Joel Harrison, Wolfgang Muthspiel Works for Guitar Showcased by Tribeca New Music
It’s good to see a synergistic working relationship between Tribeca New Music and Joel Harrison’s Alternative Guitar Summit. The August 16 “Mastery in Motion” concert marked the debut co-production of the two presenters in a new venue, the beautiful acoustic realm of Christ & St. Stephen’s Church on West 69th Street, New York. It also marked the U.S. premiere of Austrian guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel’s “Etudes/Quietudes,” released as an album and book of sheet music in 2024. The audience included numerous six-string luminaries in attendance.
The second half of the concert was a celebration of Harrison’s latest from AGS Recordings, Guitar Talk Vol. 2: A Double Album of Jazz & Classical Duos. The album’s latter portion finds Fareed Haque and Dan Lippel playing compositions written by Harrison during the pandemic, when he had time to explore his first instrument, classical guitar. In between the two longer sets, Harrison himself took the stage on electric in duo with Haque, playing two more of his pieces, which combined strong forms with open improvisation.
Muthspiel is one of ECM’s signature artists of the past decade-plus. The dozen pieces he performed were revelatory, both for his astonishing facility on nylon-string acoustic and the variety of moods and soundscapes he generated, all seemingly from memory (he occasionally looked down to a single sheet of paper that had a few introductory bars for each composition). The performance was only 33 minutes but felt like a lifetime of musical narrative.
The etudes incorporated explosive flourishes or the juxtaposition of speedy fingerstyle figures and slower single-note melody lines. One exuded ECM-like clarity while another detoured into gruff, rhythmic chord progressions. Muthspiel explored both acoustic harmonics and electronic effects, using the latter to reverse a loop while adding a counterline — the most surreal and compelling moment of the evening. The density moved from whisper to whirlwind but never at the expense of absolutely perfect articulation. That, in combination with the church’s hushed sonic profile, made it feel like Manfred Eicher was hovering overhead.
Haque, a staple of the Chicago scene, was effusive in partnership with Harrison. “It Falls on You” and “Song For Carla Bley” (the latter a duet with Muthspiel on Guitar Talk Vol. 2) moved from the ether of space to gentle summer precipitation with an occasional lightning flash.
Lippel’s use of a lift, and Haque a more traditional footstool, showed how classical guitar is hardly a monolith. The first piece, a three-part dedication to Harrison’s late cousin, was in turns placid, spritely and dense, yet maintaining an airiness no matter how complex the harmony and counterpoint. Of the five pieces, the most memorable were “Saturday Night in Udaipar,” introduced by Haque as incorporating a bluesy raga, highly exuberant in its off-kilteredness and earthiness mixed with mysticism; and the closing “Pegasus,” evoking its mythical namesake with forceful galloping and then leaps into the firmament, acoustic fusion worthy of Mount Olympus. JT