Lawrence "Butch" Morris' conduction technique, a form of directed improvisation whereby musicians follow a variety of live hand signals by the conductor to shape and reshape both notated and non-notated music, has not taken on the revered status of
Ornette Coleman's harmolodic method of free improvisation, but has produced equally exciting music. In fact, mirroring the keen mix of composition and improvisation found in both
Anthony Braxton's and
John Zorn's work,
Morris' relatively structured music at times surpasses
Coleman's more free-form output. If his conceptions were amateurish,
Morris' "songs" would pale in comparison to any of the high-end work
Coleman has produced, but, as is the case with
Dust to Dust, the pieces come out sounding whole and refined, enhanced greatly by a variety of impromptu musical twists. Enlisting a stellar cast of 12 musicians including, among others, drummer
Andrew Cyrille, pianist
Myra Melford, harp player
Zeena Parkins, clarinetist
Marty Ehrlich, and keyboard player
Wayne Horvitz,
Morris works through a varied program of seven numbers, mixing electronic and acoustic elements to produce constantly shifting ambient soundscapes. The pieces range from the spacious and pastoral-sounding "Via Talciona" and "Othello A" (with the harp parts faintly evoking Japanese koto music) to the more tightly wound, atonal-minimalist "Bartok Comprovisation," which is insistently moved along by repetitive figures played on the piano and a variety of electronic instruments. For the duration of all these cuts, a multitude of sound fragments drift in and out as original themes progressively turn more diffuse, broken up by a variety of rhythmic shifts. Some sound contrivances don't come off, like a few awkward guitar bits on "Via Talciona," but considering the amount of improvisation going on here and the mostly seamless result, these indiscretions end up as attractive aberrations. Taking in Webern's 12-tone brevity, Far Eastern music, jazz,
Brian Eno's ambient work, and a load of his own compositional ideas,
Morris creates a sophisticated and satisfying mix on
Dust to Dust. ~ Stephen Cook