The Promise of Escape
Percussionist Michael Jones releases an album featuring three works that resulted from close collaborations he has had with composers pluto bell, Nicholas Deyoe, and Scott Wollschleger. These works are part of a growing portion of the solo percussion repertoire that celebrates sensitivity, timbre, and painting of expressive worlds not as a counter to traditional virtuosity, but an expansion of it.
Michael Jones’ The Promise of Escape is a rich addition to the growing repertoire of expansive solo percussion works that focus on timbre, sustain, and texture. Often, and for many years, percussion music has celebrated a kind of vigorous physicality, but quietly behind the scenes, a counterbalancing trend has been growing. These three works by Pluto Bell, Nicholas Deyoe, and Scott Wollschleger represent that subtler, inward looking impulse in percussion writing, and document the cultivation of an alternative virtuosity for the instrument. A few New Focus releases by solo percussionists come to mind as contributors to this space as well: Haruka Fujii’s Ingredients, Greg Stuart’s Subtractions, and Christopher Whyte’s Cold Stability. On this collection, Michael Jones brings his own artistry and sensibility to these substantial works, two of which (Bell and Wollschleger) are the result of his own commissions.
On his work trace-escape-horizon (2023-24), Scott Wollschleger writes, “While composing the work I developed various procedures of disorientation and I tried to eliminate any sense of development.” Wollschleger’s process strived to inject ambiguity and weightlessness into the composition. Despite the hypnotic state the music can induce in the listener, this kind of texture demands acute concentration from the performer lest the spell be interrupted, conjuring a tense dichotomy between the execution of the sound and its effect. Wollschleger establishes a dialogue between two pitches in the opening several minutes of the piece, often articulated as harmonics via two different techniques. This sonic meditation explores the relationship between these two sustains from myriad possible angles and refractions. Only after sixteen and half minutes do we hear new pitch material introduced, and the subsequent subtle expansions of the register and harmonic palette read as seismic shifts in context. The multi-hued timbre of a chromatic pitch pipe sounds as a yawning growl from an emerging creature, and Wollschleger’s bent vibraphone pitches distort sonic reality, as if the music has suddenly gone into a bowl of water. The bending notes create a bridge to a section focused on oscillation, with warbling tremolos and glistening trills, leading into a halo of luminescent sound. trace-escape-horizon takes a surprising turn at the 32:25 mark, as brightly, closely spaced sustains animate the high register like reedy organ pipes, before the work closes on fifty seconds of a hollow white noise texture. Whether or not Wollschleger was aiming for development or static ambiguity, trace-escape-horizon traverses significant expressive and sonic territory. His work, along with that of Bell and Deyoe and Jones’ sensitive realizations, demonstrates that along with a new set of performance demands, this developing trend in percussion music is finding new structural skeletons within which to house innovative sounds and gestures.
– Dan Lippel