T BRAXTON Telekinesis

Record and Artist Details

Genre:

Orchestral

Label: Nonesuch

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 35

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: 7559 79096-7

7559 79096-7. T BRAXTON Telekinesis

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Telekinesis Tyondai Braxton, Composer
Andrew Cyr, Conductor
Brooklyn Youth Chorus
Metropolis Ensemble
The Crossing

Telekinesis is the ability to move or shape objects from a distance using mental power rather than physical means. It’s an appropriate term when describing Tyondai Braxton’s compositional approach.

Braxton’s interest in sonic shapeshifting evolved during his time with visceral math rock band Battles, whose song structures often developed organically out of short, repeating patterns and figures. Since then the New York composer has absorbed the influence of 20th-century avant-garde figures such as Varèse, Xenakis, Stockhausen and Feldman while continuing to draw on the power, propulsion and drive of experimental jazz (his father is legendary saxophonist Anthony Braxton), minimalism and rock, to produce a unique form of what he terms ‘generative music’. Telekinesis is the most compelling illustration to date of this idea.

Premiered at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in April 2018 with the BBC Singers and BBC Concert Orchestra but performed on this recording by the Metropolis Ensemble under Andrew Cyr, alongside Brooklyn Youth Chorus and chamber choir The Crossing, the musical topography of this large-scale, 35-minute work in four movements for large orchestra, electronics and choir often appears impenetrable, alien and forbidding. Entering its sound world, one feels like an explorer discovering a planet located at the far reaches of a distant galaxy. It seems fitting that the inspiration behind the work was Braxton’s passion for science fiction and Japanese cyberpunk comic-book serialisations.

The first movement, ‘Overshare’, opens with large terraced sonic blocks catapulted through musical space in slow motion, like immense planetary matter. These gestures eventually fragment and dissipate, leading the listener to the more pointillistic, fractured and grid-like design of the second movement, ‘Wavefolder’. The third, ‘Floating Lake’, makes effective use of massed wordless voices not unlike Ligeti’s choral writing to impart a barren, wind-bitten, lunar-like landscape, while the urgent pulse and creeping intensity of the final movement, ‘Overgrowth’, harnesses the entire dynamic force and range of the 87-piece orchestra to offer a dramatic conclusion to a journey that is at once exhilarating, terrifying and alienating.

Debussy once asked whether it was not the composer’s duty ‘to find a symphonic means to express our time’ – one that captured the progress and daring of the 20th century. In Telekinesis we are offered a glimpse of what that might become in the 21st.

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