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Stephen Flinn / Bryan Eubanks -
CD



Stephen Flinn / Bryan Eubanks
bandcamp



Stephen Flinn - percussion and gongs
Bryan Eubanks - saxophone electronics
Recorded live in concert at PAS-Berlin,
March 17th, 2023 by Bryan Eubanks
Mastered by Wayne Peet
Photographs by Daniel Root |
Reviews: (Lost in a sea of sound) Water ripples in outward patterns with the slightest disturbance. Peaceful space is found within the live performance of Stephen Flinn & Bryan Eubanks, and like glassy surfaced bodies of water, their sonic energy sends waves through the conscious. The balance rests on patience and understanding. Their instruments easily have the ability to crash the tranquil spirit, but their wisdom of how these sounds are unleashed is true testament to their alluring symphony. Stephen Flinn is the force behind percussion and gongs, while Bryan Eubanks orchestrates both saxophone and electronics. The performance was recorded live from PAS-Berlin on March 17th, 2023. A half hour of subtle sonic gestures paring to create an aural world filled with stirring mystery. The comparison that comes to mind is the fourth track titled the "Searchers" on Jerry Goldsmith's Planet of the Apes OST. The live recording by Stephen and Bryan would have fit in beautifully here, adding a much more real and raw feeling to the desert foray. Released by the label Public Eyesore on compact disc. Another addition for the label that pushes all boundaries and shares sounds challenging our comfortable spaces. - Ken Lower
(Vital Weekly) Public Eyesore Records and its cassette offshoot Eh? Records present a series of releases on the fringes of electro-acoustic improvisation and modern music, as they, perhaps, always do. The first is by Stephen Flinn (percussion and gons) and Bryan Eubanks (saxophone, electronics). It’s been a while since I last heard something from either. Their CD contains a 31-minute recording from a concert they did at the Petersburg Art Space in Berlin in 2023 and is described by the label as “spontaneous improvisation”. Both musicians have a background in this kind of music, which works well. I have no idea what this performance space looks like and if the reverb I hear is from the space or artificially created, but it gives the music a sharp edge. There is great tension between both players and their respective approaches to their instruments. There is a lot of scraping with a bow over metallic percussion pieces, to which Eubanks responds with similar sharpish saxophone playing. Sometimes the music is very close by, sometimes very distant. This is created by moving the recorder through this space, or the players move around or using various techniques—that contradiction of far away and close by fuels the tension even further. The tension between the players is from the way they respond to each other or do not respond, of course, and their interaction with the performance space. The result is some intense music, captivating for the full 31 minutes. - Frans de Waard
(Jazzword) Blending electronic impulses and acoustic instruments now has a multi-decades history in improvised music. Depending on the participants sub genres have developed which emphasize whether the oscillations or the phonics are paramount. The most rewarding of these situations however, are those which highlight one or the other but reconcile the two impulses. The single more than half-hour improvisation by Americans Stephen Flinn and Bryan Eubanks emphasis synthesized wave forms since alto saxophonist Eubanks specializes in distinctive spatial and computer-based composition, while percussionist Flinn moves beyond standard drum patterns to create unique sounds, which in this case are intensified with electronic interaction. While both members of Light.box are fully involved in electronic experimentation on Eyre’s six tracks, UK trumpeter Alex Bonney and Canadian bass guitarist Pierre Alexandre Tremblay’s retention of acoustic timbres are further strengthened contributions from British tenor saxophonist Tom Challenger, who usually plays in non-programmed settings with the likes of Mark Sanders and Olie Brice. Flinn and Eubanks’ triumph is how they navigate the parameters of the harsh, inflating and sometimes ear-splitting instrumental motifs so that its dimensions also reflect of concurrent associations. Throughout unvarying reed note bending and strained vibrations brush up against not only gong reverberations and scrapes against unyielding metal but tempo and pitch changes summoned through programming and dial twisting. Quivers advanced with thickening resonance, aviary whistles and back of throat reed gargling abut unbroken electronics impulses. At the same time undulating shills that intersect are propelled with such skill that whether their origin is wave form intensity or thick cymbal and gong scrapes is often unclear. Contrapuntal pushback also encompasses jagged saxophone bites and bell-like pulsations until gong reverberations, reed overblowing and electronic pulsations are squeezed together into a pressurized finale. Eyre is distinct and different from the eponymously titled other session. That’s because bass string bounces, brass tongue buzzes and undulating saxophone slurs are as upfront as the electronics’ watery slurps and chugging wave forms as early as “Lateral Sway”, the first track. These alternating impulses continue throughout the performance before culminating in an electro-acoustic synthesis on the concluding “Covalent”. This involves shaking programmed reflux colliding with an unvarying reed breaths and last-minute bass guitar strums. During the group of “Chain Chimes” tracks Challenger’s mid-range expression and the synthesized rumbles rarely advance without a top line from Bonney’s trumpet that range from mewling whines to half-valve howls and brassy shakes. The melded understated judders and emphasized breath emphasize electronic or acoustic pivots in turn, reaching an interactive crescendo on “Chain Chimes Part 3”. As ringing tremors and whooshing shakes inflate, an instance of stop-start textures speed up to trumpet triplets and triple-tonguing reed digs as the wave form drone continues unabated. Finally, a unison buzz and shake is heard before fading into a mellow slur. As long as sessions like these continue to probe electro-acoustic dimensions, the possibilities for more invention and fine sounds remain. - Ken Waxman
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