"Julius Eastman's Maverick Music Lives On"
Davóne Tines has taken the stage to celebrate the life and art of Julius Eastman, a groundbreaking composer who bridged New York's uptown and downtown arts scenes in the 1970s and '80s. The Barbican concert showcased the breadth of Eastman's eclectic output, from electric guitar-driven performances that defied genre conventions to delicate piano pieces with a nostalgic charm.
One highlight was "Touch Him When", reimagined for electric guitar, which exploded into a head-banging, doom-metal fueled performance by Jiji, its abrasive riffs propelling Tines through the auditorium like a fist in a velvet glove. In stark contrast, Conor Hanick's nuanced playing of "Piano 2" - a tripartite work with an early-20th-century feel - provided a soothing respite from the chaos.
Tines also led in the performance of Eastman's powerful tribute to Joan d'Arc, "The Holy Presence". Here, he intoned a poignant prelude, channeling the medieval warrior's defiant spirit. The original improvisation allowed cellist Seth Parker Woods to trade lines with prerecorded accompaniment, but adding more cellos to the mix would have undoubtedly amplified their emotional impact.
Eastman was known for reworking his music to accommodate whatever forces were available. At this concert, the "Gay Guerilla" got a thrilling two-piano arrangement, complete with choreography and dancers, which transformed into a sensual pas de deux, where Khalid Dunton and José Lapaz-Rodriguez lost themselves in an increasingly blurred landscape of sex, combat, and death.
In Eastman's maverick world, art and performance were intertwined. His music remains a powerful call to arms, challenging listeners to confront the boundaries between sleep and death, sex and combat.
Davóne Tines has taken the stage to celebrate the life and art of Julius Eastman, a groundbreaking composer who bridged New York's uptown and downtown arts scenes in the 1970s and '80s. The Barbican concert showcased the breadth of Eastman's eclectic output, from electric guitar-driven performances that defied genre conventions to delicate piano pieces with a nostalgic charm.
One highlight was "Touch Him When", reimagined for electric guitar, which exploded into a head-banging, doom-metal fueled performance by Jiji, its abrasive riffs propelling Tines through the auditorium like a fist in a velvet glove. In stark contrast, Conor Hanick's nuanced playing of "Piano 2" - a tripartite work with an early-20th-century feel - provided a soothing respite from the chaos.
Tines also led in the performance of Eastman's powerful tribute to Joan d'Arc, "The Holy Presence". Here, he intoned a poignant prelude, channeling the medieval warrior's defiant spirit. The original improvisation allowed cellist Seth Parker Woods to trade lines with prerecorded accompaniment, but adding more cellos to the mix would have undoubtedly amplified their emotional impact.
Eastman was known for reworking his music to accommodate whatever forces were available. At this concert, the "Gay Guerilla" got a thrilling two-piano arrangement, complete with choreography and dancers, which transformed into a sensual pas de deux, where Khalid Dunton and José Lapaz-Rodriguez lost themselves in an increasingly blurred landscape of sex, combat, and death.
In Eastman's maverick world, art and performance were intertwined. His music remains a powerful call to arms, challenging listeners to confront the boundaries between sleep and death, sex and combat.