David Garland
My Vortex Camera
1. My Vortex Camera mp3 2. Ditty One 3. ESP 4. Ditty Two 5. Under The Blanket 6. My Tiny Life 7. Ditty Three 8. Happy Ending 9. Ditty Four 10.Forest Fractures 11. Ditty Five 12. Once Upon A Time |
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rere 96 CD 2000 34'35"
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David Garland | vocal, bass guitar, psaltery & recorder, toy piano, guitar (track 3), accordion (track 10) |
Brain Dewan | electric zither, auto harp, taisho koto, accordion (track 10) |
Will Holshouser | accordion |
Fay Lovsky | theremin (track 3) |
"In New York City, where I live, musicians from very different
backrounds and from all over the world can encounter one another in their search
for kin from their muse's home town. It might be that their only point of connection,
and only common language, is music. Several years ago I was listening to maverick
radio station WFMU when a song about a "wastepaper basket fire" came on. I hear
a lot of songs I can enjoy, but not so many that make me feel that the songwriter
is grappling with words and music the way I like to myself. I called the dj,
Irwin Chusid, and learned that I was hearing Brain Dewan perform one of his
songs. Irwin gave me Brain's phone number, and I called him up to invite him
to be a guest on my WNYC radio show, Spinning On Air. A song heard by chance
on the radio and a sense of aesthetic camaraderie were the only things I expected
to have in common with Brain. There are two wonderful CD's of Brain's songs:
Brain Dewan Tells The Story, and The Operating Theater, plus a couple EPCD's
were released. Brain's electric zither is one he designed and built, and plays
it through a Leslie cabinet. Will Holshauser is the only accordionist I know
of who studied with jazz eccentric Anthony Braxton. He's an imaginative composer
and arranger, as well as being one of the new generation of accordionists for
whom the accordion is not just a genre instrument. The Dutch multi-multi-instrumentalist,
singer, and songwriter Fay Lovsky happened to be in new York at just the right
time to add her theremin to "ESP". It really is a thrill to play with imaginative
musicians like Brain, Will, and Fay. And there is another voice on this CD as
well: my 11 year-old son, Kenji Garland. Most of the music on this CD was performed
for broadcast on Live at the Stork Club, a weekly program on WFMU. On my other
recordings I've allowed myself to reimagine the performing ensemble for each
song, but this CD is different. Instead of indulging in the infinite options
of multi-tracking, I've limited the arrangements to what we can play live. Three
of these songs have been released in different versions: "Under the Blanket"
and "Happy Ending" on Togetherness, and "Forest Fractures" on Control Songs.
"Control Songs" is the category I've created to describe my songs. Just as "love
songs" can address the fundamental motivating force of love from many perspectives
- happy, sad, ernest, ironic - so my Control Songs address another fundamental
force in our lives: our need - sometimes ambivalent and illusory - to believe
that we have control over our lives."
David Garland, March 2000
"David Garland leidet an der Welt. Was ihn von anderen musikalischen
Melancholikern unterscheidet, ist, daß er nicht zynisch wurde, sondern Frohnatur
blieb. ... zaubert das Trio Melodien, die sich anhören wie eine Mischung aus
Weill-Evergreens, Chanson, Kinderlied, Bänkelgesang, Country-Moritat und andere
amerikanische Traditionen. Das erinnert an den verschrobenen Van Dyke Parks,
an den Beach Boy Brain Wilson, ist aber meist David Garland pur. "Er ist der
beste Songwriter meiner Generation", schrieb Kyle Gann im Village Voice. Das
ist vielleicht ein wenig übertrieben. Das seine Songs kleine, sympathische,
wunderbar androgyne Juwelen sind, ist jedoch unbestreitbar, ..."
Anna-Bianca Krause, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 02.05.00
" Seine skurril wirkenden Lieder, kompositorische Perlen in
eigenwilligen Arrangements, zeugen vom unbeirrbaren Gestaltungswillen ihres
Schöpfers. Sie vereinen alte Musik, Charles Ives, Improvisationsmusik, Kinderlieder
und Kammermusik vom Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts."
Mathias Bäumel, Dresdner Neueste Nachrichten, 14.08.00