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defixiones reviews

 




 

EDWARDBATCHELDER.COM

The following article was borrowed from
http://www.edwardbatchelder.com/kitchener.htm 

Diamanda Galas

Open Ears Festival, Kitchener, Ontario, 4-30-05

 

"What is this love for bones and dirt," asks Diamanda Galas near the end of Defixiones: Will and Testament, her latest work of catharsis and mourning. It's a question that might be asked of any of her pieces, for few modern composers have been so relentlessly committed to recalling – in all senses of the word – the forgotten dead of the last century's catastrophes. Within Defixiones, however, the question attains a particular resonance.

 

Dedicated to the "forgotten and erased" Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks who perished amid the violent death throes of the Ottoman Empire nearly a hundred years ago, Defixiones is one of Galas's most personal pieces, with its origins, she has said, in stories told to her by her father. At the same time, her instincts as a musician are so wide-ranging that the piece becomes more than a personal vendetta (though it is certainly that, too); it rises up into a long liturgical lament for all the cultures that existed and co-existed – however uneasily – in the Eastern Mediterranean at that historical moment.

 

In its hauntingly beautiful recorded version, Defixiones starts with a long, keening cry that evolves into an Armenian mass, and from there encompasses reported testimony of atrocities, Turkish love songs, Assyrian children's choirs, and a long strident litany of argumentation that contains the above quotation. Making full use of tape loops and voice processing, the piece also moves through at least eight languages in addition to English – Armenian, Arabic, Assyrian, French, Greek, Italian, Spanish, and Turkish. It's a remarkable polyphony of voices circling around the central theme of physical loss and spiritual desolation.

 

In its performance in a small church as part of the Open Ears Festival, Defixiones had evolved again, this time to re-encompass its origins by being framed by Greek poems in translation. It also gained immeasurably from Galas's feeling for understated theatrics.

 

On a stage lit primarily by candles, beneath an enormous cross, Galas appeared in a long black dress, hair hidden beneath a dark flowing shawl that gave her a gaunt, skull-like visage. From a mic stand on the right of the stage, she began with a Yannis Ritsos poem about the need to guard the dead. From there, the piece segued into the Armenian mass, while Galas drifted like a specter to the grand piano center stage, producing a rumbling in the lower registers before drifting back to the mic stand to spit out a guttural, multi-lingual tirade broken by long moans (extended and overdubbed on voice processor by Blaise Depuy) mixed with staccato yelps and whoops. With the addition of whistling wind noises, it did indeed sound like a convocation of the angry dead. From there it was back to the piano for a lilting song of homesickness, the Turkish love song, and a newly inserted, violently anti-Greek poem in Turkish called "Hate."

 

This was the rhythm for most of the piece – the shrouded Galas moving from the piano to the microphones, and the music moving from heart-wrenchingly lovely melodies to whirling spasms of angry noise. Galas's remarkable three-and-a-half-octave voice has only gained in power over the years, and increased its ability to channel spirits in the eeriest possible fashion. "Holokaftoma," in particular, which occupies the center of Defixiones, features Galas's voice casting out epithets against a background of recorded voices and sustained piano chords, climaxing in a terrifying call and response between Galas's guttural moans and backwashes of high-pitched shrieking.

 

By the end of the concert, she ended up in center stage, backlit and gesturing with her hands while the looped music raged around her before finally closing with a more subdued reading of several George Seferis poems, also about death and the dead.

 

Galas is a remarkable and unique talent, melding a vision darker than any punk's with classical vocal and piano technique and an embrace of electronics worthy of Hendrix. Defixiones, pulling from both her own personal history and the rich history of Asia Minor, is undoubtedly her strongest work yet – a dark but moving collision of voices, languages, and cultures. Her tour of the piece last fall was cancelled for technical reasons, but there will be two performances of it on September 8 & 10 in Manhattan as part of the 2005 What Comes After: Cities, Art, and Recovery International Summit.

 

Galas has long been popular in Europe; perhaps, as this nation begins to come to grips with catastrophes of its own, she may find the American audience that she deserves.

 

© Edward Batchelder

(from Signal to Noise: The Journal of Improvised and Experimental Music)