The Guardian (USA)

Snowdrops: Volutes review – musical studies from the edge of humanity

- John Lewis

While working as a radio operator during the first world war, Maurice Martenot became fascinated by the pure sine waves that were accidental­ly produced by radio oscillator­s – the stray noises that he heard when trying to find a signal. Martenot, a trained cellist, researched ways of manipulati­ng these faulty signals and, after the war, started building his own instrument. By 1928 he had created the ondes Martenot, a bizarre proto-synth where the pitch of several radio oscillator­s is controlled by moving the right hand over an electrical ribbon, while the timbre is manipulate­d by operating a touchsensi­tive “lozenge” with the left hand. The instrument’s ghostly, frictionle­ss sound proved popular with a host of composers, including Messiaen, Boulez, Varèse and – latterly – Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood, as well as becoming a fixture of horror-movie soundtrack­s.

Strasbourg-based pianist Christine Ott is one of the world’s foremost exponents of this curious instrument. After playing it in Yann Tiersen’s band for a while, she recently released Chimères, a dark and haunting album of electronic­a recorded using multi-tracked ondes Martenots. Snowdrops is her electroaco­ustic duo with Mathieu Gabry, and their latest album Volutes puts Ott’s ondes alongside violin, cello, piano, Mellotron and the viola of Anne Irène-Kempf.

What’s amazing is how different Ott makes the ondes sound on each track. On Ultraviole­t it chirrups like a boy soprano over an astral feast of Mellotron flutes and sighing viola; on Trapezian Fields it burbles over gentle piano and strings. On Comma (a track from Chimères that is interprete­d twice here) the ondes shivers over lavish string voicings; on the 13-minute epic Odysseus it provides a guttural, primeval growl that drags us into a terrifying underworld. It’s a transgress­ive instrument that occupies an uncanny sonic valley – not quite as obviously artificial as a synth, not quite human-sounding, but uniquely and unsettling­ly alien.

Volutes is released on 16 October on Injazero Records.

Also out this month

After homages to Reich, Bach and Xenakis, Tribute to Miyoshi (Linn) sees percussion­ist Kuniko Kato performing a series of complex marimba works by the Japanese composer Akira Miyoshi – abstract, Bartókian little puzzles that lurch between delicacy and violence. The centrepiec­e is his 1969 concerto, a 15-minute epic where the Scottish Ensemble’s growling, unresolved harmonies are set against a highly minimalist marimba workout.

The Killing of Eugene Peeps (Gearbox Records) is an imaginary soundtrack written by Bastien Keb, one that recalls, variously, the proto-triphop of Serge Gainsbourg and Jean-Claude Vannier, the rumbling scores of Bernard Herrmann and the cinematic swagger of Barry Adamson.

Do keep an eye on the Bandcamp page of the Polish-born, Melbourneb­ased composer Katarzyna Wiktorski, where you’ll find some superb chamber music recorded under lockdown. There are precise, fin de siècle string arrangemen­ts that leave room for florid piano and alto sax improvisat­ions; there are Nyman-esque piano miniatures; and remotely recorded trios whose delightful­ly hesitant interactio­ns seem to make sense of post-Covid isolation.

 ?? Photograph: Benoit Lesieux ?? A uniquely alien sound ... Snowdrops: Christine Ott and Mathieu Gabry.
Photograph: Benoit Lesieux A uniquely alien sound ... Snowdrops: Christine Ott and Mathieu Gabry.

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