ABOUT ARE SPIRITS WHAT I HEAR?
Agustí Martínez: Alto saxophone. Recorded live, no overdubs, 2007.
Etude Records is proud to present the first release by composer Agustí Martínez,born 1960 in Barcelona, this is the first ever released record of some of
his minimal,graphic scores and homemade compositions for alto saxophone.
A figure in the underground avant guarde of Barcelona, "Are Spirits what I hear?"is an unique oportunity to hear the ghosts inside this amazing composer.
"Are spirits what I hear" has been recently included in the book "Best Musicians, Singers, Albums and Entertainment Personalities of the 19th, 20th and 21st
Centuries", Volume V of World Who's Who in Jazz, Cabaret, Music and Entertainment. Published by the Federation of American Musicians, Singers and
Performing Artists (FAMSPA.)
REVIEWS
I really don’t know what Agusti Martinez hears, but for me, spirits are not exactly my first association with this album. Except maybe, if they come
in the context of being “in good spirits” or something of the like, which, considering the opaque and apparitional character of the black and white booklet,
does however not seem to be the issue here. And still, dispite its somewhat bleak aesthetics, this is a warm collection of multicoloured solo compositions
for Alto Saxophone. On my mind’s eye, the summer’s what I see.It is obvious that some people will have initial reservations about the concept of this disc.
Admittedly, listening to one man play his instrument for 50 minutes may at first seem like a pretty hard job. But then again, Martinez plays it like noone else.
Using the entire body of his Sax, he produces hissings, heavy breathings, stortorous noises, airy warblers, beatings and knockings, energetic one-tone
meditations, abrupt fountains of tones and rapid melodic lines, walls of sound and open spaces and even throws in the occasional shout. As he points
out himself, “Do I hear...” is not interested in virtuoso fingerpickings, but cares more for creating polyphonics made up of concrete and indeterminate
elements – and truly, in the spacey and stretched-out middle section of the work, the original (or rather: well-known) timbral qualities of the Saxophone
get lost in wave upon wave of fragmented clicks and rhythmic emissions of air. It is almost as if the Catalan composer has his mind set on deconstructing
his instrument into microscopic parts, using each building block as a new source of aural material. But right before everything falls apart, he picks up on
the intense opening and delivers some of the most sharp-edged and precipitiously majestic horn blows, dividing the sea like a giant oceanliner on a
cloudless sky. The first release by Etude Records, Mike Hansen’s “At Every Point” was well-constructed and intruigingly asbtract, but with this
fire-breathing set of pure electricity they distinguish themselves as one of the new labels to watch.Martinez prefers the heat and the sweat above
sugar-coated sweetness, but at the very end, he dives into a dreamy lullaby, a yearning and longing lyrical fantasy of a mere fifty second, which brings
the album to a sensous close. I could listen to this man play forever
-Tobias Fisher (Tokafi)
Trabajo que ejemplifica el íntimo y acerado diálogo entre músico e instrumento que promulga Etude Records. Como ya hiciera Anthony Braxton en
For alto y luego John Zorn en Locus solus, Agustí Martínez se enfrenta a todas la posibilidades expresivas del saxo alto desde un planteamiento,
como él mismo reconoce, que está orientado hacia la “emisión del sonido” antes que al virtuosismo. Elude así Martínez toda impostación o intención
artificiosa al penetrar en la “experiencia personal que producen en la boca todos esos fenómenos sonoros”. Usando las más diversas técnicas (slap,
multifónicos, respiración circular), creando figuras imposibles que recurren a los ataques, a los pianísimos y a los sobreagudos, el músico indaga en
la naturaleza poliédrica del sonido a través de una herramienta contemporánea que es deudora tanto del jazz más elusivo de Roscoe Mitchell o el
cuarteto Rava como del ascetismo de Scelsi (la multiplicidad de una nota) o la fisicidad espectral de Sciarrino (la desfiguración en el roce armónico).
¿Parecen espíritus lo que escuchamos si el sonido sale desde nuestro interior?
-Jesus Gonzalo (revistamu.com)
Apesar de ter nascido em 1960 e de ter um passado considerável na música (fez parte de várias bandas de jazz), Are Spirits What I Hear? é o
disco de estreia do músico avant-garde Agustí Martinez, catalão de nascença. A editora Etude, de Barcelona, não exitou sequer em lançer mais um
OVNI para o panorama musical espanhol. Are Spirits What I Hear? é um conjunto de composições para o saxofone alto sem mais convidados, sem
mais instrumentos, sem sequer a utilização de overdubs. São dez paisagens monocromáticas mas provocadoras de sensações distintas. O saxofone
é o maior e único personagem num disco onde Agustí Martínez aproveita para explorar diferentes técnicas e abordagens ao instrumento. O catalão
explora também abordagens emocionais distintas: do calmo ao explosivo, do sereno ao tenso, do belo ao feio pode ser apenas um segundo. Há de
facto ruídos que não associaríamos ao saxofone utilizado de forma habitual (o tema “Are Spirits What I Hear?” é exemplo disso), mas tudo parece
surgir da relação com o saxofone, da sua livre exploração. É ele o centro das atenções. É ele que guia este disco pela escuridão e, em ultima instância,
pela solidão.
-Andre Gomes (Bodyspace)