This album review was originally written in February 2004.
Chamber Music for the Inner Ear
Kitty Brazelton
CRI, 2002
New York composer-performer Kitty Brazelton brings together many different styles and genres in her late works of the 20th century. This CRI album presents a diverse selection of her creative and exploratory work from the last decade of the last century.
Come Spring! (1996) for brass quartet is the most traditional instrumentation on this album with two trumpets, horn, trombone and tuba. Written for and performed by the Manhatten Brass Quintet, the work explores intense sonorities, extended techniques in a horn solo as well as percussive effects on the horn and tuba and culminates in a final movement improvisatory punk polyrhythmic buildup to a rave-like climactic group scream. To achieve all this with five brass instruments validates Brazelton’s plaintive statement: “Why doesn’t the rock world recognize a wall of brass is as hormonal as a Marshal stack?”
R (1998) includes Brazelton as singer in a textless work for voice, electric 5-string violin, guitar, double bass and bongos. Inspired by a 1987 MIDI computer improvisation, the work has a floating half-conscious dreamlike feel with a haunting melody in the electric violin augmented by a surreal vocal part.
Sonar Como Una Tromba Larga (To Sound Like a Great Waterspout) (1998) is my favorite work on this album. For trombone and tape, this work was composed for trombonist Chris Washburn. The tape (produced at the Columbia University Computer Music Center) uses the sounds of Washburn playing trombone as well as his breathing and rehearsal comments. The result is an exquisite and unique sonic portrait of a versatile instrument and talented performer.
Called Out Ol’ Texas (1994) is an anagram of the instrumentation: alto sax and cello. The work employs four visual models of duality and George Crumb-like experimental notation. This duet presents an unusual sonorous blend in a semi-improvisational interplay of contrasting ideas.
Sonata for the Inner Ear (1999) is an octet composed for and premiered (at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art) by the Los Angeles based California EAR Unit. Scored for flute, bass clarinet, violin, cello, marimba, expanded drum set and two keyboardists on piano, electric organ and sampler the work is set in three movements that represent a macro treatment of the sonata form. Where we would normally find the elements of the sonata form within one movement, exposition, development and recapitulation are the movements in this work. Exposition presents a Bartokian first theme in the flute that transforms and moves through the piano to a peak of energy that gives way to a jazz-like second theme in the bass clarinet. Development consists of improvisatory writing for the drum set, bass clarinet, and electric organ followed by two short fugues and closed down with a serene flute solo embellished with improvised whistletones. Recapitulation starts with an introduction for solo improvised sampler and then falls into the traditional form of a recap, presenting the two themes of the first movement with tonal shifts to bring the work to a convincing close.
Despite the fact that some of the jazz and fusion references were too blatant for my taste, I found this collection of works to be a fascinating exploration of the potential of modern acoustic and electronic sonorities. With improvisation written in to most of the works, compositional development is trumped by sonic exploration. The blending of styles and genres are generally very effective and display the maturity of Brazelton’s style and confidence in her intentions as a creative artist.
There is no doubt these pieces are performance pieces. All of the works on this album (with the exception of R) were written for specific performers or ensembles, taking advantage of known strengths and catering to individual styles. The recordings are excellent, but to hear and see these works performed live would be the ultimate experience with Brazelton’s music.


