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HAYWIRE Liner Notes-1996

Haywire is the second large ensemble work of trio with strings composed by Thomas Chapin in 1995 and performed, recorded live in NYC and released in 1996.

Liner notes by Thomas Chapin:

THOUGHTS

A work is born because it demands to be born. It is a seed from another dimension whose roots grow deeper even as the fruit ripens in the manifest world. This is only slightly a rational process. It can be named, but the Reality behind the name is much greater and remains mysterious. It flirts with insanity. It dances with Angels and Demons.

My work reflects my inner world. Many beings inhabit this world—how am I to know them and ultimately love them, except to let them sing out through the music? Each work is a mission towards self-awareness.

Haywire is a tangle of personalities—an energetic bundle of loose ends. It is a state of mind where the normal rules have been disconnected, a snafu which frees me from the usual bindings. In this situation, hope or desire of maintaining “everyday mind” is lost, and yet, it is here that my artistic supra-sensibility or potentiality can arise, unrestrained.

My music is often a vent for the imaginary monsters who reside within the lunatic aslyum of my mind and other crazy characters which form the amalgam of “me.” They appear and tell their story, receiving recognition, love and ridicule. Their manifestation is a way for me to get to know myself, to reflect and be reflected. And how I love to stare! Am I the Geek who is being gawked at or am I the gawker at the Geek? (The title, “Geek Gawkin,’” was inspired by a Firesign Theater line.) If you look up “geek” in an old dictionary, you’ll definitely get an insight into the piece.

If I am sarcastic or teasing, which I often am, it is because mixed emotions reach unlit places within me. Bittersweet is a mixture which carries a certain potential. Bitter and sweet, when experienced separately, can overwhelm and carry me away into imagined ecstasy. But by experiencing the mixture—bitter/sweet—I can unite opposites and view my selves more deeply from understanding (or overstanding).

I am attracted to the Dadaists and Surrealists for their use of irrationality as a hammer, bashing through the sleepy formality of accepted reality in order to taste a bit of the sweetness or higher realms. Of course, it’s a dangerous game, as it should be.

Nowadays we are quite used to being shocked, and so “old trickster” must be summoned in new ways. Confound the expectations. I want to give you the opposite of what you expect, maybe. Unabashed beauty can be a shock, if applied at the right moment (context). It’s timing! Also, duration as a compositional element is vital, as in meditation where one rises and falls against the rock of Will. The point is to stay AWAKE and alive to what is going on.

ABOUT THE COMPOSITIONS

Haywire, as I explained above, represents the state of mind where normal connections are severed, and new possibilities arise. When I can beam free of my “everyday mind,” heightened sensibility and potential can arise, unbound, within me. I hope for this condition every time I play.

“Diva” is the odd one here, but not really, although I’ve joked that it’s my one concession on the CD to the concept of the strings “play for lovers” we all know and love—it’s that and much more. She’s also part of the pantheon of angels and demons dancing in my head, and Beauty will not be ignored. (Maybe I am easily bored, but never by beauty.)

This evocative, quasi-operatic aria was written by the great Italian trumpeter and composer Enrico Rava, with whom I had the pleasure to perform at the New Music Meeting in Baden Baden in Fall, ’95. A nod goes to Hermeto Pascoal, Brazil’s great musical genius, whose “Bebe” more than inspired the string chorus on my arrangement. By the way that’s the mezzo-soprano saxophone in F (Conn 1928) singing the song.

“Devil’s Hopyard” is a loose collection of pieces formed into a suite. These were composed specifically for the Trio plus Strings project, as apart from “Haywire” and “Geek Gawkin,” which were grown as trio pieces first, with an ear toward expansion. The hopyard (no such word in the dictionary) is a state park near the east-central Connecticut shore with definite “Legend of Sleepy Hollow” feel. There are dark corners in New England that certainly correspond with the dark corners of the mind.

One night after a gig in New London, I felt compelled to drive through the unlit, wooded hopyard on one of those one-lane roads. I stopped completely, got out and faced the darkness, alone. That’s when the Bugbears came out. They are the false monsters made real only by the imagination and must be faced—stared down, if you will. Anyway, the “hopyard” seemed like a good repository for some of the characters dredged up in the music. I especially like the rooty-tooty little fella in “Hoofin’.”

“Eidolon” is another term for “phantom,” and it’s lots of fun to hear what happens when you tell musicians to “play spooky” in the improvised sections. Basically we do the same thing in “Bump in the Night,” only there is no exact written part and there’s a bit more “oomph.”

“Hoofin’” quite unexpectedly developed into an African-sounding piece, particularly because Michael Sarin and I are big fans of African sounds, I suppose, and it just “went there.” Having been thoroughly steeped in the flute playing of Roland Kirk, I immediately made the connection when I heard recordings of various flute styles of West Africa—WOW! To hell with the flute-haters club!

The big challenge on “Bugbears” for me was to flow completely wild in the trio section and maintain a serene central eye (“I”) which would enable me to negotiate the tricky technical passage immediately following, as well as keeping breath control through it. There’s a real practical lesson here!

“At Peace with My Demons” is one of those rare pieces which bubbles up whole and heartfelt onto the composer’s page. Its classical simplicity somehow evokes impressions I had of my sister Sally when I was a kid, so it’s dedicated to her.

Finally, “Geek Gawkin’” is a big, clod-hopper stomper—a real rubbernecker, bulging eyes, vein popper, by gosh. Everyone gets a workout here—fiddle, cello (the devil’s instrument!), dueling basses, percussion, duck, and the beast (bari sax)! Needless to say, there is the strong influence of many a well-spent hour watching cartoons here.

THE TRIO

There is the fundamental trio driving this project in terms of compositional concept and long-standing working relationships. I have been making music with bassist Mario Pavone in a variety of contexts since 1980. He has also worked with Bill Dixon and Paul Bley, in addition to leading and recording with his own groups. He is a unique musician, largely self taught, artistically inspired and our musical lives have been intertwined through the years. Mario is the anchor of the group rhythmically and sonically, while the wit, humor and dialogue takes place between drums and saxophone on an almost telepathic level.

The TCT’s debut was in summer ’89 for a performance at the now-defunct Gas Station in the east-east village, New York City. The festival was curated by downtown music archivist Bruce Lee Gallantar (Listener par excellence!) and included Mario and drummer Pheeroan ak Laff. It was Bruce who then set up the first hit at the Knit—a double bill with John Zorn trio in December, ’89. One tune from that gig, “Insomnia,” found its way onto the pioneering series LIVE AT THE KNITTING FACTORY (VOLUME 3). This was Steve John’s first performance with us and he became our drummer for the next two years, appearing on our first two CD’s, THIRD FORCE and ANIMA.

In May-June ’91, the trio did its first tour of Europe on the Knitting Factory bus-and-traveling road show with three other groups—James Blood Ulmer, Gary Lucas and Samm Bennett, and has toured there every year since.

Drummer Mike Sarin makes his appearance in the fall of ’91, subbing on a few gigs and a few cuts of ANIMA, finally becoming a permanent member with our cross-country Knitting Factory USA marathon bus tour in Spring ’92. Back then his talents were a well-kept secret—now he’s the man in demand! He’s worked with such downtown luminaries as John Zorn, Dave Douglas and Ned Rothenberg, among many others.

As with Mario, Mike’s sound and sensibility combine with the other two empathically so as to create and define our very particular trio sound. To me this is not just a musical group, it’s a magic triangle, a generator! I feel truly blessed to have developed this kind of relationship with these two beautiful musicians.

In addition to our many tours, the trio has had the good fortune to appear at many of the major jazz festivals in Europe, Canada and Japan, as well as the Knitting Factory’s What Is Jazz? Festival in New York City and the JVC Jazz Festivals in New York City, Saratoga and Newport, Rhode Island. We were featured on the nationally televised Newport Jazz Festival ’95 program. (Hi Mom!)

STRINGS

I really like the idea of taking this core trio and combining it with another grouping of instruments (as on INSOMNIA—trio plus brass), in such a way that the essential character of the trio still shines through. I compose differently for the trio than I do for other situations, and carry this “trio mind” into composing for the larger projects.

We were extremely fortunate to have the virtuosic talent of Mark Feldman (violin). His help in directing the string activities was invaluable. Prior to his omni-presence on the new music/jazz scene (with the likes of John Zorn, Bill Frisell, Billy Hart, etc.), he was an active player in the country-and-western world of Nashville, Tennessee, so I couldn’t resist asking him for some fiddle on the hoe-down section of “Geek Gawkin’”!

Boris Rayskin (cello) is a Leningrad Conservatory of Music graduate who moved to New York in 1989, and, in addition to his orchestral gigs, has since been making his presence felt in the improvised music milieu. We had a lot of fun collaborating on various improvised music concerts so I really knew he would be a good fit with this group. He really shines, for instance, in the free space of “Bump in the Night,” in addition to his written melody feature in “Diva.”

I’ve known Kiyoto Fujiwara (bass) almost since coming to New York in ’81, and we have had great experiences (and fun!) on several Japan tours with his group. Kiyoto is a well-schooled (Julliard) and widely experienced musician, have performed traditional Japanese music, European classical and jazz (with Horace Silver, Clifford Jordan, Jaki Bayard, among others), as well as being a very talented composer and improviser in his own right. On this project, he expertly performs a variety of functions—as an alternative to the other bass or in unison with it, arco sections, group improvisations and in duet with Mario on “Geek Gawkin’.”

So, there you have it, as things stand at the moment. I wish you good listening!

BE, HEAR, NOW!

Thomas Chapin
July, 1996

All compositions and arrangements by Thomas Chapin © Peace Park Publishing, except “Diva” by Enrico Rava (arranged by Thomas Chapin).

Recorded Live at the Knitting Factory, New York City, January 24 & 27, 1996 by Jon Rosenberg & Brett Heinz. Mixing and Editing by Jon Rosenberg & Brett Heinz.

Produced by Thomas Chapin.
Cover Photo by Marc Marnie
Design by Peter Hill

Thomas Chapin, alto sax, mezzo-soprano sax, baritone sax, flute, miscellaneous instruments
Mario Pavone, bass
Michael Sarin, drums
with
Mark Feldman, violin
Boris Rayskin, cello
Kiyoto Fujiwara, bass

HAYWIRE is the property of Akasha, Inc., P.O. Box 720083, Jackson Heights, NY 11372, U.S.A.