Monday, 11 November 2013

Gaz Coombes' November shows: acoustics, reverb, space, sound and magic


Before music was put more fully in the hands of the people, 'new music' was commissioned for specific events, and hence fairly specific locations. The composer was either already working on the music in the location itself, or the location for the finished piece was in mind from the start - there was a relationship between music, and place. 
In the case of churches: music, emerging from chant, was part of a calling out to a higher force - a calling in song which would always receive its response enshrouded with reverb - as architecture and acoustics play with textures, frequencies and note elongation mysteriously, and seeming magically, in a special place.

Gaz has shaped the new arrangements of the songs, the new line-up, and the way we we will be playing them, with the locations of the four shows in mind. Salford St Philips, Glasgow Oran Mor, Leeds Holy Trinity, and London Union Chapel - each place we will find ourselves in has its own acoustic properties: an 'original shell' of sound quality unique to the location, which becomes activated when a sound event occurs. When you record sound, the acoustic properties of the space define the sound itself. The acoustic space of the Motown recording live room is as much part of every hit as the instruments and musicians themselves, (albeit with some compression). Different spaces create different perspectives of the same music or song. It is almost as if you are getting a different 'mix' in each place, as it reveals, highlights, or mutes certain aspects. This is simple science - certain sound waves or frequencies are favoured or cancelled out depending on the dimensions or building materials of the room - but it means that not only do you never really hear the same version twice, it is almost a new version in each place.

And it is the transcendental quality of natural reverb that often 'sets free' the music, the sound, in a way that you might not expect. To meet deadlines and to feed the industry as a matter of necessity: in the recording studio sound is kidnapped, bound and gagged, manipulated by processes, software, by machinery, warped until it fits the producer's or artist's directives, until it is 'the right sound'. Then when you take the music out live, you are suddenly at the mercy of the space itself. Some of the O2 academies that we played in on the last tour were awful: booming, square, soulless places - can you really 'hear' music here..? And what of the sense of occasion? Are we being directed by the sponsors of the venue, who are more interested in squeezing our 'consumer group' for as much cash as they can, or are we experiencing something unique with the artist in a place chosen by them?

There will be new songs, a new set up, and we will be using very new Allen & Heath desk complete with onstage monitors mixers. But even as we make an inadvertent nod to our nation's musical past, choosing these venues is not a 'going back', but instead it is a move to the future - a way to really 'hear' music again after years of saturation - as once again an 'event' in a 'place'.

You want to hear something new? Come see us - choose your location!