David Grubbs - Creep Mission
The Quietus
In his brilliant 2014 book Records Ruin The Landscape, David Grubbs writes of what he calls the "unfamiliar nexus" that linked pop, jazz and the experimental avant-garde in London in the late 1960s. Grubbs's own restless career, full of dualities, can be seen as charting its own unfamiliar nexus between disparate contexts and traditions. On one hand, the guitarist and improviser's music can be highly tuneful, even lush, as on the 17-minute 2011 single 'The Coxcomb'; on the other he is capable of something as avant-garde and minimal as the same year's 'Aux Noctambules', which is basically 15 minutes of a single chord. He has one foot in academia as a professor at Brooklyn College, yet emerged from the squall of the 1980s hardcore punk scene in Kentucky with the much-loved Squirrel Bait; then he went on to play with 1960s psych crusaders The Red Krayola. If you wanted to, you could describe him as highly postmodern. Either way, he is one of the most adventurous, uncompromising and thoughtful figures on the experimental side of American composition.
Because it is composition that Grubbs does. There aren't exactly many hooks on Creep Mission, his latest album and the follow-up to the equally engrossing Prismrose. That album featured vocals on just one track – Creep Mission features vocals on none. It's made up of seven instrumentals that wander, occasionally interact, always intrigue and require multiple – perhaps endless – listens.
Grubbs has again enlisted the similarly kaleidoscopic talent that is drummer Eli Keszler, whose jazz-founded contribution on the supreme title track finds a strange but affecting meeting point with Grubbs's scuzzy electric guitar. Perhaps surprisingly, given the edgy credentials of these two artists, there is a point in 'Creep Mission' where everything 'drops', as they say, and rhythm and noise take on a recharged, emphasised, tumbling momentum. It's among the more conventional moments of the record, but the track is one of breathtaking musicianship that might be bracketed with the more wistfully harmonious side of Grubbs's oeuvre, and is comparable with the drowsy lo-fi aesthetic of his 2004 album A Guess At The Riddle.
Creep Mission also prioritises harmony, melody and rhythm on the robust 'Slylight', while long-time Grubbs touchstone John Fahey is evoked on the acoustic numbers 'The Bonapartes of Baltimore' and 'Jack Dracula in a Bar'. But it is the strangeness of 'Jeremiadaic' and 'Return of the Creep' that is the heart of the album. 'Jeremiadaic' is a soundscape of heavy chimes, scampering percussion and electronic whirrings that continuously stop and start. To listen loudly on headphones is a bewildering experience, like a nightmarish sound bath. 'Return of the Creep' is a similar toying with noise. Together, these pieces reflect Grubbs's love of Cage and Stockhausen, while there is potentially also a comparison with some of the experiments in layering that Luciano Berio made in the 1960s with his sequenzas.
Records Ruin The Landscape is in part about John Cage and others' dislike of the tyranny of 'the recording' and its tendency to shackle avant-garde music to one moment in time, and how this evolving movement was particularly badly served by a recording industry which demanded limits on time and improvisation and could not accommodate important visual components. With 'Jeremiadaic' and 'Return of the Creep', Grubbs is returning to the question of how to present such expansive and apparently inaccessible sonic art on the traditional format that is an album (although it should be remembered he also releases uncategorisable things such as the aforementioned 'Aux Noctambules' and 2002's 60-minute collaboration project Act Five, Scene One).
And his method works. In presenting his more abstract and experimental pieces alongside familiar stylistic concoctions such as the title track and the raga-influenced closer 'The C in Certain', he elevated and illuminates them. They are made all the more exotic because everything around them is at least a bit recognisable – in this setting, sound art takes on renewed focus and assumes perimeters, making it all the more effective and memorable.
Creep Mission is probably not a record that is representative of David Grubbs, because no single release of his can be. It is, however, a typically playful and intellectually ambitious set – and is as good an entry into the world of Grubbs as any.
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Tue Oct 03 12:02:56 GMT 2017The Free Jazz Collective 90
By Daniel Böker
For the last three weeks I've been waiting for the new album from David Grubbs. I've been following his music for years now. Years ago, he had a duo called Gastr del Sol with Jim O'Rourke. This is where I discovered his unique way of playing the guitar. Mostly he uses a clean sound and somewhat catchy chords. But every time, his songs or tracks open up to something that is far beyond pop-music (which is why I think it is appropriate to write about his latest album here).
Listening to the new record I realize that the routes Jim O'Rourke and David Grubbs each took are very different but they both move between song and sound. Every few years Jim O'Rourke releases an album with perfectly composed pop songs. After that he continues to work in the field of improvised music with guys like Keiji Heino and Oren Ambarchi.
David Grubbs has also worked with different musicians over the years whom I have tried to follow. He worked with Mats Gustafsson, with Andrea Belfi, with different electronic sound artists and musicans such as f.s.blumm. Jim O'Rourke seems to separate his two approaches to music completely. David Grubbs puts tracks and songs on the same record, standing side by side.
Another difference between the two might be that Grubbs' way of playing the guitar was and is always recognizable. On some of his records the free often electronic based tracks stood side by side with the more guitar-based songs. David Grubbs often composed songs in which he actually sang. So there was (and maybe still is) a connection with "pop-structures".
On the last couple of releases though something changed. The connection between his catchy approach and the free or improvised tracks grew stronger.
I've been listening to the new record Creep Mission over and over again. All the ingredients are there: The typical Grubbs-guitar, electronics and some drumming, this time by Eli Keszler. Nate Wooley is adding some trumpet sounds on four of the seven cuts.
There are no vocals on this record which might be another indicator for the theory that David Grubbs is breaking down the barrier between the two different approaches he is following. And the outcome is outstanding. The album is not harsh or wild. The sound is very calm but if you are listening closely there are many different layers to it. Listening to it you are waiting for an outburst to release the tension that is there but it seldom comes. Grubbs holds this tension between song and sound, between calmness and outburst.
The first track 'slylight' is a very good example for this. It starts of with a few guitar picks that sound almost shy. There is this bass-tone he plays in so many of his pieces which is a sort of grounding to the open chords he usually adds. It takes more than a minute until Eli Keszler comes in with his drumming. But this also is rather calm, and it is a lot of cymbals. Three minutes in the sound changes as both the guitar and the drums intensify. Grubbs switches to a minimalist guitar pattern, the drums retreat to near silence, and Nate Wooley adds a breathy trumpet. So the course of this piece moves from very calm and kind of catchy (or at least easy to grab) to openness with a minimalistic tone to it. This is the tension I hear within Grubbs' music that I enjoy so much, and on this album he holds it at his best.
The second track 'Creep Mission' is also a very neat interplay between Keszler and Grubbs with Wooley entering after a few minutes again. The other tracks are different and still recognizable Grubbs. 'The Bonapartes of Baltimore' features only Grubbs and his guitar, 'Jeremiadiac' has a strong electronic woof (added by Jan St. Werner) to it, and so on.
The info on the homepage of DragCity describes the album as bi-composed/improvised. Though the credits on the CD go to Grubbs alone with the exception of 'Jeremiadiac'. The relation between composed and improvised is similar to the relation I tried to describe with the 'pop-structures' and the more open parts. All this tension makes this album a worthy listen.
Creep Mission by David Grubbs
Mon Oct 30 05:00:00 GMT 2017