Archive for January, 2010
Tin/Bag Tour Recap
Tin/Bag (Kris Tiner-trumpet/Mike Baggetta-guitar) recently completed a brief tour of the Northeast (our itinerary and press were detailed in a previous post), this time supported by a Subito Quick Advancement Grant from the Los Angeles/SF Bay Area chapters of the American Composers Forum to fund the recording of a new set of compositions at Systems Two studios in Brooklyn.
It was great to revisit this project, as we have only played together once since our last extensive tour in the Fall of 2007. Just three performances were slated for this trip (Syracuse, NY – Pittsfield, MA – New York, NY) but they all went quite well; the old music felt fresh again and we were able to get a good handle on some new material. There is an audio recording (and photos, apparently) from the Syracuse show, and a forthcoming All About Jazz review of the NYC show, so I will update this post when all of that becomes available. The photos from the Pittsfield show above are courtesy of Caleb Hiliadis of the Kaleidoscope of Environments blog.
Our studio session couldn’t have gone better. Joe Marciano and his crew at Systems Two are all fantastic, the room sounds amazing, and you would not believe the gear they have on hand. My mic setup was a blend of a vintage RCA 44 ribbon mic (abt 20%) and an RCA 77-DX (abt 80%) which once belonged to John Coltrane and was reputedly in use on many of his classic RVG sessions (see the pics above… they also put up a modern condenser mic that we didn’t end up using). This was absolutely the best trumpet sound I’ve ever gotten in a studio! And audiophiles take note: everything was mixed live to two-track, with practically zero postproduction aside from a few slight dynamic tweaks. We are aiming for a late 2010 release on this, more details coming soon…
Here is a preview some of the music we recorded. This is “Maslow” from my Transpersonal Suite, a series of compositions each dedicated to and inspired by the writings of a different theorist/philosopher/guru. This suite was the basis of my proposal for the Subito grant:
In all, eight originals were recorded; I had one other composition in addition to the 5-part suite, and Mike brought two new pieces. The ninth and final track on the album is “Just Like A Woman”, a Bob Dylan song that we have been performing together for several years. This was the last thing we tracked, and I finally had the good sense to turn on the video camera as we got into it. Enjoy…
Transpersonal Suite
The Transpersonal Suite is a series of compositions that I have been working on for several years. I have performed them with a number of different ensembles, but they have acquired a particular focus in recent performances by Tin/Bag, my longstanding duo with New York guitarist Mike Baggetta. During the more than five years I have been performing with Mike Baggetta we have developed a musical rapport that has enabled the ongoing creation and performance of these very special compositions. The inspiration for these works may lie in the world of books and ideas, but the music itself is the product of years of exploration and dedication to the project of uncovering a very personal, intuitive, and compelling musical language for creative improvisation.
In these single-page compositions the objective is to compress as much potential musical information into as few notes as possible, creating an eloquently stated melodic contour which can function as a theme in the traditional sense, and can also be expanded dramatically. The individual pitch and rhythmic elements may be divided, reorganized, repeated, rerouted (via jumping repeat zones), reversed, condensed, aggregated to create distinct chords or harmonic centers, and/or otherwise elaborated upon by the improvising performer. On paper the compositions appear deceptively simple. But they are very carefully designed to possess a potential complexity wherein every last bit of information has the maximum usefulness and innate recombinatorial value. The outer simplicity of the composition is such that each performer may immediately and effectively grasp the basic materials, though the internal compositional logics will ultimately yield an array of possible connections.
Each of these compositions has been named in honor of a writer, philosopher, or spiritual thinker whose work has motivated the kind of intuitive and integrated processes that inform and enrich my aesthetic world: Sri Aurobindo, Abraham Maslow, Hazrat Inayat Khan, Osho, and Lama Anagarika Govinda. Within each composition I have embedded certain distinctive systemic relationships that embody some dimension of the philosophical world view of each writer.
The first composition from this series to be completed was “Aurobindo”. This composition was recorded by the Empty Cage Quartet in July, 2006 and released in 2007 on the CD Stratostrophic (Clean Feed Records CF103) – that recording is embedded below. It consists of flugelhorn, alto saxophone, and contrabass working from the written melodic material, with electronically processed percussion improvising on the rhythmic relationships:

“Maslow” is the next composition in the series. Embedded below is a video recording from a live performance by Tin/Bag in Boston during the Fall of 2007. The audio quality is not ideal, but it should provide an adequate representation of how these compositions work:
This performance begins with solo trumpet playing the theme, at first unadorned, then gradually expanding and improvising upon some of the repeated areas before the guitar enters with a chordal accompaniment based on pitch aggregations derived from the various melodic fragments. Both instruments then engage in a bit of free melodic counterpoint alternating with sustained tones and guitar harmonics. This opens up into a more improvisational middle section, which eventually settles back into the melodic material of the third and fourth staves. Trumpet then drops out as solo guitar meditates for a moment on the theme. When the trumpet re-enters, the pace slows dramatically, and we end by focusing on the last six written notes of the theme (G-Ab-F-G-G-F).
In this particular case the only decision that was agreed upon beforehand was that we would begin with a trumpet solo. Every other performance decision is made in the moment, with regard to the flow of the music and the information that is contained within the piece.
In 2009 I received a Subito Quick Advancement Grant from the Los Angeles/SF Bay Area chapters of the American Composers Forum to fund the recording of the full Transpersonal Suite with Tin/Bag at Systems Two studios in Brooklyn. I wrote about that session and the brief Northeast tour that preceded it in this post. Here is the audio from the master recording of “Maslow”, recorded on January 16, 2010, and due for CD release in late 2010:
Following are the remaining three compositions in the series in their order of completion: “Inayat Khan”, “Osho”, and “Govinda”. I would be happy to discuss these in the comments section below if anyone would like any further information.
Click on a thumbnail image to view the larger version:
Music and Film @ Metro Galleries
Click here for the Facebook event page
Thursday, January 28, 8 p.m.
METRO GALLERIES CONCERT SERIES PRESENTS:
IMPROVISATIONAL MUSIC and FILM (Curated by Kris Tiner)
KaiBorg
David Borgo – saxophones + laptop
Jeff Kaiser – trumpet + laptop
+
Kris Tiner – solo trumpet
Allen Glass - film projection
Metro Galleries
1604 19th St.
Bakersfield, CA 93301
$5 Admission
* * * *
Metro Galleries Presents Improvisational Music and Film
The Metro Galleries Concert Series continues on Thursday, January 28 with a very special multi-media performance incorporating improvisational music, electronics, digital video, and film.
The San Diego-based electro-acoustic duo KaiBorg explores the intersections of cutting-edge computer music and video processing with jazz-influenced improvisational music to manifest what the San Diego Union Tribune has called “a surging sonic kaleidoscope.” Saxophonist David Borgo is also an ethnomusicologist and an Associate Professor of Music at UC San Diego. He won first prize at the International John Coltrane Festival in 1994, and has performed domestically as well as in Sweden, Amsterdam, Armenia, Hong Kong, and Macau. His book Sync or Swarm: Improvising Music in a Complex Age won the Alan P. Merriam Prize from the Society for Ethnomusicology in 2006 as the most distinguished book published during the previous year. Jeff Kaiser is a composer, trumpet player, music technologist, and founder of pfMENTUM, a record label dedicated to the documentation of new music on the West Coast. Kaiser is currently a PhD student in the Integrative Studies Program in Music at UC San Diego. Kaiser and Borgo will be celebrating the recent release of their CD Harvesting Metadata on pfMENTUM Records.
For the opening set, local trumpet player and Bakersfield College and CSUB music professor Kris Tiner will perform solo to accompany a live film projection by Los Angeles filmmaker Allen D. Glass. Tiner, whose music has been described as “extraordinarily inventive” by Signal to Noise Magazine, has performed at concert venues and festivals throughout North America and abroad, and he appears on over 40 recordings. He has given solo performances at the Line Space Line Festival of Improvised Music, Slow Sound Festival, and Annual Conference of the International Society for Improvised Music. Glass is an international film artist, psychologist, musicologist, archivist, chemical dependency specialist, and hallucinaturalist whose films and photographs have been exhibited by The British Film Institute, The Museum of Modern Art, Anthology Film Archives, Festival International Nouveau Cinéma Nouveau Medias Montréal, The International Experimental Cinema Exposition, Black Maria Film Festival and the international film festivals of London, Melbourne, Tehran, Toronto, Tokyo and Luxembourg among others.
Metro Galleries is located at 1604 19th St. in downtown Bakersfield. Admission to the show is $5; tickets are available at the door only; all ages are welcome. Doors open at 7:30, music begins at 8:00.
For more information…
Jeff Kaiser: http://www.jeffkaiser.com
David Borgo: http://www.davidborgo.com
KaiBorg: http://www.kaiborg.com
Kris Tiner: http://www.kristiner.com
KT3 @ Dagny’s
Click here for the Facebook event page
Kris Tiner Trio
Kris Tiner – trumpet, flugelhorn
Scott Walton – bass (from San Diego)
Nathan Hubbard – percussion (from San Diego)
Music by Kris Tiner, Ornette Coleman, Thelonious Monk, Sun Ra, Morton Feldman, Majid Bekkas and others.
It’s been a while since these guys last came through town, so don’t miss this FREE show tomorrow night…
Tin/Bag East Coast Tour: January 14-17
- January 14 – Tin/Bag | Metropolis Underground | N. Syracuse, NY | 8pm
- January 15 – Tin/Bag | Lichtenstein Center for the Arts | Pittsfield, MA | 7:30pm
- January 16/18 – Tin/Bag | Studio Recording @ Systems Two | Brooklyn, NY
- January 17 – Tin/Bag (+ Kirk Knuffke-tpt/Jesse Stacken-piano) | Cornelia Street Café | New York, NY | 8:30pm
Tin/Bag (Kris Tiner-tpt/Mike Baggetta-gtr) will once again be touring the East Coast, this time supported by a Subito Quick Advancement Grant from the Los Angeles/SF Bay Area chapters of the American Composers Forum that will fund a studio recording of a new set of compositions at Systems Two in Brooklyn.
Keep an eye on the space below for updated links to various press and media connected to this trip. You can also follow me on Twitter (and follow Mike Baggetta too) for all the up-to-the-minute details…
Press, Previews, and Reviews
- Facebook Event Page
- Tour announcement at the American Composers Forum Website
- Details on the Cornelia Street Show (scroll down to Jan 17)
- Preview of the Cornelia Street Show at Time Out New York
- Preview of the Cornelia Street Show at BroadwayWorld.com
- Preview of the Lichtenstein Center show at the City of Pittsfield website
- Preview of the Lichtenstein Center show at Kaleidoscope of Environments
- Preview of the Lichtenstein Center show at Rural Intelligence
Video from Chung King Corpse
SASSAS has posted the complete video from the Chung King Corpse event in Los Angeles, September 12, 2009 | Read more…
(My portion with saxophonist Alicia Mangan begins about 10 minutes in…)




















