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Bike northward up the road a spell, northwest of Northwest Portland, a few miles past historic St. Johns and the historic St. Johns bridge, past the historic Linnton speed trap, and you’ll
come to historic Wappatoo Island in the wobbly waters where the Willamette exhausts itself into the Columbia and starts its home stretch seaward. There, on what you no doubt think of as
“that island with the nude beach and the pumpkin patches,” you’ll find Topaz Farm: 130 acres of former Multnomah land where you can cut your own flowers, pick your own berries, and listen to
live music outside. Yes, dear reader–as you already know, Live Music Is Back, and this Sunday you can catch up with Third Angle New Music as they squeeze an entire season’s worth of
rescheduled chamber music concerts into a single hot afternoon (well, hopefully not too hot). Outdoor venues are, of course, the norm now, and there’s nothing odd about live music on Sauvie
Island. It’s especially not unusual for 3A, who have been known to take their shows onto rooftops and into basements, and whose usual concert hall is a dance studio in the back of a real
estate office. The aptly-named Fresh Air Fest (which hopefully has you hearing Terry Gross in your mind’s ear) consists of three hour-long concerts and two massive intermissions–ideal for
picknicking, refreshing your food and drug supplies, or just generally moseying around mulling over the music. And the music will be grand, all “new” stuff, in the sense that the stodgiest,
oldest dinosaur across three programs is a bit of Takemitsu from 1992. And the newest stuff is very new indeed, because it just wouldn’t be a 3A concert without a world premiere. We’ve
spilled enough digital ink over newly-local composer Andy Akiho, who dominates the 3:30 set _Sticking Power_ with fellow percussionist Ian Rosenbaum; the duo will mostly be playing Akiho’s
earlyish synesthesiac pieces, collected on Akiho’s awesome first album _NO one to kNOW one_. If you know who Akiho is, you already have your picnic basket packed for Sunday. If you
don’t…well, catch yourself up right here–and then pack that basket. There–since you’re going anyways, now the other two concerts are pure gravy. The third features another
percussionist/composer, Chris Whyte, performing a set with the lovely, obvious, perfect name _The Whyte Album_. That one happens at 7 p.m., several hours before dark, and will feature
cellist Valdine Mishkin (on Akiho’s _21_) and flutist Sarah “Not Bossy Just The Boss” Tiedemann (on Andrew Rodriguez’s _re:Write_). The big showcase for _percussionist_ Whyte is Christopher
Cerrone’s impossibly weird _Memory Palace_, but the real showcase is Whyte as composer–that world premiere I mentioned earlier is one of his, a new work with the winey title _A Cold
Stability_. Between those two dudely percussion sets, at the ridiculous time of quarter-past-five, it’s all _Technicolor_ with the Debussy-trio of Tiedemann, violist Wendy Richman, and
harpist Sophie Baird-Daniel. This set will no doubt be the riskiest, musically speaking, which means it will likely also be the most rewarding. Two composers stand out on what looks to be an
excellent program. You probably remember local composer Yuan-Chen Li from her particularly memorable Chamber Music Northwest performance of _Shore, Island, Chelonia_ a few summers back; she
composed one of 3A’s Soundwalks, and this weekend you can hear her trio _The Source_. The set opens and closes with two aughts-era compositions by Angélica Negrón: _Drawings for Meyoko_ and
the title-bestowing _Technicolor. _Check out Negron’s “vegetable synth,” which surely won’t be on display at Topaz Farm but perhaps should be. Sponsor THE LONG DAY’S JOURNEY OUT OF NIGHT As
we move out of the extended quarantine and into the sunshine of a long summer, I am reminded not only of the 3A show that got me through _last_ summer (read about that here), but also of a
3A concert I haven’t told you about yet, a video concert you probably missed last December, the mid-winter glow of _The Place We Began_. When I first heard about that one, I thought it
sounded like bullshit–why would I want to watch John Luther Adams on a screen? Especially when that particular composer is: 1) so excruciatingly “natural” and 2) my own personal Public Enemy
Number One of contemporary classical music. Naturally I had to watch it (journalists are obliged to be contrary, not least with themselves)–and, naturally, it was not Bullshit but The Shit.
“What a lovely surprise,” I thought as the dark, weepy strains of JLA’s new, 3A-commissioned string quartet _Noctilucent_ came trickling out of crappy TV speakers and spooked around my
living room, seeping blissfully over rugs and blankets, scaring the paperbacks into hushed submission. That long winter was pretty hard on this particular music writer, and for some reason
the strongest injection of hope I received that season was the shocking discovery that JLA could write music for a moody Elfmaniacal dope like myself. The next day–shortly before noon on
December 4th, a month after someone dropped a house on Orange Julius–I called up the Third Angle folks, Sarah T. and Lisa V., and we chatted for an hour or so, catching up and reading tarot
cards and talking music and quarantine and The Weird Times. _Tiedemann and Volle’s answers have been condensed and edited for clarity and flow_, with WORKING ON THE HYGGE SARAH TIEDEMANN,
THIRD ANGLE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR: I do a lot of teaching–I teach at PSU and Lewis & Clark, and I have private students–and teaching online is not my favorite thing. I miss actually being
able to work with my students in person; that has felt like quite a loss. However, I have some new students that started lessons because of all this, and it’s rewarding to be able to give
them a place to have a musical connection when they can’t be in band and such. Sponsor I miss playing with people. It’s just not the same going on an app and recording your track and sending
it to someone else. I’ve shied away from performing into software and into my iPad, because I just don’t want to do versions of what I normally do and have it not feel the same. I’m mostly
playing along with YouTube videos for fun, like some Music Minus One. I got rear-ended driving a couple months ago, so I’m playing in very short snippets, and mostly play the Franck Sonata
over and over again, which is obviously not new music. At the end of my senior year of college, a friend passed away unexpectedly, and I went into the practice rooms right after I found out
and I played the Franck Sonata. After all these years, it’s still my coping mechanism. I’m also listening to a lot of different music putting together the Spotify playlists for Third Angle
this summer. That’s been great—it gave me a reason to dig into mix tapes like I hadn’t since high school. I’m trying to make space for myself to do whatever feels right in the moment. I know
I’m eating a lot, and I just don’t care. I know I haven’t been jogging, and I just don’t care. I’ve been letting myself watch some extra Netflix and cooking good food. We have to do
whatever we have to do to keep our serotonin up, so this year is just whatever it’s going to be and we’ll pop back into reality when it’s over. And it’s nice to have a creative outlet where
we’re deep into brainstorming, even if we’re working around what’s going on. It helps take your mind out of it in a certain way. LISA VOLLE, THIRD ANGLE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR: I’m listening to
a ton of stuff, but I’m watching very little. I’m not enjoying the sitting-live-steaming. Even though it’s nice to have access to around-the-world opportunities by some of our great friends
and collaborators, personally, it’s just not the right platform for me. I don’t want any more screen time than I’m getting. So I get up very early, get out of my house and do an outdoor
workout or go on a run or a bike ride almost every day, and I usually do that again at some point later in the day. Moving my body is super helpful. Then I come back and start my day. The
privilege to be able to do that isn’t lost on me, especially because we’re surrounded by great outlets. We’re in December and we’re able to play tennis outdoors safely and ski, garden. I got
400 bulbs planted last week. Lots of privilege, but also giving space to what Sarah’s mentioning: If we need to take time, we take time. Cook nine meals if you want. I danced around my
house; I had the best dance party of my life after Biden won. That was a fun day–we had forgotten what real joy looks like. It’s a gorgeous day, the sun’s out. We’re lucky to be working for
Third Angle and working in the new music field, and just giving space for all that and other things that bring us joy. TIEDEMANN: I lived in Stockholm for a year and came up with coping
mechanisms at the time, with four hours of dusk for daytime. I’m kind of back in my Sweden mindset. I’ve been working on the hygge. I’ve gotten used to holing up and being cozy. THE A-HA
MOMENT TIEDEMANN: In grad school at New England Conservatory, I played with a group called the Callithumpian Consort that was led by Steve Drury, an amazing contemporary pianist. We did a
semi-staged performance of the Peter Maxwell Davies piece, _Miss Donnithorne’s Maggot_. A maggot apparently is a rant and not just an animal that crawls out of half-rotten food, although
it’s a double entendre, because it’s basically the Miss Havisham character from _Great Expectations_, but it’s based on a real-life woman from Australia who was left on her wedding day and
went all _Grey Gardens _about it and locked herself up. She went around in her wedding dress with a wedding cake rotting on the table for years and years. Sponsor So we each dressed up as a
different part of her psyche–the female characters did, and the male ensemble members were running around the back of the hall throwing the doors open and interjecting words. And right
before that the group, without me, had also done the Davies _Eight Songs for a Mad King _with a singer from NEC, Brian Church. He went full method-acting madness for a few weeks, and none of
us knew what was going to happen. He stumbled into the hall looking as if he were homeless, with a plastic grocery bag stuck on his foot, and he was all up in the audience freaking
everybody out. Those two pieces were the most spectacular thing I’d ever seen. I remember being onstage mid-_Maggot, _and I had a whip tucked into my boots or something, and thinking, “This
is it. This is what I’m doing, it’s not going to get any better than this. I thought I wanted an orchestra job. Nope. This is what I do now.” VOLLE: Mine is so PG compared to yours. Thank
you for that visual! I’m a recovering horn player–that probably paints a different picture. I love the intimacy of chamber music so much, and I remember being really touched by the Brahms
_Horn Trio_ growing up, and realizing that I never wanted to sit in an orchestra but always wanted to be in an intimate space listening and creating. I also love new experiences probably
more than anything in the world, and they’re hard to come by the older you get. Music, especially new music, presents an opportunity to have them. I remember driving through Montana and
listening to _Music for Eighteen Musicians_–the first time I’d ever heard it. I’ve been really lucky to hear so many world premieres. I love the taste of something new, a new activity,
seeing something new, being on the side of a mountain in crampons. I’m a big adventure-seeker, and I think that translates well to Third Angle. We constantly are asking people to move
forward on the edge of their seat and experience the unexpected. And I actually love when people don’t like everything in a show — there’s interesting dialogue. I never want to hear from an
audience member, “Yeah, it was fine.” Then we haven’t done our job. I love hearing the critique, I love hearing the dialogue, and I like when people are pushed outside their comfort zone.
LISTENING FOR PLEASURE TIEDEMANN: I just did my little Spotify 2020 top five and my number one song was Brandi Carlile’s “The Joke.” I love Brandi Carlile. So I listened to that, and I
really love the Icelandic band Sigur Rós. I grew up in Hillsboro, and at the end of high school, I worked in a little music store downtown called Music Village with a guitarist and a
drummer. They got me listening to Primus and Captain Beefheart, and I still listen to that. As far as classical music, I’ve been on a Ligeti kick, obviously Franck, John Luther Adams. Some
of my favorite playlists are the ones that are the weirdest, kind of a mish-mash. VOLLE: Mine is so mood-dependent. I’m obsessed with Mountain Man. It’s kinda like Dixie Chicks but way
better. But then I got into listening to a couple bands from South Africa in the last couple weeks. I’m all over the map. I don’t have even a genre I’m drawn to, I’m very eclectic. Sponsor
TIEDEMANN: My problem, too, is that I just really like my job, so I find it relaxing to listen to music we could do later. It’s helping to get me out of where I am now to imagine concerts in
the future, so I don’t want to say exactly what that is and spoil the surprise. I would say two-thirds of my music listening is repertoire like that, and it ends up on lists of things that
would be cool for us to do. THE LIGHT OF MID-WINTER DARKNESS: COMMISSIONING JLA’S _NOCTILUCENT_ TIEDEMANN: When the concert initially was programmed, obviously we didn’t realize a number of
things were going to happen in the world. The idea was, we’re going to have an election, people are going to be stressed out, and there’s obviously a schism within the community, so we want
a chance to have a peaceful moment, a time when politics isn’t on anyone’s minds. And it was supposed to be the Thursday right before the election. Then came the pandemic, and protests, and
wildfires. And in the middle of all that, John Luther Adams came to us because he knew we were going to be doing a concert of his works, and he said, “I’m working on this string quartet, and
I’d love to work with Third Angle on it.” So we made it all happen; we have a generous donor, Betsy Russell, who agreed to underwrite the commission. We were initially going to include _The
Place We Began _as the first piece on the concert, as a sort of pre-concert where people could wander and sit and have some meditative time. That translated into video in a really cool way.
Our video production company, Straw to Gold, really nailed it. We did a few of our Wine Wednesdays online as live streams early in the pandemic, but we don’t want to rely on doing what we
would do in the concert hall and popping it online without re-tailoring everything to the new medium. So that piece was a particular advantage, and the concert ended up really making good
sense online. We could’ve had a projector with a screen in live performance, but that piece was actually _better_ online. I also loved that we were able to use the space in different ways
and have each piece show the venue in a different way. VOLLE: John was actually scheduled to be in Portland for our show at the end of October, when we were going to be in person. When we
realized that wasn’t going to happen, that initiated the whole, “If I can’t come, would you like to commission the string quartet?” process. We’ve had such a long relationship with him–we’ve
been with him almost since the beginning of his career. We did _Earth and the Great Weather_ at Lewis & Clark in the chapel, we did _____Everything That Rises_ in the planetarium a
couple years ago. I think he’s really appreciated deepening the relationship with the organization and the musicians. Sponsor TIEDEMANN: I like the sense of place in what he writes. The new
piece, _Noctilucent_, is about clouds that happen in north latitudes–you can take the boy out of Alaska, but you can’t take Alaska out of the boy. His tie to Alaska feels very Northwest in
many ways—it’s reflective of the way we look at our environment and our connection with nature. I think his music has gotten a little edgier over the past few years, and I enjoy our group
being a part of his evolution. _Noctilucent _is darker than some of his past works; ___Everything That Rises_, which we performed in the planetarium, was similar. He told us that in his
twenties he would’ve scoffed and maybe even been a little offended if you had suggested that he would write string quartets someday. The novelty of that doesn’t escape me–it’s incredible to
be a part of his artistic evolution, because he’s one of the finest composers of our time. VOLLE: I really appreciate that he can move between chamber music and orchestral work so fluidly.
That’s a really unique set of skills, and also challenges. I went up to Seattle to see the premiere of _Become Desert_, the second in his trilogy with Seattle Symphony, and I love the way
his music transports you into a different space. And I appreciate that he doesn’t shy away from presentation — he has some pieces that explore outdoor performance in a very authentic way.
One of my favorite things about our mission at Third Angle is that we really push the boundaries of presentation, incorporating space into projects. Not a lot of composers want to have their
music performed outside, because it adds so many different variables, but he composes some pieces specifically for that experience. INCORPORATING SPACE, TECHNOLOGY, PARTNERSHIPS VOLLE:
Sarah and I made a pact when this pandemic started that we weren’t going to just do everything the way we had been, but be responsive to the time and what was going on both globally and
locally. There’s something really special and unique about live performance, and we’re not trying to play with that piece of it. Because we’re really looking forward to getting back to that
moment. My favorite sound in the whole world is the space at the end of a concert before the clapping starts. It’s so beautiful to me. And you don’t get that on any of these platforms. Even
what we did last night, you’re not going to get that experience. So we’re not trying to push up against that, we’re trying to find space and beauty in redesigning things here and there that
can speak to the moment. Our Soundwalk Series does a nice job playing with that. We’re trying to approach it with a different kind of framework and possibilities. That’s what we’re learning
as we’re going through this. We can’t have the same kind of producer or artistic role-like vision as live performance. It has to be different. For the maximum success and impact, it has to
be redefined and reimagined–that’s what new music is. We’re lucky that we’re constantly playing with tradition and experimentation in presentation and everything else, so it comes sorta
naturally to us. Sponsor TIEDEMANN: I’m one of those people who picks a word of the year every year, and back in January I picked the word “opportunity.” In retrospect, that seems like
incredible foresight and also sad irony. We’re now in a box we never would’ve foreseen, and this can push us toward things we otherwise might never have thought of. We never want to just do
a version of what we’ve done before, one that makes people feel like there was a piece missing. We want to try something new. VOLLE: I think we were super lucky. First of all we’ve had a
very good relationship with Branic. We really trust him, he’s our secret weapon. We trust him with our life, and I’d trust him more than any other artist. He’s on all our projects. We do not
mess around. We were lucky that Branic and Straw to Gold had been in Temple Beth doing a recording project two weeks prior to when we engaged them for this work, so they learned so much
about the space working on a different project that translated. We were very grateful that they had a different expertise going in. Every space is very different, and Branic can tell you for
days what the resonant frequency of the building is. Just having that sort of trial run, having time in the space before really benefited this project, because the music is so different and
challenging. TIEDEMANN: I would say you dream of having team members who will come up with things that you didn’t know that you wanted until you see them do it, and you say, “You read my
mind,” or, “You came up with something better than what was in my mind.” Whatever we give him an opportunity to do, we can trust him. There’s Lisa and myself, and then there’s Branic. He’s a
completely integral part of the team. He records our albums, he does sound for our concerts, and when we have something that works with live electronics, Branic runs them. He knows exactly
what we’re doing, how we play, and he pushes the buttons. And truly, he’s just a lovely human. We were glad to use a local film crew and a local sound engineer. You can see with the
Soundwalks Series, too, all of the composers are local. We understand people’s financial situations and artistic outlook right now, so we’re trying to keep our work and financial
contributions in the community. I’m really excited about our Soundwalks. Because when you look at the roster, everyone is so different. When you commission a piece, you approach the
composer and say, “We’d love to work with you,” and sometimes there’s some back and forth, and sometimes you have some idea of what you might get. With this, we said: “You have an hour, pick
a park, do something. We like you, we like what you do, we have no idea what this is going to look like. We can’t wait.” That’s the best part. We have Amenta [Abioto], who does solo shows
with a looping pedal. We have no idea what she’s going to do. We have Darrell [Grant], and there will obviously be some jazz involved—I know he’s composing. Branic’s was all of his audio
prowess coming out in the most dialed-in form possible. If we have a role in all this, it’s that we’re giving people something to be excited about, and that includes a reason to get out of
their homes and back in touch with their senses. VOLLE: And what a gift right now to be able to go walk and listen to something. For the complete hour that I did it, I was transported
outside of everything that’s been going on and totally took a break. That’s such an amazing gift right now. Sponsor TIEDEMANN: In Branic’s, you pace your walk with the sound of footsteps on
the recording. My favorite thing about it is that instead of feeling isolated and lonely, there’s another person in your mind. The earbuds are in, and it doesn’t feel like you’re on the
walk by yourself. VOLLE: It is sort of like chamber music, in that it’s very intimate but connected. WANT TO READ MORE CULTURAL NEWS IN OREGON? SUPPORT OREGON ARTSWATCH! WANT TO READ MORE
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