall, often performing a string chorale, with the audience fairly drowning in rich harmonic sound. Jaffe relishes restless themes in a diatonic way, spreading this feast out over 25 minutes, with equally rich applause at the end from a healthy crowd.

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Computer Music Journal Review by Brad Garton

In

Review of "David A. Jaffe: XXIst Century Mandolin: Acoustic and Computer Music for the Mandolin," Computer Music Journal, 1994.

Reviewed by Brad Garton, New York, New York, USA.

The mandolin occupies a unique musical space-from Vivaldi to Stravinsky, its sparkling soprano timbre has colored many 'classical' compositions. To most contemporary listeners, however, the sound of a mandolin evokes images of a Dublin pub or a bluegrass festival in southern Indiana. For me, the mandolin seems to exist in all of these worlds simultaneously, evoking an interpenetrated! pan-stylistic musical universe. David Jaffe shares this multi-dimensional conception of the mandolin, stating that his early experience of his father's mandolin playing gave him "a taste for permeating the boundaries that separate musical styles." Mr. Jaffe discovered that "by combining diverse, seemingly irreconcilable stylistic elements, [he] was able to uncover a rich dynamic source of musical expression."

'XXlst Century Mandolin' is a tour de force demonstration of that "dynamic source of musical expression." The CD contains four large works: two for acoustic instruments (mandolins, of course) and two computer-generated pieces (with decidedly mandolin-like timbres, primarily using the Karplus-Strong algorithm and digitized mandolin fragments. Each of these works is a coherent melding of a range of compositional and performance styles, with results that are truly unique.

If I were asked to summarize David Jaffe's music in a single word, it would have to be, 'different.' I don't mean this as a dismissal of his music (in the way that many use the adjective 'interesting', for his compositions display a musical virtuosity that is highly original -- there's the 'difference' -- and often quite moving.

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Soledad O'Brien 1998 MSNBC interview

In

This video begins with percussionist Andrew Schloss demonstrating the "Drum/Piano" hybrid instrument we developed for "The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World." It continues with discussions of the RadioDrum and its relative the "radio baton" with inventor Max Mathews (co-inventor: Bob Boie), and includes an interview with me (at time 4:00), as well as a description of the physical modeling techniques pioneered by Julius Smith and myself in such works as Silicon Valley Breakdown and further developed as part of the Stanford University Sondius program, and at Staccato Systems, Inc., the company I co-founded with Julius Smith and several others.

In 2012, Soledad O'Brien hosted one of the debates between Barak Obama and Mitt Romney.

Historical Reviews (U.S.)

In

Smithsonian, December 1994, "A composer whose computer music has a magical twist". [In Silicon Valley Breakdown, Jaffe] imagined a huge orchestra of plucked instruments, superguitars and harpsichords of every imaginable size: tiny sounds barely audible, huge tonal blobs that sound...like "a plucked Golden Gate Bridge," the music swooping here and there, dropping to Earth for a moment of hilarious honky-tonk almost-harpsichord, then taking off again on a star trail.

Newsweek, Aug. 2, 1982, "Breaking Sound Barriers." Silicon Valley Breakdown sounds like a high-tech hootenanny. It begins with a banjo-like E, speeds through some crazily fast picking, soars into a tinkling stratosphere and shoots with a dramatic glissandos down into earthshaking chords--the sort of sound that you'd get if you plucked the cables of the Golden Gate Bridge.

Computer Music Journal, Winter 1996, "XXIst Century Mandolin." Ellis Island Sonata is a virtuosic piece, both in the amazing performance ability demonstrated by Jaffe, and also in his compositional ability to weave a panoply of musical influences together into a compelling work. Silicon Valley Breakdown stands as one of the landmarks of computer music. [The CD "XXIst Century Mandolin" is] a wonderful collection of music by an innovative and thoughtful composer.

Audio Magazine, July 1997. "Classical Recordings." The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World is wild stuff indeed. Its avant composition, unique solo instrument, and unusual orchestral backing route a procession of musical sounds through your speakers that they have probably never before reproduced. Sound: A+, Performance: A.

Keyboard Magazine, April, 1994. Jaffe offers American Minatures, in which samples of mandolin and voice are ingeniously manipulated on NeXT computer, and Silicon Valley Breakdown, whose synthesized plucked string sounds gleefully obliterate idiomatic preconceptions.

San Jose Mercury News, Jan. 13, 1984, "Funky electronic music that's calculated to please." David Jaffe's Silicon Valley Breakdown is puckish, funky, and at times jazzy-improvisatory; he has great fun with sudden shifts of the reference pitch, making his tunes wow giggly up and down the scale.

American Record Guide, April 1997. In ['The Statue of Zeus' from The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World], the interaction between the piano and other instruments, particularly the unpitched percussion, is truly exhilarating.

20th Century Music, February 1997, "Wonder" Full Music. Jaffe is a consummate artist.

Array (Computer Music Association), Spring 1997, "CD Reviews." [The CD of "The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World"] is superbly recorded and executed by the players and represents a major achievement by the composer... David Jaffe has a very distinctive and original musical style, and there can be no doubt as to the clarity and technical mastery with which he expresses his ideas.

The New York Times, May 24, 1981, "A Summer Camp Where Musicians Work Hard at Playing." David Jaffe, composer-in-residence [at the Composer's Forum of the East], prepared Dybbuk... The audience responded with wild clapping and cheering.

San Francisco Chronicle, California, July 29, 1991, "Cabrillo Music Festival Opens With a Real Bang." There's considerable hell-raising in Jaffe's [Whoop For Your Life!]. The audience gobbled it up.

Oakland Tribune, California, April 27, 1983, "New material gives 'Mostly Modern' a maverick touch" The audience loved it [Would You Just As Soon Sing As Make That Noise!?].

San Jose Mercury News, California, July 24, 1993, "Conducting electricity." Composer-conductor-performer David Jaffe was able to make the computer music follow him. In [Terra Non Firma], cello lines weaving up and down the register echoed the wavy earth movement... Meanwhile, the electronic orchestra produced the trills of "flutes," a "sax" solo and a sassy muted jazz "trumpet." [The result] was mesmerizing.

San Jose Mercury News, California, July 21, 1990, "The muse electronic." David Jaffe's Impossible Animals was a rare (and successful) venture into humor, with the computer supplying an ultra-high chorus of yips and yaps accompanying Jaffe's own "straight-man" violin playing. The piece was uncommonly sophisticated in the live-electronic interplay as well as in the "voices."

Minneapolis Star Tribune, Minnesota, September 24, 1988, "'Words in Motion' opens Composers Forum's study of new repertoire." In clever fasion, and using his own text, Jaffe represents the four seasons from a "bird's-eye" view, combining bird calls with elaborate vocal counterpoint [in Bird Seasons].

St. Paul Pioneer Press Dispatch, Minnesota, Sept. 25, 1988, "Forum takes on the task of wedding word and sound." David Jaffe, in his Bird Seasons...handled his four-voice texture expertly, and I heard echoes of the 16th century madrigal style. For its wit, the second section, "Circle Dance for Summer," was the winner; for poignancy, the final one, "Autumn Meditation," in which previously heard materials were ingeniously recalled.

San Francisco Chronicle, California, Jan. 12, 1987, "Chanticleer Chorus Keeps a Tradition Alive." David Jaffe, in The Fishing Trip, combined live voices and tape in a most satisfying and stimulating fashion.