Simulacrum


Shadows


Excerpt From Free Jazz Collective Review

“…Simulacrum is something apart from other Leap of Faith projects. It is missing what seemed to be PEK’s preferred cores until recently: that between him and cellist Glynis Lomon and with a variety of percussionists. Instead, Simulacrum is a vortex of shifting soundworlds that ultimately blast across the alkali flats in a jet-powered…or rather fueled by the addition of Joel Simches on live processing and electronicists Eric Woods, Robin Amos and Bob Moores, who focuses more on his synths and drones than his usual frontage of trumpet and guitar.…”

By Nick Ostrum

Excerpt From Liner Notes by PEK

“…I’m always excited to play with people who are strong flexible players from very different backgrounds.  We pursue a broad palate approach and musicians from other disciplines bring a vocabulary and sensibility which greatly adds to the depth of the sonority set.  That’s been true of musicians with Classical backgrounds, and with Jazz backgrounds and it is certainly true with Robin’s strong electronic skill set…”

Shadows:

Simulacrum

Evil Clown Headquarters, Waltham MA –

1) Shadows – 1:09:51

2) Chiaroscuro – 5:54

PEK – clarinet & contralto clarinets, alto & tenor saxophones, bass tromboon, musette, guanzi, alto flute, 5 hole wood flute, accordion, melodica, game call through soma pipe, theremin with moogerfooger, ARP odyssey, ms-20, moog subsequent, novation peak, Linnstrument controllers, tank cello, almglocken, xylophone, balafon, Tibetan bowls & bells, brontosaurus & tank bells, Englephone, danmo, orchestral chimes & anvils, wood blocks, log drums, cow bells, gongs, plate gong, [d]ronin, 17 string bass

Michael Caglianone – soprano, alto & tenor saxophones, clarinet, flute, hulusi, melodica, spring & chime rod boxes, array mbira, log drums, wood blocks, temple blocks, chimes, brontosaurus & tank bells, flex-a-tone, orchestral castanets, almglocken

Bob Moores – electric guitar with efx, electric trumpet with double efx chain, Helm, Moog Model D and MainStage Synth emulators on MacBook Pro, kracklebox, drone generator with efx, gong

Robin Amos – Studiologic Sledge hybrid synth, Roland VP-03 vocoder, Waldorf Blofeld synth, Behringer 1202 mixer

Eric Woods – analog synthesis, moog subsequent, novation peak, nord stage 3

Joel Simches – live to 2-track recording, real-time signal processing

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Free Jazz Collective Review


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Review by Nick Ostrum – Free Jazz Collective

Blasting Across the Alkali Flats with Evil Clown

“…In quiet solitude or blasting across the alkali flats in a jet-powered, monkey-navigated…… and it goes on like this.” – Rev. Timothy Lovejoy, The Simpsons

In the above quote, Rev. Lovejoy was reading the wedding vows of one Homer J. Simpson. With just a little imagination and minus the “quiet solitude” part, however, he could very well have been describing the two releases reviewed here. Each is from one of PEK’s newer ensembles, which are based more around electronic environments than the acoustics of the sax-cello core of Leap of Faith, or the drum-propulsion of the Metal Chaos Ensemble. In that, however, they lose none of the sonic probing one has come to expect, and none of the tendency toward excess and entropy.

Simulacrum – Shadows (Evil Clown, 2023)

Simulacrum is something apart from other Leap of Faith projects. It is missing what seemed to be PEK’s preferred cores until recently: that between him and cellist Glynis Lomon and with a variety of percussionists. Instead, Simulacrum is a vortex of shifting soundworlds that ultimately blast across the alkali flats in a jet-powered…or rather fueled by the addition of Joel Simches on live processing and electronicists Eric Woods, Robin Amos and Bob Moores, who focuses more on his synths and drones than his usual frontage of trumpet and guitar.

Naturally, PEK, reedist + Michael Caglianone and, when focused on such tools, Moores literally add the gusts to the electrified sandstorm of crackles, shimmers and all out sonic strangeness. Shadows is heavy, and heavy on the Arkestra-infused space gaze. However, the missing dedicated percussion replaced by a variety of electro-acoustic techniques help this one float to different corners of the cosmos, clunkily walking the thin line between order and inevitable decay along the way.

And, as a bonus to the hour-plus first track Shadows comes Chiaroscuro, a six-minute excursion into a more linear, but still gnarled and knotty kosmische Musik.

Shadows is available as a download and CD from Bandcamp.

Perturbations – That’s Where the Unknown Is (Evil Clown, 2023)

Perturbations is another beast. It shares members PEK, Caglianone and Simches, here with a bigger footprint, with Simulacrum. Albey OnBass rounds out the quartet with his bass and box of percussion and electronics. Recorded in November 2023, That’s Where the Unknown Is begins with acoustic clangor and electronic “perturbations”, which blend into a quiet cacophony that mirrors an insect-ridden night in the woods. (One imagines the unknown could reside here, in the space between civilization and the wild, between the physical and metaphysical, as much as anywhere.)

An accordion and layered tones of unknown provenance break the spell, transporting the listener from a simulated forest to a port city, creaking docks, lonely saxophone and all. The picture, however, never truly becomes clear. Swooshes of interference intervene. A second, deeper horn engages with the first. A busy swarming background persists, and, in the whirl of elements, it can be difficult for the listener to find footing. Albey OnBass introduces a staggered bass line, and his subsequent duet with a lone sax pose the jazzier moments of this piece.

But these moments are fleeting, as was the forest and the dock. It seems like the moment the piece settles, it detours or rather leaps to different aesthetic realms. In that sense, That’s Where the Unknown Is is clunkier (though deftly and intentionally) than the ebb-and-flow characteristic of so many extended collective improvisations. This zigs and zags rather than builds and releases. And, well, it goes on like that, zigging, zagging and always finding new corners of the alkali flats to agitate.

hat’s Where The Unknown Is is available as a CD and download from Bandcamp.

Liner Notes by PEK

Simulacrum is an offshoot of Metal Chaos Ensemble that was conceived just prior to the Virus shutting things down.  The ensemble features 3 core members PEK on all my stuff, Eric Woods on analog synth, and Bob Moores on space trumpet, guitar, and electronics.  The basic idea of this band is to increase the amount of electronics, to keep the ancillary percussion and loose the drum set, along with PEK and Bob holding down the horn parts. 

I’ve been looking for more electronics geniuses for the last few years.  We’ve got Eric Woods, who specializes in analog synthesis plus Bob Moores who doubles trumpet, guitar & electronics plus me who also doubles.  We have Bonnie Kane who always puts electronic processing on her horn playing.  We have Bill T Miller who is great, but is busy and has only come twice.  I’ve courted a few others but never managed to get them to participate. 

A principal means of adding musicians to the roster is via recommendations from current Evil Clown players.  Several people have made multiple fruitful recommendations.  Michael Knoblach (percussion) has brought in multiple players including Jimmy Zhao who in turn brought a bunch of other Chinese musicians.  So, I was excited when we scheduled an Expanse trio set for me, Michael and Michael’s friend electronics wizard Robin Amos.  Robin is an excellent player who was a founding member of the seminal 90s era Boston band Cul de Sac with which he toured in Europe a lot.  He knows and has played with many seminal European electronic musicians.  He also played keyboards in a Black Metal band for years.

I’m always excited to play with people who are strong flexible players from very different backgrounds.  We pursue a broad palate approach and musicians from other disciplines bring a vocabulary and sensibility which greatly adds to the depth of the sonority set.  That’s been true of musicians with Classical backgrounds, and with Jazz backgrounds and it is certainly true with Robin’s strong electronic skill set.

This set, Shadows, has the Simulacrum core unit of Eric, Bob and me along with Robin and one of the strongest sax players in the Roster, Micheal Caglianone.  I expected this strong ensemble to have a strong debut, and I was not disappointed…

I like this set and I bet you will too.

PEK Out – 10/25/2023


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