RARE NOISE  
TO RELEASE  
INDIGO MIST & INTERSTATIC  
IN AUGUST
CUONG VU AND RICHARD KARPEN 
JOIN FORCES ON 
ELECTRO-ACOUSTIC PROJECT
Provocative Ellington/Strayhorn Tribute, 
That The Days Go By And Never Come Again,
Scheduled for August Release on RareNoiseRecords
AVAILABLE IN STORES AND ONLINE AUGUST 4, 2014
AND THROUGH RARE NOISE RECORDS
ON CD, VINYL AND HI-RES DIGITAL DOWNLOAD
| 
Cuong Vu | 
trumpet | 
| 
Richard Karpen | 
piano | 
| 
Luke Berman | 
bass | 
| 
Ted Poor | 
drums | 
| 
Ivan Artega | 
Live Electronics iPad   Performers | 
| 
Shih-Wei Lo | |
| 
Douglas   Niemela | |
| 
Joshua   Parmenter | 
ABOUT THE LABEL - RareNoiseRecords was founded in late 2008 by two Italians, guitarist/arranger/ producer Eraldo Bernocchi and all-round music nut Giacomo Bruzzo. Located
 in London, the label was created to present a platform to musicians and
 listeners alike who think beyond musical boundaries of genre. For 
further information and to listen please go to www.rarenoiserecords.com.
New York, June 18, 2014 - Trumpeter-composer Cuong Vu has
 established himself as a distinctive voice on the new music/improvising
 scene for his adventurous work over the past 20 years with the likes of
 guitarist Bill Frisell, Pat Metheny and Laurie Anderson as well as his 
four recordings as leader. 
Composer Richard Karpen
 has earned accolades for his work in the classical field as well as for
 being a cutting edge sonic experimenter of the highest order. Joined by
 innovative bassist Luke Bergman (their faculty colleague at the University of Washington) and Vu's longstanding bandmate, drummer Ted Poor, these two kindred spirits push the envelope in a myriad of provocative ways on That The Days Go By And Never Come Again. An extended suite that pays tribute to the indelible composing team of Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn in
 a most uncompromising fashion, their extraordinary RareNoiseRecords 
debut under the collective name of Indigo Mist is unlike any Ellingtonia
 you've ever heard."
Says
 Vu, "The whole record, to me, is a tone poem that is deeply affected by
 their music, even to the point where as we were at the apex of 
experimenting, Duke and Billy were always in the room with us and we had
 to come to terms with their presence. I feel that we've respectfully 
paid homage to them by taking our own connection to them and sprinkled 
that all over the record like a mist."
The
 unlikely duo of New York-based improviser-bandleader Vu and Seattle 
academician Karpen crystallized when they met at the University of 
Washington. As Vu explains, "One of the things that I did when I became a
 new faculty here was to research my colleagues, mainly just to get to 
know about the various interests of the School of Music faculty and get a
 feel for how I would move about within that musical community. Once I 
started reading about Richard, I was immediately interested because his 
work was on the forefront of electro-acoustic music as well as being a 
composer from the Western Classical Art Music tradition.  Much of 
classical music had such an impact on how I interfaced with music while I
 was doing my bachelors of music that I've always been interested in 
working with a serious composer at some point. Then when I heard his 
music I was completely blown away and knew that I had to work with him, 
if not to just make music together somehow, then to at least learn from 
him."
Adds
 Karpen, "It is very unusual for a 'classically' trained composer like 
me, with my particular background and continued interest in experimental
 music and several decades of very deep involvement in the development 
of computer music both as a composer and as a programmer, to be head of 
such a School of Music. And it seems to me to be just as unusual for 
someone coming from a jazz background like Cuong, who is deeply involved
 in breaking through artificial boundaries through many kinds of 
experimentation, would be on the a faculty of such a school. The chance 
that both of us would be at the same place at the same time, and with 
one of us heading this school, seems to be one chance in 
millions!           
                                                                                                       
The
 provocative tone poem kicks off with a torrent of drums from Ted Poor 
entitled "L'Heure bleue." While traversing the kit with power and 
precision, Poor's drumming is sonically enhanced to give it the effect 
of rolling thunder, gently falling rain or a phalanx of drummers.  
Poor
 then switches to mallets for the evocative title track as Karpen and Vu
 make their entrance into the mysterious soundscape, beginning with 
Karpen's sparsely plucked notes from inside the piano and continuing 
with Vu's electronically treated trumpet and Luke Bergman's sparse bass 
lines. The piece builds to a thunderous crescendo with Karpen's 
throbbing bass notes and Cecil Tayloresque cascading in the high 
register of the piano. Poor's potent free drumming fuels the track while
 Vu's intuitive keening trumpet wails over the top of the fray. This 
urgent piece gradually morphs into a haunting treatment of Strayhorn's 
"A Flower is a Lovesome Thing" that has Vu remaining close to the melody
 as Karpen pushes the harmonic envelope with his probing piano work. It 
then flows organically into a thoughtful but uncompromising meditation 
on Strayhorn entitled "Billy." 
An
 element of swing enters the picture on "Duke," which opens with Poor's 
hip, syncopated playing on the kit in intimate conversation with Vu's 
unaffected trumpet worked, Bergman and Karpen enter the conversation 
near the midway mark and extrapolation ensues until they build up to 
extreme layers of density and dissonance with Vu reaching into his bag 
of extended techniques on the trumpet to match the pitch of the 
turbulent proceedings. At their tumultuous peak, Vu and Bergman lay out 
and Karpen gradually settles into zen-like repose on the piano, setting 
up for a sublime reading of Ellington's gorgeous "In a Sentimental 
Mood," which is played beautifully by Vu and underscored with tastefully
 restraint by Karpen, Bergman and Poor. This gentle but brief bit of 
Ellingtonia then morphs into the more mysterioso excursion "Charles" 
(for Mingus), which in turn leads into a highly impressionistic take on 
Strayhorn's "Lush Life." 
Karpen's
 furious, rolling bass notes and aggressive stabs at the keyboard next 
come into play on "The Electric Mist," a frenzied improvisation which 
has the pianist going toe-to-toe in full-out Cecil Taylor mode with 
drummer Poor augmenting his urgent attack with some powerhouse playing 
of his own. The piece ends with an electronic barrage that is purely of 
the 21st century. The album concludes with a spacious, abstract 
rendition of Ellington's "Mood Indigo" that begins with the sounds of a 
gong (or singing bowl) and plucked piano strings penetrating the silence
 before Bergman and Vu enter with a walking-on-eggshells approach. The 
familiar theme of this final nod to Ellington is hinted at throughout 
the course of the piece but not truly revealed until near the end of its
 eight-minutes in the beautifully warm tones of Vu's trumpet. It's 
definitely the most challenging music I've been engaged in our musical 
interests and curiosities, I'm at a place in my life right now where 
it's crucially important for me to make music that is completely honest 
and without any external pressures.
"We're
 trying to do something new and different while flipping the whole idea 
of playing 'jazz' upside down," says Vu of this Indigo Mist project. 
"And by choosing this music as our primary subject matter or subject of 
inspiration, we are addressing jazz in a way that I feel is in reverence
 and trying to add our own perspective of the greatness what jazz really
 means to me along with the greatness of these two masters."
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