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Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville 2019, Part 2-2

Courtesy Martin Morissette
Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville
Victoriaville, Quebec, Canada
May 16-19, 2019
The first two days of this year's FIMAV lived up to lofty expectations, and, if anything, Saturday's and Sunday's programs looked even more promising, with artists such as

Roscoe Mitchell
saxophoneb.1940

Vijay Iyer
pianob.1971

Tyshawn Sorey
drumsb.1980

John Butcher
saxophoneb.1954
Unfortunately, I had to miss Saturday's first concert by Thomas Korber with the

Konus Quartett
band / ensemble / orchestraNot the Music is a duo comprised of

Eric Normand
bass, electricb.1977
The black box at the Carré 150 was packed full for the performance by Roscoe Mitchell and Moor Mother (Camae Ayewa). This was easily the most controversial of the festival, with widely divergent opinions on what constitutes music and/or poetry. Mitchell opened with harsh cries of pain from his soprano sax before Moor Mother started her poem, "The Black Drop." An incantation full of allusions and repetition, the piece explores the pain and bewilderment of being black in America, where slaves had to learn "a new language of pain."Mitchell moved from saxophone to a set of small gongs. I was transfixed by the harsh beauty, power, and emotion contained in the words and music. While I don't know who all of the people who attend Victo are, what I do know is that in a way, they're my people, part of a loose tribe that exists here and there around the world, and these people know that we must listen to such stories.
In sharp contrast, the Vijay Iyer Sextet is the closest to a mainstream jazz group that I have heard in twenty years of attending FIMAV. In a different context, I would have admired the obvious musicianship of Iyer,

Steve Lehman
saxophone, alto
Mark Shim
saxophone, tenorb.1973

Graham Haynes
cornetb.1960

Stephan Crump
bass, acousticb.1972

Tyshawn Sorey
drumsb.1980
French guitarist

Julien Desprez
guitar
Max Andrzejewski
drumsb.1986
Saxophonist John Butcher's solo set on Sunday afternoon at the beautiful ?glise St-Christophe d'Arthabaska was highly anticipated. In the end, it proved to be worth the trip to Victoriaville by itself, as Butcher, alternation on tenor and soprano saxophones, played four pieces that explored the technical possibilities of his instruments and the acoustic possibilities of the church. Piling overtones on top of overtones in the high reaches of the room, exploring fragments of sound as they began to break apart, maintaining and then releasing control of the sounds, Butcher was magnificent and inventive, sensuous and rigorousin short, what one hoped for. One friend remarked jokingly on leaving the church afterward, "Typical John Butcher." Yes, typical in the sense that it was the best concert I had attended in a couple of years.
It felt like a quick turnaround to the concert by the Tyshawn Sorey Trio (Sorey, bassist

Chris Tordini
bass, acousticCory Smythe
pianoOne of the frustrations of performances of electronic music is the fact most in the audience have no idea what the musicians are doing to produce the sounds.
Lionel Marchetti
synthesizerJoane Hétu has been an important person in Montreal's very active experimental music community for over thirty years, with a respectable list of recordings and frequent performances of ambitious works. Her ensemble Joker is a "noise choir" that she uses to explore the possibilities of the human voice. The performance at 8 o'clock Sunday evening was a world premiere of a piece titled "Les Lucioles," in which Hétu "plays" her ensemble, choreographed in their movements and gestures and sounds. This is an ambitious work, requiring the utmost of precision and attention to detail, and while I do not know exactly what it was aboutand maybe it wasn't supposed to be about anything other than what it wasthis was a crowning achievement for Hétu.
The evening and the festival concluded with a double concert at the Colisée A, with Indonesian duo Senyawa joined by

Keiji Haino
guitarHappy to report, Haino meshed much better with Senyawa, vocalist Rolly Shabara}and Wukir Suryadi, who plays a homemade guitar/cello hybrid that he calls a bambuwukir, than he did with

Peter Brötzmann
woodwinds1941 - 2023
Heather Leigh
guitar, steelThe Ex, playing new music once again as per custom, were great and great fun, once again. Drummer Katerina Bornefeld fuels the band with a beat so righteous and heavy that they don't need a bassist. The three guitars of
Terrie Hessels
guitar
Andy Moor
guitarSo another FIMAV came to an end. People at Victo don't usually dance, but there was reason to, as the overall quality of the performances was perhaps the best many of the regulars have ever seen. The 35th edition felt like something of a summary of the previous 34, and was even marked by the publication of Musique Actuelle: Topographie d'un Genre by Montreal writer Rejean Beacuage, which focuses a great deal on FIMAV and its role in nurturing Quebec's mystique actually movement. Well done, and looking forward, as always, to the next.
Tags
Live Reviews
Mike Chamberlain
Canada
Montreal
Vijay Iyer
Tyshawn Sorey
The Ex
John Butcher
Thomas Korber
Konus Quartet
Not the Music
Eric Normand
Philippe Lauzier
Roscoe Mitchell
Moor Mother
Camae Ayewa
Vijay Iyer Sextet
Steve Lehman
Mark Shim
Graham Haynes
Stephan Crump
Julien Desprez
Abacaxi
Jean-Fran?ois Riffaud
Max Andrzejewski
Tyshawn Sorey Trio
Chris Tordini
Cory Smythe
Lionel Marchetti
Xavier Garcia
Joane Hetu
Senyawa
Keiji Haino
Rolly Shabara
Wukir Suryadi
Peter Brotzmann
Heather Leigh
Katerina Bornefeld
Terrie Hessels
Andy Moor
Arnold de Boer
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