Amirtha Kidambi & Luke Stewart - Zenith/Nadir

Avant Music News

Fri Jun 24 13:20:29 GMT 2022

A Closer Listen

Genres are a fact of contemporary musical life: they categorize, organize, and make manageable the sea of sounds that is the current musical landscape. Traditionally, artists are meant to find a genre or a style and stick with it — to experiment and reinvent themselves, yes, but only within the boundaries of a trademark sound or emotional register. 

On their recent project Zenith/Nadir, vocalist Amirtha Kidambi and bassist Luke Stewart try a different approach: rather than stylistic cohesion, they aim for sharp contrast. The two parts of Zenith/Nadir take radically different approaches to the same instrumentation. While the first side verges on harsh noise, the second side sees the duo taking a stripped back, acoustic approach. As the artists explain in the liner notes, the goal of this approach is to give voice to “extreme contrasts of high and low” and to reflect “a time where despair and possibility were inextricable.” 

Still, the two sides of Zenith/Nadir maintain a certain frantic yet dejected tone that makes the musical distinction between high and low difficult to discern. On the opening track, “Circulation”, pulsing, siren-like electronics and rumbling static compete for space with the howling, stuttered vocals of Kidambi, whose warbling vibrato and guttural screams, fed through a harsh, granular vocal effects pedal, demand the listener’s immediate attention. This trend continues through “Premonition” and “Postmonition”, two further explorations of distorted vocalizations and noise, and into “Exaltation”, perhaps the most unique track of the first side. With haunting, distant swoops, Kidambi lifts Stewart’s newly-distinguishable bass grumblings out of their muddy depths, creating some of the most compelling improvised textures of the album. Like a bridge between the album’s two sound-worlds, “Exaltation” features light touches of distortion, reverb, delay, and electronics, yet both bass and vocals are allowed to retain their distinct timbre. If there is a “high” of the record, it’s here.

Kidambi’s clicking, growling, screaming, and wailing lend Zenith/Nadir’s first side a visceral, ritualistic quality, yet much of its impact comes from the the heavy layering of distortion and effects which surround and augment her vocalizations. On the project’s second side, Kidambi and Stewart allow themselves to improvise in a more “pure” format, yet Kidambi remains committed to exploring a personal repertoire of vocal extended techniques which, although certainly unusual, gradually become repetitive. On “Relics”, Stewart’s bass playing finally comes to the fore, and is revealed to owe much to the angular, stuttering bass lines that characterize much of contemporary free jazz. On “Medium”, Stewart grabs his bow and the duo let loose a storm of acoustic noise, while the more down-tempo closing track “Telepathy” serves as the duo’s equivalent of a ballad, with Stewart’s plodding bass lines serving as the harmonic underpinning for Kidambi’s somber wails. Although the raw ebb and flow of the duo’s improvised counterpoint results in some compelling moments of synchronicity, the three acoustic tracks which comprise the album’s second side feel more like naked versions of their noisier counterparts than new emotional or stylistic excursions.

Perhaps the most honest genre title for Zenith/Nadir would be “improvised”: despite the change in hardware which is positioned as a defining feature of the album’s vision, the duo’s improvisations, which are of more or less the same character throughout the album, remain the album’s main musical material. The high and the low of “Zenith/Nadir”, then, happen only within certain bounds, leaving a fuller range of emotion to the improv sessions of another time and place. (Peter Tracy)

Mon Aug 01 00:01:08 GMT 2022

The Free Jazz Collective 0


By Keith Prosk

Amirtha Kidambi and Luke Stewart freely play seven environments for voice, bass, pedals, and amplifier on the 43’ Zenith/Nadir.

This is the first time they’ve released a recording together.

The context guides towards a motif of high and low. The words in the title carry not just a location but a quality, specifically of power and fortune. And the notes reveal the recording occurred in the months following George Floyd’s murder, in which intense despair and hope coexisted, for the truth of the matter and that it might finally provoke meaningful change. The sound reflects perhaps similarly polar things in several ways. In electric and acoustic sides. In the registers of this voice and bass. In peaks and troughs of electric current and pulsing resonances.

The fiery electric half hisses and pops like oil in a pan at its most simmering moments, maintaining through high volume, high density, or even just crackling pitch clarity a volatile presence. Bottle-rocket woos and EVP ululations accompany feedback freakouts. Maqamesque lines interlace over deep bass drones. Vocals choke alongside purring motor amplifier. Syncopation from distortion clipping for dystopian funk.

The subtler sounds of the acoustic side make clearer what was also in the first, that these two move together and complement each other in volume, density, and texture. But beyond the mellifluousness of its angelic chorus or plucked lyricism, melodic song or melancholy arco intonations, this half allows space for the sonorous resonance of bass’ big body and the rich harmonic depth of a full formant to interact.

I have a hunch this is the point. To not just present poles but the interaction or complementary action of them. From the complex feelings surrounding the context to the nearness of the words on the page in the title and the relativism of their meanings to the general principle of an improvising duo, the vibrancy of things is what is in between.

Zenith/Nadir by Amirtha Kidambi & Luke Stewart

Sat Sep 10 04:00:00 GMT 2022