Hydra Nightingale features premiere recordings of recent works for solo contrabass by Caroline Louise Miller, Jessie Cox, Anqi Liu, and Asher Tobin Chodos, performed with vivid clarity by Kyle Motl. Miller’s Hydra Nightingale weaves melodic threads, rattly string noise, and multiphonic noise as a living organism. Liu’s Light Beams Through Dusts, Through a Mist of Moistures views the bass through a post-spectral lens where hazy clouds of barely audible harmonics give way to grinding multiphonic textures. Cox’ Nachklang employs multiphonics and pressure techniques on prepared strings, bringing the bass to speak with a fragile whisper that resonates with glistening tones. Motl’s own Phosphene conjures a hallucinatory polyphony of light by way of oscillating harmonics. The only work with electronic media, Chodos’ Trickle Town brings loopy rhythms in dialogue with Ronald Reagan speeches. Together, these works present a multitudinous yet cohesive view into the possibilities of solo bass.
We speak of sound in terms of high and low, and in doing so we carry some of that metaphor’s cruelty into discussions of music. As the bass has emerged as a solo instrument, some of that cruelty has lost its purchase. But some survives, and by surviving gives this album a delightful plaything.
Hear a low tone. Take a pause. Now hear a chord three octaves up. Is there not some primordial instinct to measure each of the sounding tones against the remembered bass note? The dialogue between the two registers is not innocent of such vestigial hierarchies. Or, at least, from such habituated ways of listening. These habits are exactly what this album toys with, inverting them and working them into beautiful new shapes.
How long, this album asks, and through what disorienting spectral straits, will you continue to cling to a fundamental before you relinquish it as the foundation for everything else? What is the muddiness threshold beyond which a musical figuration is no longer acceptable as a motif? Why is there such a thing as basso buffo, and is the bass even a low instrument to begin with? The works on this album do not castigate these ancient music-theoretical conceits, but instead stand as benign witnesses to their partial decomposition. This music in part eases their passage, but it also seems to tease them on their deathbeds and play with their cadavers.
Each of these pieces, in other words, works by defamiliarizing the lower half of the audible spectrum. If the history of bass notes is a landscape of distantly perceived but rhetorically decisive stratification, these pieces are a quiet and ambiguous form of subterfuge. Instead of proclaiming loudly that the emperor’s clothes don’t exist, they steal them from his bedroom, put them on backwards, and dance in the center of town.
1. Caroline Louise Miller - Hydra Nightingale (2017)
2. Anqi Liu - Light Beams Through Dusts, Through a Mist of Moistures (2019)
3. Kyle Motl - Phosphene (2016/2018)
4. Jessie Cox - Nachklang (2018)
5. Asher Tobin Chodos - Trickle Town (2016)
Kyle Motl - contrabass
Hydra Nightingale, Light Beams…, and Nachklang recorded by Matt Baltrucki - March 27, 2021 in Boca Raton, FL
Phosphene recorded by Kyle Motl - September 8, 2021 at Earthdance, Plainfield, MA
Trickle Town recorded by Alexandria Smith - April 26, 2019 at UC San Diego, Warren Studio A
Mixing & mastering by Matt Baltrucki (except for Trickle Town, mixed by Alexandria Smith)
Design and layouts by Dustin Krcatovich (Golden Feelings)
Cover painting by Leah Asher (2021)
Executive producer: James Ilgenfritz