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Considering the dearth of good solo tuba recordings in recent years Carl Ludwig Hubsch would be in a field of his own even if he didn`t try to be different. DER ERSTE BERICHT ("the first report") acknowledges the inevitable novelty charge with a Cover of Kashmir - we don`t get many Led Zeppelin covers in these pages either but what persists is Hubsch`s contro, and, yes, poetry with an instrument that, for jazz, was long relegated to huffing in the end zone. Creating overtones by singing through his horn, he extends his instrument the way Albert Mangelsdorff stretched the trombone, while his drumming on the side of the instrument in M5 and Ross 780 adds a third party. Away from those extensions, he has astounding control of his instrument`s softer range, as the reverie of Groombridge 34 affirms so handsomely. Coda Magazine July 2000 |
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Liner Notes: "Narratio prima" is the title Nicolaus Copernicus chose for his first book, published in 1540: a "first report" ("erster Bericht") about an iconoclastic reinterpretation of cosmic order, replacing the traditional geocentric concept with the revolutionary model of a heliocentric universe. Why should a tuba player name his first solo record after Copernicus? And why should he select the titles of his improvisations according to the cosmic objects listed in the star catalogues compiled by the French astronomers Charles Messier ("M1", "M2" etc.) or Nicolas Louis de Lacaille?
"I know virtually nothing about astronomy", Carl Ludwig Hübsch claims (a
statement which is more a reflection of his innate modesty than a true
representation of the facts), and his music is certainly not "cosmic music"
in the obvious way such references to astronomy may imply. Neighter do his
pieces attempt to mirror cosmic proportions, nor are they based on the
visual structures of star charts (like John Cage's orchestra piece "Atlas
Eclipticalis" or his "Etudes Australes" for piano).
Knowing that Hübsch,
apart from his training as a brass player, also studied percussion and
singing, it may not come as a surprise that this virtuoso tuba player
should explore the percussive and vocal extensions of brass technique in
depth. In "Ross 780", Hübsch not only gradually transforms the tuba into a
complete drum kit, but also manages somehow to add a melodic line on top.
And "M5" is nothing less than a complete polyrhythmic drum choir - plus
vocals. Other pieces investigate the eerie soundworld of a reed-blown tuba
("M3") or the multiple possibilities of extended multiphonic techniques
(e.g. "Lacaille 8760", "Wolf 424"), and "M6" transcends the traditional
physical limits of wind instrument phrasing, utilizing eivculat breathing
to build continuous, richly modulated multiphonic layers. Following
Hübsch's journey through tuba space, one comprehends that the tuba is far
a filter and modulator for the entire panorama of human vocal expression.
In other words: Carl Ludwig Hübsch is not only a first-rate tuba player, but also world-class musician - as can be witnessed on this CD, or in Hübsch's playing in his own ensembles ("PostNoBills", "Planet Blow", "Massnahmen", among others) and his various sideman activities with the likes of Lester Bowie Henry Threadgill, Thomasz Stanko and the ICP ensemble. "Der erste Bericht": Welcome to tuba space, and welcome to the sound of music. Peter Niklas Wilson |
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