Broderick Peter & Ensemble O
Give It To The Sky: Arthur Russell's Tower Of Meaning Expanded
Label: Erased Tapes
Genre: Electronica / Ambient / Experimental
Availability
- LP x2 €31.99 In Stock
For all its wonder and beauty, the musical output of the American cellist, composer, singer, and musical visionary also embodies irony, tragedy, and paradox. Russell famously recorded more than 1,000 hours of tape and left an otherwise-tremendous archive, now part of the New York Public Library. But before his death in 1992, Russell released just three albums under his own name. One of those was Tower of Meaning (1983), a score commissioned for and then abandoned by a Robert Wilson production of Euripides' Medea.
Composer and pianist Philip Glass helped preserve the music, at least, subsequently releasing a somewhat-thin recording on his own label of just 320 LPs. Russell was never much for definitive versions, of course. He was constantly rethinking the possibilities of a piece, of wondering what else it could do.
Give It to the Sky is a powerful affirmation of those principles, using Tower of Meaning’s framework to build outward and upward, to shape something that functions within Russell’s wondrous, paradoxical world. And Give It to the Sky is also not intended to be some definitive last word. Broderick and Ensemble 0 speak already of the ways it may shift on stage, of where else it might lead.