Personnel: Barry Guy (bass, director, composer); Maya Homburger (baroque violin); Agustí Fernández (piano); Percy Pursglove (trumpet); Mette Rasmussen, Mats Gustafsson, Liudas Mockūnas (saxophones); Torben Snekkestad (saxophone, reed trumpet); Rafał Mazur (e-bass); Paul Lytton and Ramón López (percussion)
Disc Five consists of the world premiere performance of the piece For to End Yet Again, which, unlike the other discs in this collection, were recorded at Radio Krakow. Barry Guy is the prime composer, though some passages are miniatures composed by György Kurtág. Unfortunately, I cannot weigh in which these specific ones are, but I can say they blend beautifully into the larger piece. Nothing sounds out of place, despite various constituent dynamic shifts.
For to End Yet Again begins with a lone quavering bass tone. Soon, Maya Homburger’s violin joins in and the two engage in a slow dance of call-and-response, with Homburger forging the melody and bass(es) relying on single drones and a few steady plucks. This sets a melancholic mood. Five minutes in, the rest of the ensemble trickles in, eventually breaking out into some more energetic group improvs (first around minute 15), those even these quickly dissolve in smaller configurations and eventually dilute into the slow, somber dialog between Guy, Homburger and, often enough, Mazur.
This persistent focus on strings really makes this piece. The band, comprising a formidable 11 members (and including some famously heavy blowers) primarily plays a supporting role, and, at many points, a silent role. They intervene to punctuate or fill out the sound, generally sparse small groupings. Only in a few instances, however, do they persist and steer the group from its spare, elegiac core. Around 50 minutes in and nearing the end, the ensemble reaches a point of opening when the band falls into a tone-to-long-tone volley. Almost organically, this collapses into a brief but emphatic free-blow fanfare, which dissolves into a latent hum as quickly as it had emerged.
Especially for those drawn to bigger units, this recording is absolutely worth checking out, as is the rest of Kraków 2018. (By Nick Ostrum)