
Gravikords, Whirlies & Pyrophones: Experimental Musical Instruments
Hans Reichel, "Le Bal"
The Daxophone
AU (221k)
Real Audio 28.8 (41k)
Copyright 1994 AHO Recording / FMP Publishing (GEMA)
Sugar Belly, "Shake Up Adina"
Bamboo Saxophone
AU (221k)
Real Audio 28.8 (41k)
Copyright 1978 Port 'O' Jam
Copyright 1996
Ellipsis Arts
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HIP SOUNDS FROM WAY OUT

The Sea Beastie, a wind-sound maker
Photo: Gene Ogami
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Most creativity seems eccentric when first encountered, so it's probably unfair
just to make a lot of jokes about Gravikords, Whirlies & Pyrophones:
Experimental Musical Instruments, which is a book-plus-CD-in-a-box
compiled by Bart Hopkin, the publisher of a quarterly journal called
Experimental Musical Instruments. In fact, it's certainly unfair,
because most of the eighteen pieces presented on the CD are more beautiful than
hilarious, and because Tom Waits makes plenty of good jokes in his
introduction. Comparing various manufactured and "found" noises to "a
monkey with his hair on fire" and "a titanic organ at a midget wedding,"
among other things, Waits makes clear that arranging sound waves in new ways
also arranges your imagination in new ways. And if that isn't fun, what is? The
body of the book consists of thirty-seven short profiles of inventor-composers
whose backgrounds range from religious fanaticism to avant-garde performance
art to inexplicable obsession with the sonic qualities of hardware. Hopkin
nicely captures both their absurdity and their heroism, but the CD is the main
appeal. Only small portions of it sound like a monkey with his hair on fire.
Some of it is mystical and meditative, some of it makes you want to dance, and
all of it will inspire you to go out in the garage and hit something
for the sheer noise of it. Whether plunked, whacked, or tootled, every
instrument raises the question "What sounds like that?" And then you can make
your own analogies.--C.M.Y.
| February 1997 Cover Page
| Classical
| Dance and Theater
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