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A Quarter-Century Of Banging, And Still As Fresh As Ever

Members of the Bang on a Can All-Stars playing in Shanghai in 2009.
Christine Southworth
/
courtesy of the artists
Members of the Bang on a Can All-Stars playing in Shanghai in 2009.

Here at Deceptive Cadence, we hope the music we share most Tuesdays — what's piqued our interest and pricked up our ears — will urge you towards discovering new sounds in a flash. But today's review has even more of a time-stamp than usual.

To celebrate its 25th anniversary, Bang on a Can (BoaC) — the New York-based new music composers' collective/presenting organization/teaching institution/record label — is giving a double album away, but only through tomorrow, Jan. 25. When you visit their website, just share a little memory or feeling about the group. And if you're a newcomer, that's fine, too.

Despite its anniversary tie-in, Big Beautiful Dark And Scary isn't a retrospective, though it does gesture at some basic BoaC tenets. There's music by all three of the group's founding composers: Julia Wolfe's throbbing title work, David Lang's delicate and then driving sunray and Michael Gordon's haunting and nearly apocalyptic elegy For Madeline, with particularly arresting klezmer-style clarinet wailing.

Other compositions reflect the BoaC stalwarts' wide-open ears and admirable disdain for genre divides. There's three movements from clarinetist and composer Evan Ziporyn's graceful, gamelan-shaded Shadowbang, not to mention three short works by David Longstreth, better known in most corners as a member of The Dirty Projectors.

It's a bit odd that music by Conlon Nancarrow, who was born exactly a century ago, still qualifies as "new" music, but BoaC's arrangements of his player piano studies are as happily demented and wildly fun as ever — as you can hear in Ziporyn's take on Study 3a for the Bang on a Can All-Stars:

There's also a generational shift, as evidenced by the presence of Louis Andriessen's four-part Life (which, on the CD version, includes films by Marijke van Warmerdam). It's followed immediately by Ridgeway, a piece by one of Andriessen's students, Kate Moore. Bang on a Can may have become a venerable institution over the past 25 years, but as this release shows, they're still kicking down doors.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Anastasia Tsioulcas is a reporter on NPR's Arts desk. She is intensely interested in the arts at the intersection of culture, politics, economics and identity, and primarily reports on music. Recently, she has extensively covered gender issues and #MeToo in the music industry, including backstage tumult and alleged secret deals in the wake of sexual misconduct allegations against megastar singer Plácido Domingo; gender inequity issues at the Grammy Awards and the myriad accusations of sexual misconduct against singer R. Kelly.