Ted Byrnes & Michael Foster - Solfege (2024)

  • 30 Aug, 06:12
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Artist:
Title: Solfege
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Torn Light Records
Genre: Jazz, Free Improvisation
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 320 kbps
Total Time: 0:50:29
Total Size: 267 / 117 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1.One 07:53
2.Two 02:34
3.Three 07:31
4.Four 06:50
5.Five 04:04
6.Six 04:16
7.Seven 05:51
8.Eight 06:23
9.Nine 05:02

t’s always very special for me as a ‘harsh noise’ artist to be able to discuss the improvisational works of colleagues such as Ted Byrnes and Michael Foster as I have the opportunity to use abrasive sound language to break down and interpret the percussion and saxophone material. Ted and Micheal’s first duo studio recording SOLFEGE is highlighted by the professional recording procedure as their sound is sonically punctuated even more than its masterful usual.
I have cited Ted Byrnes’ work as my favorite ‘textural harsh noise’ as its rapid and abstract percussive strikes are not unlike the greatest lines of cracking harsh noise recordings, but made even more pronounced and made perfect by its physical percussive quality. In SOLFEGE, Michael’s incredible timing and sustained sounds bridge the gaps between Ted’s various strikes manifesting a rough forest soil under the various cracking twigs and sticks; everything amplified and crisp accentuating the silent gaps between the actions. Throughout the various tracks, even the most aggressive and rapid fire material can be paralleled to the more subdued ‘atmospheric’ tracks as Michael’s sound can be seen up very close as gravelly and working alongside Ted’s more ‘bass’ heavy percussion which can also be looked at as less gunshot-like, but rough, extended and textured.
My favourite quality of a duo work this powerful is the way everything works off of each other like bridges over rivers during WWII. The bridges are used briefly, the bridges are blown up into pieces, the bridges are hastily reconstructed with specialized gear and technique, the bridges are shot at and blown up again. Perfect lines of percussive strikes and saxophone semi-extended sounds, bridging and breaking.