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John Luther ADAMS (b. 1953)
The Farthest Place (2001) [10:53]
The Light That Fills the World (1998/2001) [12:58]
The Immeasurable Space of Tones (1999/2001) [27:01]
Marty Walker (bass clarinet) Amy Knowles (vibraphone and marimba) Bryan Pezzone (piano) Nathaniel Reichman (electronic keyboard and sound design) Robin Lorentz (violin) Barry Newton (double bass)
rec. August 2002, Architecture, Los Angeles
Reviewed as a digital download
COLD BLUE MUSIC CB 0010 [50:57] 

I hope to live long enough to see the composer John Luther Adams become well enough known not to be described as “not that John Adams”. Personally, I think that John Luther Adams is far and away the more interesting of the two.

As I am sure is the case with many listeners, I first came across JLA through his Pulitzer Prize-winning work, Become Ocean, in 2014. Wonderful though that piece is, I tend to think it gives the wrong impression of his work as a whole. Frustratingly, what I regard as his masterpiece, Sila: The Breath of the World remains unrecorded commercially though it can be viewed here under the tab Watch.

What unites Sila, Become Ocean and the works on this disc is a set of simple compositional principles that might seem a trifle contrived but for the wonder of the musical results. Adams is a man who spent 40 years in a remote cabin in Alaska and this has given him plenty of opportunity to contemplate and refine and simplify his music down to essentials. Nothing in his music is frivolous. If he uses a technique then it is because it reveals some core truth of music. Sila, for example, explores the rising overtone series of a single low note over its one-hour duration. The idea seems arbitrary, banal even, yet the effect in performance is ecstatic.

This disc was released in 2002 but we seem to have missed it here on MusicWeb. The works on it represent a crucial phase in the development of his work which leads in time to bigger works like Become Ocean.

The initial impression, I’m sure, on the novice listener will be one of minimalism. This is not stridently dissonant music. What is different from minimalism is its largely static character. In his writings – he is an inspirational writer as well as a great composer – JLA likens his music to a landscape in which, rather than representing a journey into the landscape, the listener sits still while the landscape shifts around them. Elsewhere, he uses the word transpersonal to evoke music that is not about the subjective individual emotional response as we would find in autobiographical Romantic music. This is not to say that his music is impersonal or cold. Aside from its awe-inspiring vistas, this is music intended to connect us to the natural world and, as a consequence, feel more human and more alive.

It can also have a surprisingly emotional effect. There is no human culture without music, which suggests that music is of the greatest importance to human beings. In tuning in to his remote landscape in extreme isolation and trying patiently over decades to find ways of responding to it musically, Adams has developed a music that in the best sense gets back to basics. Music’s origins lie in rituals which for millennia performed crucial psychological and spiritual services for humankind. If this seems a little far fetched, think of what Wagner was up to at Bayreuth! In his very different, largely egoless way, Adams returns music back to that ritualistic function. It is unsurprising that he namechecks Rothko and Morton Feldman as inspirations. Yet in returning us to the healing roots of music, and I personally do believe passionately in the potential for music to heal the wounded human spirit, Adams also collides with the damage that wounded alienated humanity has done and continue to do to the natural world. Adams’ music is grounded in the most fundamental and, as a result, most natural musical elements for very good reasons.

In the case of the three works included here the underlying musical procedure is characteristically simple: the higher the note the more motion there in the music. In practice, this means slow-moving bass notes and glittering, twinkling ones on high percussion. The combined effect of this is like looking at a grand, mountainous landscape with the slow bass registers acting as the larger geographical features and the higher more mobile elements acting like elemental features such as wind, weather and fauna. Everything unfolds at an unhurried pace that feels organic, yet is never dull in the same way that encountering nature is never dull.

More than this, what Adams has written is a musical process equivalent to the natural processes of the world, not an aesthetic response to some beautiful scenery. If his music is beautiful, and it is, it is not because he has striven to make it so. The beauty emerges out of the slow, organic process. So rooted is Adams’ approach in the very nature of sound and music that it starts to become an issue of the composer hearing and recording rather making and inventing. This is going a little far because Adams is still very much a musician trying to solve musical problems, but there is a different kind of relationship between artist and landscape here than in the traditional one of artist and source of inspiration. If nothing else, listening to this music I feel that the composer is part of the landscape rather than outside it looking on. It has the same effect on me as a listener. I am not listening to a piece of music about the Arctic but I am immersed in a piece of music which feels made up of the musical aspects of the Arctic as filtered through JLA’s remarkable, patient listening.

Enjoyable though the two shorter works are on this recording, I feel the longest work here, The Immeasurable Space of Tones, best exemplifies what Adams’ music is all about. The larger canvas allows the musical ideas to unfold with a greater sense of inevitability.

Another preoccupation of these works is a definite shift to foregrounding aspects of the music – tone colour and harmony – that normally stay in the background. Adams likens this to Rothko’s decision to dispense with the figurative elements of his painting in favour of colour. There is nothing in these scores that could reasonably be likened to melody. The slowness of the harmonic progression means that we are equally far from harmony as from drama that we might find in Beethoven.

So far so technical, but what does all this mean for the listener? Rather like a Rothko painting, it robs the listener of a lot of the points of reference that might normally used for orientation. On the other hand, the building blocks of this music are very familiar and diatonic. The listener listens to the familiar in a different way. In the absence of drama or narrative to follow, we eventually come to experience the music in the way we might experience weather or ritual. This might make this music sound like a test of patience, but it is anything but. Adams has spoken of prizing openness and this is one of the most characteristic features of his music. The simplicity of the music means that it is very far from esoteric. The listener can respond without knowing a thing about the background of the music. In his development as a composer, Adams has isolated what is universal in music. All that is needed is that the listener meets his openness with their own.

Above all else, in a world of relentless frenetic activity, the pieces on this CD offer a stillness not born of gimmicks but of devotion to the silence of the Arctic terrain. To enter Adams’ world is to enter a place to recover a sense of oneness with the world around us, whether that world is Alaska or London where I live.

In many ways, these are JLA’s most pure evocations of the Alaska in which he dwelt for so long. His music has developed in ways that match the manner of many of his pieces – that is slowly and organically and without revolutions. Each of his pieces solves a very specific environmental, spiritual but above all musical challenge and this recording captures not just the specific moments that prompted these particular compositions but a watershed moment in the composer’s career.

But what it all comes down to is a simple but deep sense of wonder that is evoked by listening to these moments.

David McDade



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