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Alessandro Bosetti |
Interview: Robin Hayward (2007)
I play tuba, without any electronics though the way I play it often sounds very electronic. A love-hate relationship, as I actually have considerable problems with it when it's played normally. Maybe this was the reason I ended up playing it the way I do. At 10 years old I was too young to know better when I took it up - I wanted to play trumpet and they put me on tuba. This is very hard to answer, as I'm not sure it's really rational. Perhaps it's just that I enjoy exploring and discovering - curiosity, not knowing what's round the corner. But why this should be in music rather than anything else I really have no idea. I like the fact that it questions and breaks down the classical hierarchy of composer-performer-listener. It's a very social way of making music. And I like the direct contact with the sound, and the immediacy of inventing music while I'm playing it. Plus the challenge of trying to make it work with other people. I certainly find it necessary to reflect on the music, which I suppose is a kind of planning. Occasionally if I'm finding the music too routined I deliberately do something that doesn't obviously fit in in order to throw the music into a different direction, or even deliberately lose technical control and then work with whatever the instrument throws up. But mostly it's a question of listening both to what's going on and playing when I hear something I want to contribute. Which implies knowing the instrument, controlling the sounds etc - things that would come under the category of planning. I don't practise for a particular improvisation. I do rehearse with other musicians, but this has to do with developing and clarifying what we're doing, rather than preparing for a specific improvisation. Sometimes we practise exercises for improvisation, usually arising from having observed that something's happening by default rather than because we want it to. The exercises are intended to make us more aware of whatever it is and learn strategies of how to avoid it. Yes, I do mostly use sounds that I have control over, which implies having tried them out and practised them. But I try to avoid simply playing repertoire - the challenge is to use the sounds so they make musical sense, though it's not always easy to say why a sound seems to make sense in one context and not in another - it's necessary to work very empirically. There are definitely rules, though it's often hard to say what they are. It's mainly just a question of remaining sensitive to the present moment and intuiting what it seems to imply. I suppose I have a set of criteria, some quite conventional: did the form work, were things too predictable etc. One sign of a successful improvisation is often that the music seemed to play itself, without any effort. But it's often quite hard to say why one improvisation worked and another one didn't. It can help focus things. Actually I haven't recorded that much improvised music though.
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| addlimb.org, 2007, 2008 |
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