
In Memoriam Alvin Lucier
This album is not just a homage ā itās a gentle act of remembrance. A way of tuning in to what Lucier showed us: that listening is an art in itself. A meditation on resonance, memory, and the quiet power of pure sound. Or to quote Alvin Lucier himself: āI guess Iām trying to help people hold shells up to their ears, and listen to the ocean again.ā The influence of Alvin Lucierās work on acoustic phenomena and the interplay between sound and space is difficult to overstate. His legacy continues to echo through the work of countless composers and sound artists today. Lucierās music is marked by a sense of childlike wonder and sonic simplicity - shifting our perception from what we hear to how we listen. At the heart of his compositions lies the sine wave: the purest, most elemental form of sound. Clarinetist Dries Tack pays tribute to this master of minimalism with an album centered around two works Lucier composed as intimate āIn Memoriamsā for friends. Both pieces explore a single, elegant idea: the interaction between an instrumental tone and a sine wave.Out of that interaction, ābeatingsā emerge ā a pulsating rhythm that accelerates or decelerates as the waves draw nearer or drift apart. Though built on the same concept, the two works are like mirrored reflections of one another: In Memoriam Jon Higgins, the sine wave glides in a slow glissando while the clarinet holds steady tones. In Memoriam Stuart Marshall, itās the clarinet that dances around a fixed sine wave
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$12.00In Memoriam Alvin Lucier
This album is not just a homage ā itās a gentle act of remembrance. A way of tuning in to what Lucier showed us: that listening is an art in itself. A meditation on resonance, memory, and the quiet power of pure sound. Or to quote Alvin Lucier himself: āI guess Iām trying to help people hold shells up to their ears, and listen to the ocean again.ā The influence of Alvin Lucierās work on acoustic phenomena and the interplay between sound and space is difficult to overstate. His legacy continues to echo through the work of countless composers and sound artists today. Lucierās music is marked by a sense of childlike wonder and sonic simplicity - shifting our perception from what we hear to how we listen. At the heart of his compositions lies the sine wave: the purest, most elemental form of sound. Clarinetist Dries Tack pays tribute to this master of minimalism with an album centered around two works Lucier composed as intimate āIn Memoriamsā for friends. Both pieces explore a single, elegant idea: the interaction between an instrumental tone and a sine wave.Out of that interaction, ābeatingsā emerge ā a pulsating rhythm that accelerates or decelerates as the waves draw nearer or drift apart. Though built on the same concept, the two works are like mirrored reflections of one another: In Memoriam Jon Higgins, the sine wave glides in a slow glissando while the clarinet holds steady tones. In Memoriam Stuart Marshall, itās the clarinet that dances around a fixed sine wave
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This album is not just a homage ā itās a gentle act of remembrance. A way of tuning in to what Lucier showed us: that listening is an art in itself. A meditation on resonance, memory, and the quiet power of pure sound. Or to quote Alvin Lucier himself: āI guess Iām trying to help people hold shells up to their ears, and listen to the ocean again.ā The influence of Alvin Lucierās work on acoustic phenomena and the interplay between sound and space is difficult to overstate. His legacy continues to echo through the work of countless composers and sound artists today. Lucierās music is marked by a sense of childlike wonder and sonic simplicity - shifting our perception from what we hear to how we listen. At the heart of his compositions lies the sine wave: the purest, most elemental form of sound. Clarinetist Dries Tack pays tribute to this master of minimalism with an album centered around two works Lucier composed as intimate āIn Memoriamsā for friends. Both pieces explore a single, elegant idea: the interaction between an instrumental tone and a sine wave.Out of that interaction, ābeatingsā emerge ā a pulsating rhythm that accelerates or decelerates as the waves draw nearer or drift apart. Though built on the same concept, the two works are like mirrored reflections of one another: In Memoriam Jon Higgins, the sine wave glides in a slow glissando while the clarinet holds steady tones. In Memoriam Stuart Marshall, itās the clarinet that dances around a fixed sine wave











