zondag 29 december 2019

Review of the Four Baritones at Stranger than Paranoia in Paradox Tilburg

http://www.jazzenzo.nl/?e=4368

A raving review of the set we played at the 'Stranger than Paranoia'-Festival in Paradox Tilburg with the Four Baritones, the world's first baritone saxophone quartet:


I am especially proud because we played one of my first compositions, 'Christina' for four baritones saxophones and electronics. I wrote this piece as a tribute to the Bijl/Flann family who are moving to Australia as we speak.

"Baritones
The baritone is not only an impressive instrument to look at, it also sounds grand. Jan Menu, Nils van Haften, Niels Bijl and Ties Mellema form the Four Baritones, here in their program 'Stranger than Four Baritones', in which classical and jazz go hand in hand. The program is eclectic and goes from Downland and Byzantine music to experiments with electronics. Their ensemble sound is downright incomparable and seems to refer to gigantic church organs, or better said, to a Russian male choir with voices that go lower than low. The impact of the four instrumental giants is overwhelming. And justly the four musicians could count on an ovational applause." (Cyriel Pluimakers)

zondag 27 oktober 2019

I will receive an Amsterdam Fund For the Arts subsidy!

Today I heard that that the Amsterdam Fund for the Arts will grant me a subsidy to help me develop  into a creating musician with the saxophone, improvisation and electronics. I put a lot of effort in the application. It means that the restart of my career is going to take more concrete forms. I want to start creating my own music, somehow. I set up to trajectory in three phases of which I will present the the first phase in Paradox Tilburg. On the evening I will present my new collective: 'RIOT' with Maarten Ornstein and Bart de Vrees. My students of the Fontys AMPA Conservatory will also participate. This concert is part of the 'Nederlands Saxofoonfestival'. I will post updates about what I am doing on this blog.




maandag 26 augustus 2019

My new group premiers this year in Paradox!

January 15 is the official premier of my new group RIOT in Paradox Tilburg during the Fontys Academy of Music & Performing Arts Nederlands Saxofoon Festival with saxophonist/clarinettist/composer Maarten Ornstein and percussionist/composer Bart de Vrees. We are in the process of writing new music as we speak. https://paradoxtilburg.nl/programma/riot-paradox-nls-saxofoonfestival/ It's a very exciting time in which I am rerouting my career to new paths and exploring the edges of styles. ‘RIOT’ is the final concert of the Netherlands Saxophone Festival organized by the AMPA Fontys Conservatory. Saxophonist Ties Mellema, professor of saxophone at AMPA, put together a program that marks the start of a new phase in his career. He will do this together with his new group ‘RIOT’ with saxophonist/clarinettist/composer Maarten Ornstein, percussionist/composer Bart de Vrees and students of the AMPA Conservatory in Tilburg. ‘RIOT’ will premier in jazz club Paradox in Tilburg. Ties, Maarten en Bart are members of the groundbreaking musicians collective ‘Splendor’ in Amsterdam. But their past goes back years. Ties and Bart played together in the Concertgebouw Orchestra and Maarten composed many important solo and ensemble works for Ties. In the mean time the three artists developed themselves, each on their own path. Ties decided to bring them together in a new group called ‘RIOT’ that unites their musical backgrounds into one. In Paradox Tilburg ‘RIOT’ will play new pieces that the trio made together inspired by music of Squarepusher, Boards Of Canada, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Eddie Harris, Johann Sebastian Bach, Aphex Twin, John Coltrane, Claude Debussy, and many others. An evening with soundscapes, sheets of sound, beats, improvisation and above all, everything in between.

dinsdag 30 juli 2019

My memories of Anner Bijlsma

Coming back from holidays I was struck by sad news: Anner Bijlsma - Unofficial Fanpage passed away. From about 2005 he was my mentor for the Netherlands Music Prize. He coached me on a regular base also after receiving the prize. His way of approaching music and life was and is an inspiration that I will always keep in my heart and mind. 
I remember that during one of my first lessons he told me that the big disadvantage of the saxophone is the risk of singing too much and showing off the sound. It’s part of the nature of the instrument. According to Anner one of the challenges of the saxophone was to make the instrument almost literally speak. Anner did not believe in music that needs a big line. The big line consists of small parts that need a clear pronunciation above everything, according to him. 
I asked him one time if he knew good music that did need a big line. He did: Wagner, but he added right after, that’s not really good music.
His favorite recordings were the ones where music was played with the expression of the composer, not the expression of the musician performing. Much like the evangelist telling the story of Jesus instead of expressing the pain of Jesus himself (because of pure vanity). 
The lessons with Anner came at exactly the right moment for me. It was a couple of years after I graduated with Arno Bornkamp at the Conservatorium van Amsterdam where I received the best education one could have as a saxophonist and musician. But still after a few years I was stuck. I did not find ways to improve my playing significantly anymore. The melody of Demersseman’s Thème (from Fantaisie sur un thème original) for example I played as legato and sustained as I could. I was almost playing it like an opera singer who ignored the consonants. Well, I am probably exaggerating. But my point is that Anner showed me that the line can also be approached from within. Using the intervals, rhythm and harmony to find an interpretation. 
But it wasn’t only this. Anner had such genius associations with music. He was always approaching music as if it was completely new to him. Even playing Bach’s Cello Suites (on baritone saxophone) and Bach’s Flute Partita (alto) he gave me the feeling that he and I were discovering this music for the first time. He realized that Bach’s music (and Mozart and Haydn) could work on saxophone if approached with the right attitude: open and new. He even once said that the future of classical music was in the hands of ensembles like the saxophone quartet who have the chance to give this music a new character by playing it on saxophone and using the consequences of the instrument on the music. 
Anner’s approach to music worked on every form of music. Also Berio’s Sequenza that I played on soprano saxophone. Anner was not a man of effects but always wanted music to have meaning. Every sound always needed a direction and a pronunciation. 
Anner hated the often used technique of circular breathing. Music needs to breath. A wind instrument does this automatically. If you take that away one kills part of the music.
How incredibly fortunate I was to have a session with Willem BreukerMartin Fondse and Anner together in his house. Willem wrote a piece for me and Hans Eijsackers called “Duty Calls” and Martin a piece called “Roots” (celebrating our common roots in Eiland Tholen). After we had a Calvados. His drink of preference. 
He helped me with personal decisions. Telling me that I should spend as much time as I can with my kids. We had long talks about life, music, about his books on Bach and lots of other stuff. 
He did not like conductors, in general. I once send him a cd of Gustavo Dudamel with his Venezuelan Youth Orchestra that I was particularly fond of. He didn’t spare me and the recording. The man could use the baton he said, but he used the orchestra as an organ. The expression of Mahler and Beethoven was not there he felt. 
A last anecdote, or wise lesson: at one of our first lessons Anner asked me if I could not develop a new mouthpiece. A mouthpiece that makes sound exhaling ánd inhaling. For him, in- and exhaling was like the up and down bow which never should sound the same (hence his obsession with the original bowings in Bach’s Cello Suite which are not as much inconsequent as they are extremely musical!). He was curious if this would work for wind players as well. I told him I couldn’t see this happening. But the idea was an excellent example of Anner’s open mind and an almost childlike creativity. 
Although I didn’t see him much anymore during the last years of my own illness I will miss him deeply. He was a special man, both as a musician and as a person. 
I will miss him.