'I MEAN TO LIVE HERE STILL'
Fatcat Records
I Mean To Live Here Still is the third FatCat release from San Francisco-based David Karsten Daniels, although it is an entirely different prospect to his previous releases in many ways. A collaboration with Richmond, Virginia-based 9-piece avant-jazz collective Fight the Big Bull, I Mean To Live Here Still is the product of two decidedly individual, musically (and geographically) distant sets of musicians, both firmly rooted in North American musical traditions. Their galvanizing collaboration is truly greater than the sum of its parts. Read on . . .
Significantly, both artists' musical heritages are firmly rooted in North American traditions. Both simultaneously exemplify and transcend their foundations, bringing together a sound that that implies both, but is galvanised and transformed into a record that sounds like neither.
David Karsten Daniels is an immensely talented, formally-trained composer/songwriter with a background in hymn singing and four-track experimentation, and a release history of gentle, acoustic, plaintive folk music embellished with touches of orchestration and jazz. His previous FatCat releases, 2008's Fear Of Flying and 2007's Sharp Teeth, found Daniels exploring the tension between traditionalist folk songcraft and a composer's bent for arrangement and intricate sonic layering.
Fight The Big Bull, a nonet comprising trumpet, clarinet, saxophone, trombones, upright bass, electric guitar, percussion and drums, is led by composer/arranger/guitarist Matthew White. FTBB exist loosely in the Duke Ellington/Charles Mingus/Ornette Coleman plane of jazz, yet are fiercely, often unpredictably, unique. The band's head-spinning spirals of instrumentation and experimentation, a modern counterpart to fundamental traditions of experimental jazz, to Ascension and the Art Ensemble of Chicago, have been aptly described as "messy, glorious, big-hearted."
The collaboration took flight over 2009, as Daniels worked on a new set of music, taking lyrics from the poems of 19th Century American author-poet Henry David Thoreau. Daniels began sending sketches of songs to White in September 2009. White scored arrangements – meticulously, masterfully put together – that flutter, trill, groove and crash, bracing and swelling around Daniels' honeyed voice, dodging harmonies unexpectedly in places and densely weaving a vast, jubilant collage of sound in others.
In January 2010, Daniels flew to Virginia, playing through the songs in White's converted attic space at night with the band, before a three-day, self-produced session at Lance Koehler's Minimum Wage studios in Richmond, playing the tracks live, all together in one space. Daniels returned to the west coast to mix the recordings, exchanging online notes with White throughout the process.
Contributing as much reserved, considered ensemble playing as free-jazz vibrancy, Fight the Big Bull's attention to detail and subtlety in their performance also yields a result comparable in places to the West Coast minimalists - Terry Riley/Pauline Oliveros/La Monte Young etc. – whilst noticeably referring to various strains of trad. jazz in others. A departure of sorts for the band, but one that beautifully interacts with Daniels' songwriting.
Beginning with a drifting, multi-voiced hymn, Thoreau's poem "All Things Are Current Found" is set to soft chords, flickering clarinets and Daniels' heart-melting ability to pick an individual syllable out of a phrase and work it into a swooping melody. By the end of the track, as percussion licks away at trombone whinnies and the chords have become an enveloping and intense texture, an intention is clearly laid out: these pieces of music are as primal as they are academic; as engaging emotionally as they are mentally. In the track "Die and Be Buried," an extended, clattering free-jazz freak-out builds impatiently, fervently into a huge half-tempo coda. "Though All The Fates" ends with a joyous prohibition-party brass and woodwind theme, fading out into the night like a New Orleans marching procession.
David Karsten Daniels has toured the US multiple times, sharing stages with labelmates Frightened Rabbit, Nina Nastasia, and Mice Parade, as well as Múm, Gary Higgins, and Arbouretum. He has tour dates with Fight The Big Bull planned for July 2010.