RockPoolMirror project

RockPoolMirror image copyright Belinda Webster 'Cliffedge'
RockPoolMirror image copyright Belinda Webster 'Cliffedge'

Sandy Evans and Friends

Personnel

Sandy Evans composer, leader, tenor and soprano saxophone
Adrian Sherriff bass trombone
Satsuki Odamura koto and bass koto
Steve Elphick bass
Bobby Singh tabla
Alon Ilsar airsticks, drums

"...Evans’ most absorbing album ever. "

RockPoolMirror is a musical response to photographer Belinda Webster’s Shoalhaven Gorge series. Best known as founding director of Tall Poppies Records, Belinda’s images traverse from the tranquility of rock formations reflected in still water at dawn, to the darkness of chasms, to the surreality of life-like rock warriors. The photographs will be projected at this concert, and brought to life by a performance that testifies the deep musical bonds these six accomplished improvisers have established through their rich history of collaboration.

Sandy is very grateful to Arjun Von Cammerer and Belinda Webster for their support of this project.

"This would have to be indeed one of the most intriguing contemporary musical releases in Australia so far this century"

Sandy writes: ‘Belinda described a deep sense of calm that pervaded her experience camping at Lake Yarrunga in the Shoalhaven Gorge where she took the photographs. No motorized craft are allowed in this area, so Belinda rowed 25kms up the gorge in a hand-made rowing boat with a friend to reach the camping place. She said it took a whole day of rowing to reach the site. Her and her friend shared the rowing, and they went every year from 2001 to 2006. The only time the water was still enough to take the reflective images was at dawn, so the sense of peace was enhanced by the time of day. I find stillness and water particularly conducive to my own creative process (I have to confess I’m not often awake at dawn though!). It was important to me to have an intimate, reflective calmness as the primary feeling of the overall project. Conversely, some of the photographs capture more active, intriguing, dark, sometimes even violent, aspects of nature. The tracks explore the different feelings, colours, textures, rhythms and architecture that these images evoke.

Another important theme in the composition and conception of the music came from considering the symmetry and asymmetry created by the reflective images. I used numerous musical devices to control pitch, rhythm, structure and dynamics in symmetrical and asymmetrical ways pertaining to the photographs. I endeavoured to create compositional frameworks that were relatively open for the improvisers to interpret, but still established a strong sense of mood and structure.’

View Jazz Australia Q&A

Read reviews

"Many of the photos are of rock formations and their reflections in water. In some of the artworks, Belinda re-oriented the photo disguising the original image; new, surreal, surprisingly life-like figures emerge. I was fascinated by this and could see parallels with improvised music. It highlights the importance of the listener’s perspective. For example, our interpretation of music changes depending whether we listen with the bass in the foreground of our awareness, or the drums, or the saxophone etc."

Q&A with Jazz Australia

I met Belinda when she was a sound engineer at 2MBS. (I was already aware of her reputation as a classical flautist. I was a classical flute student as a teenager and Belinda was one of the outstanding players my generation looked up to.) Belinda was a pioneer in community radio. She recorded quite a lot of the projects I’ve done with Roger Dean and his ensemble austraLYSIS and has released them on her label Tall Poppies. She also released the GEST8 CD Kaleidoscope.

Belinda invited me to perform at the launch of her photographic exhibition at the Botanic Gardens in Sydney in 2009. I loved the photographs and Belinda kindly gave me one (Rock Warrior) that has been hanging in our hallway ever since. I look at it every day. It struck me that this series of photographs would provide an evocative starting point for the exploration of the intimate relationship in duo improvisation where individual identity is expressed and maintained at the same time as being transformed and mirrored in the voice of one’s musical partner. Many of the photos are of rock formations and their reflections in water. In some of the artworks, Belinda re-oriented the photo disguising the original image; new, surreal, surprisingly life-like figures emerge. I was fascinated by this and could see parallels with improvised music. It highlights the importance of the listener’s perspective. For example, our interpretation of music changes depending whether we listen with the bass in the foreground of our awareness, or the drums, or the saxophone etc. There are of course many other paradigms that affect our aural perception – things such as memory, enculturation, musical training, and emotional state.

The project was funded privately by an individual. It is an exceptional story of generosity and compassion and I am deeply honoured and humbled to be the recipient of such extraordinary kindness.

Belinda described a deep sense of calm that pervaded her experience camping at Lake Yarrunga in the Shoalhaven Gorge where she took the photographs. No motorized craft are allowed in this area, so Belinda rowed 25kms up the gorge in a hand-made rowing boat with a friend to reach the camping place. She said it took a whole day of rowing to reach the site. Her and her friend shared the rowing, and they went every year from 2001 to 2006. The only time the water was still enough to take the reflective images was at dawn, so the sense of peace was enhanced by the time of day. I find stillness and water particularly conducive to my own creative process (I have to confess I’m not often awake at dawn though!). It was important to me to have an intimate, reflective calmness as the primary feeling of the overall project. Conversely, some of the photographs capture more active, intriguing, dark, sometimes even violent, aspects of nature. The tracks explore the different feelings, colours, textures, rhythms and architecture that these images evoke.

Another important theme in the composition and conception of the music came from considering the symmetry and asymmetry created by the reflective images. I used numerous musical devices to control pitch, rhythm, structure and dynamics in symmetrical and asymmetrical ways pertaining to the photographs. I endeavoured to create compositional frameworks that were relatively open for the improvisers to interpret, but still established a strong sense of mood and structure.

As usual, my husband Tony was an important sounding board for me throughout the process. He puts up with me ignoring him for long periods of time while I work out my ideas; then I ask him impossibly difficult questions about music, sound and aesthetics. He always manages to give a helpful and wise answer while cooking delicious dinners!

Yes, almost every track was composed in response to a particular photograph. There were also a couple of tracks where, as the music evolved, I felt the piece was more related to a different photograph, so I wasn’t strict about this in relation to every image.

Yes, it is a diverse range of musicians from one perspective, but I’m fortunate to have all of these musicians as long-term friends and collaborators. To me, this diversity encompasses some of the things I love about being a contemporary Australian improvising musician. Although each of these musicians has a deep knowledge and training in at least one tradition (and in many cases more than one), they all share a desire to make music of our time and place with as much integrity as possible.

All of them are wonderful friends who I have been fortunate to collaborate with in other contexts. I have known most of them for a long time and they are like family to me. Bass player Steve Elphick has been a friend and colleague since the beginning of my musical career, when we toured Australia for 7 months with Women and Children First in a Toyota Coaster called Bertha. Bobby Singh and Adrian Sherriff are 2 incredible artists who are largely responsible for my love of Indian classical music. Steve, Bobby and I also built a close musical relationship working with Kim Sanders; Adrian and I in many Australian Art Orchestra projects, especially collaborations with South Indian mridangam maestro Guru Karaaikkudi Mani and the Balinese collaboration, ‘The Theft of Sita’. I have collaborated with Satsuki Odamura many times in groups such as Waratah, GEST8 and with her koto ensemble. Her beautiful koto playing made me fall in love with this amazing instrument. I first worked with Alon in Ellen Kirkwood’s fantastic ‘Mieville Project’. Alon and I have had the pleasure of performing duo several times since then. As well as being a wonderful drummer, his improvisatory approach to electro-acoustic music with the airsticks, really appeals to me. I’ve been interested in electro-acoustic improvised music throughout my career and Alon’s work is opening so many new possibilities in this field.

In this recording, although I was conscious of the particular background and interests of each individual musician, the photographs, and the way we play together are the main drivers for the musical outcomes, rather than notions about genre. This was very liberating.

All the acoustic tracks were recorded at Richie B’s Free Energy Device Studio in Camperdown with Richie as the engineer and Belinda and me as the co-producers. I particularly enjoyed working with Richie and Belinda on this project. Richie’s studio was perfect for the project. He has 2 beautiful recording rooms that have a great sound and a warm atmosphere that suited the feeling of the music and the duo context. He has a keen interest in recording acoustic improvised music and was an important contributor to the creative process. Belinda has many years experience as a producer and engineer and her guidance was invaluable.

The collaborative process with Alon on the electro-acoustic tracks was exploratory and rewarding. Alon was living in New York while most of the recording took place. To communicate my ideas about the tracks to him I prepared crude guide versions on Garage Band. I edited samples from some of the material Richie had recorded and applied very basic processing to give Alon some idea about the vibe and structure of each track. He worked on the tracks in New York and we collaborated on the internet, but it wasn’t until he returned to Australia in January this year that we were able to complete the tracks in person. He did a wonderful job of creating unique, nuanced, beautifully crafted improvisations and compositions in response to my rather crude suggestions!

Reviews

Composed and led by saxophonist /composer Sandy Evans this album of ambient landscapes is a musical response to photographer Belinda Webster’s Shoalhaven Gorge series of photographic images which traverse the tranquility of rock formations reflected in still waters at dawn, to the darkness of chasms and rock formations in an area of unique and pristine natural Australian bushland. The music is a series of duets with Evans by numerous musical contributors interspersed with tracks featuring Alon Ilsar’s sonic wizardry.These dynamic instrumental pieces stay mostly rooted in the ambient mode, but occasionally soar and fly beyond, demonstrating a dizzying range of technique and tone complemented by Satsuki Odamura’s blissfully evocative koto playing,Bobby Singh’s cheeky tabla with his supple hand percussion making the disc’s rhythms feel organic, Adrain Sherriff’s sometimes bold and brassy bass trombone and the hauntingly faultlessly earthy double bass playing of Steve Elphick. The group’s interplay in duets is as bright and smart as the leaders’ compositions. Some are simple frameworks for coasting and trading fun solos, though the more successful moments lie in the surprising juxtapositions of instruments.Stand out tracks include the evocative and redolent Lake Yarrunga Colours featuring the mastery of Satsuki Odamura’s koto and the prowess of Evans’ soprano alongside Rock Warrior and Lake Yarrunga Morning Mist featuring the deftly skilful tabla playing of Bobby Singh and the inventiveness of Evans’ tenor and soprano saxophones respectively. This would have to be indeed one of the most intriguing contemporary musical releases in Australia so far this century

Barry O’Sullivan, Jazz and Beyond

Read the review online 

What a brilliant source of inspiration! Each of this album’s 12 works is a response to a photograph taken by Belinda Webster in Shoalhaven Gorge. The images, often of rock formations with anthropomorphic echoes, can be equally beautiful and disquieting. Enter composer Sandy Evans and a series of musical sketches to form the basis for improvised duets and solos evoking these startling images. The result is Evans’ most absorbing album ever. The music can be chilling, exultant, soothing, moving or mind-expanding, but never just treads water. Evans’ soprano or tenor saxophones (the former sometimes uncannily flute-like on the dramatic Rock Water Temple) are variously joined by Satsuki Odamura’s koto and bass koto, Steve Elphick’s double bass, Bobby Singh’s tabla and Adrian Sherriff’s bass trombone. Additionally Alon Ilsar offers three striking solo pieces using AirSticks (an electronic instrument of his own devising), samples and drums.

John Shand Sydney Morning Herald 29 July 2017

Recordings

Image gallery

Composed and led by saxophonist /composer Sandy Evans RockPoolMirror’s ambient landscapes are musical responses to photographer Belinda Webster’s Shoalhaven Gorge series of photographic images which traverse the tranquility of rock formations reflected in still waters at dawn, to the darkness of chasms and rock formations in an area of unique and pristine natural Australian bushland.