Hailed by
The New York Times as “a drummer around whom a cult of admiration has formed,”
Mark Guiliana brings the same adventurous spirit, eclectic palette and gift for
spontaneous invention to a staggering range of styles. Equally virtuosic
playing acoustic jazz, boundary-stretching electronic music, or next-level
rock, he’s become a key collaborator with such original sonic thinkers as Brad
Mehldau, Meshell Ndegeocello, Donny McCaslin, Matisyahu, and the late, great
David Bowie.
Guiliana’s
forward-leaping BEAT MUSIC is more than a band – it’s a community. Over the
last decade the drummer has gathered around him a family of like-minded artists
who share a passion for the limitless possibilities of electronic music
combined with an in-the-moment creativity rooted in jazz improvisation. On
April 12, Motéma Music will release Guiliana’s third plunge into that vast
musical ocean, the emphatically titled BEAT MUSIC! BEAT MUSIC! BEAT MUSIC!
(available now for pre-order). The in-your-face exclamation of that title is no
accident; Guiliana’s third recording with his BEAT MUSIC cohort is a bold and
vigorous exploration of window-rattling grooves, cinematic imagery, ecstatic
atmospheres and a captivating tapestry of textures and voices.
To realize
his ambitious vision for the project, Guiliana has enlisted a host of
collaborators who’ve become part of the BEAT MUSIC community over the years,
including such genre-defying artists as bassists Chris Morrissey, Stu Brooks,
Jonathan Maron, and Tim Lefebvre; keyboardists Jason Lindner, BIGYUKI, and Jeff
Babko; electronicists Troy Zeigler and Steve Wall; and spoken word samples from
longtime collaborators Cole Whittle and Jeff Taylor, as well as Guiliana’s
wife, singer Gretchen Parlato (along with his son, Marley).
“I feel very
lucky to have people that I genuinely consider to be my favorite musicians as
part of the BEAT MUSIC family,” Guiliana says. “It was important for me to have
all of those collaborators represented on this record, to reap the rewards of
the hundreds of hours of gigs we’ve spent improvising and discovering
together.”
BEAT MUSIC!
BEAT MUSIC! BEAT MUSIC! doesn’t feature improvisation in the traditional sense
that Guiliana’s previous release, the acoustic quartet album Jersey, did. The
music was composed entirely by Guiliana, albeit drawn from his extensive
interactions with each of these musicians. But each of his collaborators brings
a distinctive voice and attitude to the mix, so that even when playing a
thoroughly written line they imbue each note with an individual essence.
“Even when
I’m asking the musicians in BEAT MUSIC to play a part, I’m still very much
asking them to play it the way they play,” Guiliana explains. “This music is
mostly through-composed, but there’s microscopic improvising in every moment.
In each note there are sonic choices to be made about articulation, duration of
notes, where to leave space, and myriad aspects like that. Those things might
not be considered ‘improvising’ in a jazz sense, but in this genre those
decisions make a world of difference. No decision I could make would be better
than what these guys choose to do; they really bring the music to life.”
Guiliana
took a circuitous route to electronic music. He initially came to the drums via
the grunge-dominated music of his teenage years: Nirvana, Pearl Jam, and
Soundgarden (whose drummer, Matt Cameron, would later enlist Guiliana for his
own solo project). As he began to study the instrument, he was introduced to
jazz in high school and was captivated by the music’s complexity, nuances and
diversity. Leaving the relative isolation of his suburban New Jersey home to
find a wealth of like-minded acquaintances at William Paterson University, he
heard Feed Me Weird Things, the debut album by UK electronica pioneer
Squarepusher, for the first time. That opened up a whole new world of sonic
possibilities for Guiliana, who began to pursue electronic music in parallel
with jazz.
No matter
the focus of a particular album or project, Guiliana’s music blends those three
major influences in varying balances: the raw power and intensity of hard rock;
the spiritual questing of John Coltrane and the aggressive musical curiosity of
Miles Davis; the brain-twisting manipulations and cut-up hybridizations of
Squarepusher and Aphex Twin.
Those
diverse influences have converged in different ways throughout Guiliana’s
career. On one end of the spectrum is his Jazz Quartet and on the opposite is
BEAT MUSIC, with which he’s recorded twice before – on a self-titled 2012 EP as
well as the 2014 album The Los Angeles Improvisations – and the
similarly-inclined outings A Form of Truth (2013) and My Life Starts Now
(2014).
In between
are a multitude of combinations, from the electro-acoustic duo Mehliana with
Brad Mehldau to the increasingly electronic-influenced work of the Donny
McCaslin Quartet, which also features Lindner and Lefebvre. Those four players,
three of whom are featured on this album, also became the core band for David
Bowie’s acclaimed final release, Blackstar. The chameleonic rock icon
specifically cited BEAT MUSIC’s Los Angeles Improvisations as a guidepost for
that album’s enrapturing sound.
“Being in
the same room as David and watching him realize his vision was huge for me,”
Guiliana says. “He balanced knowing from the outset what he truly wanted to do
with being extremely open and creating a very democratic environment. Those are
seemingly contradictory qualities, but he so beautifully danced between the
two, attacking every moment in the music with great spirit and love, making the
art that he believed in. I really try to carry that with me.”
BEAT MUSIC!
BEAT MUSIC! BEAT MUSIC! does that vividly, from the implacable, steamrolling
pulse of opener “GIRL” through the retro sheen of “HOME” straight to the
glistening reggae grooves of finale “STREAM.” The dub mesmerism of “BUD”
deepens its already mysterious layers with a half-heard, one-sided phone
message, while the insistent “BULLET” features a Japanese voice seeming to echo
through a PA system. The dance-y “ROAST” undergirds a forceful diatribe,
followed by the bouncy zigs and zags of “HUMAN.”
While most
of the spoken word elements of the album are used as almost instrumental
elements, introducing unpredictable textures and intriguing ambiguities into
the songs, many of the pieces are also profoundly personal. “BLOOM” offers an
intimate glimpse into Guiliana’s family life, with a tender moment between his
wife and son. “BONES,” meanwhile, features the bandleader himself reciting a
poem inspired by the recent death of his mother.
That meld of
the communal and the personal is just one of many distinctive fusions that make
BEAT MUSIC! BEAT MUSIC! BEAT MUSIC! the striking and singular album that it is
– including blends of the electronic and acoustic, the composed and
spontaneous, and deeply-rooted inspirations channeled into perceptive,
forward-looking modern invention.
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