12/09/2013 (12 Moons Solo Project Day 343)

12 Moons Solo Saxophone Project Day 343

Date: 12/09/2013

Instrument: Tenor saxophone

Location: Home studio in Clinton, WA (Whidbey Island)

Notes:

This is a piece exploring the mood of morning.  I tried to express the notes not as a series of pitches, but rather as a raga or incantation of a mood.  During this improvisation I used a singe fingering that incanted pitches ranging from the middle octave F (quarter step low) to the Altissimo Bb in the upper register.  Within these pitches were little clusters that would emerge independently while playing, and others which I could very carefully control.  

Several specific melodies were played during this piece which I pulled from the pitch series.  These melodies tended to focus on the following pitch shapes: G to Eb // C to Eb // C-Bb-G (quarter step low).  In total, the pitches I remained constantly aware of were as follows.  They are written below in ascending order of pitch:

F (quarter step high), G (quarter step low), C, Eb, G, Bb.  However, they were sometimes grouped in pairs or could also be independent.  For example, the F (quarter step high) and G (quarter step low) were very clearly linked together as a two-note cluster, as were the Eb and G in the upper register.  However the C in the upper register and Bb in the Altissimo register wanted to speak more independently.  The fingering used for these pitches was as follows:

(Left Hand) 1-2-3, Octave, Low Bb // (Right Hand) 2-3, Low C

-Neil

The image “Landscape, Monument Valley” accompanying today’s post by Jeffrey Silverthorne (1968).

12/08/2013 (12 Moons Solo Project Day 342)

12 Moons Solo Saxophone Project Day 342

Date: 12/08/2013

Instrument: Tenor saxophone

Location: Home studio in Clinton, WA (Whidbey Island)

Notes:

The weather has been bitterly cold the past week, with temperatures climbing barely above freezing during the daytime.  This is very challenging for my reed set-up.  Extreme temperatures effect a reed in a number of ways, but the overall issue lies in the unpredictability of how the reed will play from day to day or even hour to hour.  The reed I played on during a show last night was extremely stuffy and on the stiff side, but this morning the same reed is now extremely bright and light.  I decided to document the current condition of this reed in today’s improvisation.  I used the easy-blowing nature of it to record a quiet piece with recurring melodic themes, and intervalic melodies that featured the clarity of sound in this reed.

While beginning this improvisation, I was struck by a beautiful, open fifths chord made with the following fingering:

(Left Hand) 1-2-3, Octave, Low B // (Right Hand) 2, Low C

This chord used the pitches F# and C# in the upper register, creating a very stable, open-ended chord that I set recurring melodies against.  I moved between bluesy and less tonally defined figures, such as: B-A-F#(chord), B-A#-F#(chord), A-A-F#(chord), or A#-A-F#(chord).  The melodic interruptions around these figures/chord, were played freely, but I was careful not to divert attention for too long away from the primary themes.

-Neil

The image “The Disappeared” accompanying today’s post  by Antonio Frasconi (1981-88).

12/07/2013 (12 Moons Solo Project Day 341)

12 Moons Solo Saxophone Project Day 341

Date: 12/07/2013

Instrument: Tenor saxophone 

Location: Home studio in Clinton, WA (Whidbey Island)

Notes:

While practicing this morning I worked with two consonant chords, pairing the two into a variety of contexts spanning quiet, delicate sounds to more aggressive smears in the extreme upper register.  After working for some time without finding any one particular direction that really struck my ear, I began recording to try and stimulate the process.  I eventually settled on a more defined rhythmic pattern, and then worked to control the internal structure of the chords to create more a melodic landscape as well.  After a number of takes, today’s improvisation finally took shape in the form of a dance-like, folk melody.

The upward smears that take place periodically during the improvisation were one of many sound components I explored while in the early stages of sculpting the piece.  After the more defined 6/8 rhythmic pattern took shape, I decided to use these smears inside of the improvisation. My first attempts include more indeterminate executions of the smears, but I eventually came to love the gentle, recurring nature of the 6/8 melody, and instead decided to use the smears as a means to give the rhythm a moment of pause before storming back in.  The melodies had a number of pitches buried internaly within the chords, but I focused my mind of two simple melodic gestures to improvise around.  The first melodic gesture/fingering used the pitches F# and B, and in the second gesture/fingering, C# to A.  The two fingerings are notated as follows:

Fingering 1: F# and B

(Left Hand) 1-2-3, Octave, Low Bb // (Right Hand) 2-3, Low C.  High F# key pressed open, then closed.

Fingering 2: C# and A

(Left Hand) 1-2-3, Octave, Low Bb // (Right Hand) 2-3, Low C.  Palm Eb key pressed open, then closed.

The upward smears were made by using Fingering 2.

-Neil

The image accompanying today’s post by Robert F. Bukaty.

12/06/2013 (12 Moons Solo Project Day 340)

12 Moons Solo Saxophone Project Day 340

Date: 12/06/2013

Instrument: Tenor saxophone

Location: Home studio in Clinton, WA (Whidbey Island)

Notes:

This morning I spent my practice session preparing, of all things, for a presentation of selections from the 12 Moons project thus far.  By last night I was physically exhausted after several day of heavy practicing, and many hours of the day spent on the horn while teaching.  It was extremely taxing to blow just about anything into the horn, but his morning I picked it up feeling renewed and physically strong.  I was immediately drawn to the textures used in today’s improvisation right as the horn entered my hands for the day.  

In this piece I worked with the shaping of clean, crisp articulations with a constant repetition of figures, as well as more gritty shapes incorporated within the continuous lines.  I wanted to maintain a dogged persistence of the Concert E throughout, and I used this as my primary focal point during the piece.  About 2/3 into the improvisation, I began slowing down the figures while maintaining the puckish, pointillist approach.  I maintained a static dynamic level throughout the piece, with the more spacious dots following suit with this approach.  The Concert E was rooted within two fingerings, which are notated below:

(Left Hand) 1-2-3, Octave, Low Bb // (Right Hand) 2-3, Low C.  During rapid articulation, take away the Low C in the right hand to created a second fingering that pulls out more hollow-sounding pitches of a similar sound profile.

-Neil

The image “A diary of flowers” accompanying today’s post by Jim Hodges (1993).

12/05/2013 (12 Moons Solo Project Day 339)

12 Moons Solo Saxophone Project Day 339

Date: 12/05/2013

Instrument: Tenor saxophone

Location: Home studio in Clinton, WA (Whidbey Island)

Notes:

This morning I reached for new and less trodden textures during my practice session.  This did not however manifest itself in an inspired idea for recording today until the end of my practice session, when I re-visited an older technique of fingering a pitch while singing with my voice into the horn.  In the past, while using this technique in recording I have stuck primarily to singing a fixed pitch while alternating fingerings around it.  Today I decided to use more fixed fingerings, and allow myself the flexibility to sing a wider range, all the while returning very frequently to established pitch centers.  

While recording this piece today I was amazed at the variety of overtones that the combination of my voice and the horn could cull up.  Around the 2:00 minute mark, and incredible array of pitches in block chords moved up and down the horn along with my voice.  These moments of rich harmonic spectrums offset the otherwise constant motion of the single pitches.  During this improvisation I tried to use as many mouth shapes and syllabic sounds as possible, but I limited my tongue articulations to only single tonging.  Interestingly, while tonging the end result created the phonetic sound “do do do” extremely often whether I was using this sound shape or not.  Other techniques included vibrato made with the back of my mouth and the upward–downward motion of the back side of my tongue.  

I primarily used the traditional Low Bb fingering during this piece, but would also occasionally lift my second finger the right hand (E key), or add the octave key in the left hand.

-Neil

The image accompanying today’s post by Roman Opalka.