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    Wind Power

    Five musicians test endurance and flexiblity with classic Rite of Spring

    Joel Luks
    Oct 14, 2013 | 11:55 am
    Five musicians test endurance and flexiblity with classic Rite of Spring
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    Listeners who first experience the opening bars of Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring unequivocally ponder, "What the heck is that?" The strained timber of the bassoon up in the stratosphere, beyond the instrument's established orchestral tessitura at the time the piece was written, renders the double reed unrecognizable even to finely tuned ears.

    A saxophone? Perhaps the English horn? A primitive instrument new to the orchestral batterie?

    Stravinsky's deliberate scoring, however, was meant to evoke the sound of the dudka, an ancient reed-pipe woodwind that's associated with herdsmen of Central Asia. In a letter dated Sept. 25, 1911, to set and costumer designer Nikolai Roerich, Stravinsky wrote, "in a state of passion and excitement, have sketched the introduction for dudki." Although the dudka doesn't appear in the final version of The Rite, designs for the introductory section of the ballet include a youngster playing one.

    Imani Winds bassoonist Monica Ellis first performed the iconic — and feared — naked solo during her last concert as an undergraduate student at Oberlin Conservatory in Severance Hall, the home of the Cleveland Orchestra.

    "The Rite of Spring cannot work in a homogeneous ensemble like a string quartet."

    When the Grammy Award-nominated virtuosos of the Imani Winds take the stage at the Shepherd School of Music on Tuesday, hosted by Houston Friends of Chamber Music, an arrangement of the The Rite of Spring that reduces a 100-piece orchestra down to five musicians will test their endurance and flexibility.

    "It's mind over matter," Ellis says about how to sound the first bassoon high C. "Psychologically, I remain calm while putting that note in perspective to the octave below. I actually have that handwritten in the music — I litter my music with affirmations, as if I were my own self-therapist. You can't fret over this moment, really, because there are 20 more minutes to come that are just as demanding."

    Physically, Ellis concentrates to ensure everything, which she describes as nerdy bassoon stuff, is in working order: Diaphragm support, a responsive reed, position of the tongue and direction of the air stream. She also practices the riff in different keys — half-a-step down, half-a-step up — so that when she returns to the original transposition the fingerings feel less cumbersome.

    Those familiar with the musical score and the ballet may find it hard to believe that the complex web of notes, textures and tonal colors is possible with only five musicians. The secret, Ellis says, lies in the heterogeneity of the five instruments that comprise a wind quintet: Flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon and horn.

    "The Rite of Spring cannot work in a homogeneous ensemble like a string quartet," she explains. "The variation of timber within the different ranges of each wind instrument expands our collective ability to allude to other sounds."

    In its upper range, the oboe sounds like a trumpet. The lower range of the bassoon mimics the timpani and double bass. The flute doubles on piccolo. The clarinet, in its chalumeau register, is rich like the cellos and violas. The power of the work's thicker textures is provided by the virility of the horn.

    "The fact that five disparate instruments can create a huge sound world is an example that there's much to be learned from what can happen when seemingly disparate ideas converse, experiment and fuse as one."

    Jonathan Russell, who's a New Jersey-based composer, initially arranged a fraction of The Rite of Spring. At the suggestion of Imani, Russell expanded his adaptation to include many more of the controversially beloved movements, a recording of which by Imani was digitally released on EMI in May. The bare bones translation surprisingly pays respects to Stravinsky's aesthetic. Listen for yourself in the live performance video above.

    But more importantly, the exercise of condensing tangled staves of notation to just a handful aligns with Imani Winds' personal convictions.

    "We are exploiting the differences in a beautiful way, similar to how our ensemble celebrates the diversity that exists in human beings," Ellis adds.

    "The fact that five disparate instruments can create a huge sound world — beautiful at times, stark, aggressive, ethereal, playful, thoughtful — is an example that there's much to be learned from what can happen when seemingly disparate ideas converse, experiment and fuse as one."

    ___

    Houston Friends of Chamber Music presents the Imani Winds on Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at the Shepherd School of Music. Tickets start at $20 and can be purchased online or by calling 713-348-5400. Also on the program are Coleman's Tzigane, Ravel's Le Tombeau de Couperin, Husa's Five Poems, Mendelssohn's Scherzo from Midsummer Night's Dream and Shaheen's Dance Mediterranea.

    Houston Friends of Chamber Music presents the Imani Winds on Tuesday.

    imani winds
      
    Courtesy photo
    Houston Friends of Chamber Music presents the Imani Winds on Tuesday.
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    Movie Review

    New horror movie Sinners sings the blues with twin turn from Michael B. Jordan

    Alex Bentley
    Apr 18, 2025 | 12:30 pm
    Michael B. Jordan and Miles Caton in Sinners
    Photo courtesy of Warner Bros.
    Michael B. Jordan and Miles Caton in Sinners.

    Writer/director Ryan Coogler has become so well-known for his blockbuster films — Creed, Black Panther, and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever — that it’s easy to forget that he made his debut with the small-but-powerful 2013 film, Fruitvale Station. After more than a decade, he’s finally returning to original material with his latest film, Sinners.

    Each of Coogler’s films has either starred or featured Michael B. Jordan, and this one gives moviegoers a double dose, as Jordan plays twins who go by the nicknames of Smoke and Stack. Set in 1932, the two hustlers have recently returned from mysterious (and possibly criminal) work in Chicago to their hometown of Clarksdale, Mississippi to open a juke joint.

    They call upon a number of friends and family to help them with the venture, including cousin and guitar player Sammie Moore (Miles Caton), Smoke’s old girlfriend Annie (Wunmi Mosaku), piano player Delta Slim (Delroy Lindo), bouncer Cornbread (Omar Miller), and Chinese couple Bo and Grace Chow (Yao and Li Jun Li). Trouble is never far from the brothers, though, whether it’s Stack’s old girlfriend Mary (Hailee Steinfeld), the Ku Klux Klan leader who sold them the property for the juke joint, or something even more sinister.

    Coogler began his feature film career by confronting the issue of unjustified shootings of Black people by police. How Black people are perceived by society has been a part of everything he’s done since. By placing this film firmly in the middle of the Jim Crow era, he infuses the story with all manner of subtext, including the injustice of sharecropping and prevalent segregation in the South.

    Music, specifically Blues, plays a big part in the film as well. It’s championed through the emerging talent of Sammie and the veteran presence of Delta Slim, but it’s also a driving force for other parts of the plot. Sammie is decried by his pastor father for playing “the devil’s music,” while strange newcomer Remmick (Jack O’Connell) seems to appreciate it a little too much. A fantastically surreal scene at the juke joint turns into an entertaining and educational lesson on the history of Black music.

    It’s Remmick’s obsession that’s at the center of the final hour or so of the film, one in which all hell breaks loose. The manner of that hell is probably better enjoyed if it’s not spoiled here, but suffice it to say that Remmick has an evil to him that threatens to destroy Smoke and Stack’s venture before it even gets started. The horror aspect of the film is fine, but it winds up being the least interesting part of the story.

    Jordan can occasionally go over-the-top with his performances, and with him playing twins the threat of doing so was doubled. But he remains relatively restrained for most of the film, giving each twin their own unique spin. Caton, a rising R&B singer, makes his acting debut in the film and winds up stealing every scene he’s in. The rest of the cast complements each other well, with Mosaku and Steinfeld being standouts.

    Coogler has proven himself to be a savvy filmmaker in each of his previous four films, and with Sinners he combines the personal with crowd-pleasing elements to great effect. It features great music, an insightful story, and even some gory action for an experience you’re not likely to find anywhere else.

    ---

    Sinners opens in theaters on April 18.

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