Still And Moving Lines Of Silence In Families Of Hyperbolas
Classical
| Dec 2003
Reviews
Ben Bostwick
Reviewed 2004-02-20
Reviewed 2004-02-20
Alvin Lucier – Still and Moving Lines of Silence in Families of Hyperbolas
I’m not usually a big fan of Concept Music, but I really enjoy Lucier’s work. I really appreciate his thorough knowledge of the science of acoustics and the creative way he tweaks it to create interesting effects on both an aural and conceptual level. This disc documents part of a 70s composition dealing with interference patterns in closely spaced sound waves (the “beats” you hear when people are out of tune). For this piece, he’s got several different soloists playing along with sine waves. He has them alter their pitch at regular intervals to create the patterns in the sound, the audio equivalent of dropping a bunch of pebbles into a lake. He uses the different attacks and timbres of the instruments to keep things interesting. As with all of Lucier’s work though, this disc is not for the impatient. The tracks are long and the effects are subtle, but I still found all this to be strangely comforting and addictive. The liner notes give a track by track description of what’s going on, so I won’t go into detail here, but I did particularly enjoy disc 1 track 4 which features a vocalist altering her pitch between two sine waves for an amazing effect.
Recent airplay
Vibraphone
Music Casserole — Mar 29, 2025
Voice
Cognitive Overload — Jul 14, 2007
Flute
the Dog and Pony Show — Aug 12, 2005
Voice
Umami Jazz Program — Jan 18, 2005
Violin Duet
Brownian Interim — Jun 23, 2004
Marimba
The Dumbarton Auroras — May 12, 2004
Charting
2004-03-01 — 2004-05-03
| Week Ending | Airplays |
|---|---|
| Apr 25 | 1 |
| Mar 7 | 3 |
Track listing
| 1. | Clarinet | ||
| 2. | Marimba | ||
| 3. | Viola | ||
| 4. | Voice | ||
| 5. | Xylophone | ||
| 6. | Violin Duet | ||
| 7. | Flute | ||
| 8. | Glockenspiel | ||
| 9. | Cello | ||
| 10. | Horn | ||
| 11. | Vibraphone | ||
| 12. | Violin Solo |
