Turbulence Orchestra


Finding the Loophole


Excerpt From Liner Notes by PEK

“… This time I got a new drummer, Jared Seabrook, and a relatively new bass player, Scott Samenfeld, who has attended one prior set with Simulacrum. Scott is a bit more jazz than most of the bass players who participate in any of the Evil Clown bands. The result is kind of a free big band set up with a two-man rhythm section. With all the doubling that goes on in one of these sets, there are lots of sections with various keyboards, electronics and percussion to round out and fill up the sound.…”

Finding the Loophole:

Turbulence Orchestra

Evil Clown Headquarters, Waltham MA – 13 April 2023

1)  Finding the Loophole – 1:10:58

PEK – clarinet, contralto & contrabass clarinets, sopranino,  alto & bass saxophones, alto flute, bass tromboon, [d]ronin, theremin, 17-string bass, novation peak, moog subsequent, prophet, syntrx, soma pipe, nord stage 3, Linnstrument controllers, spring & chime rod boxes, Tibetan chimes & bowls, balafon, xylophone, gongs, brontosaurus & tank bells, log drums, wood & temple blocks, almglocken, chimes, orchestral chimes, Englephone

Dennis Livingston – flute, recorders, ocarinas, bottles, nord stage 3 

Michael Caglianone – soprano, alto & tenor saxophones. flute, clarinet, glass of water, spring & chime rod boxes, lfo synths, spring & chime rod boxes, moog subsequent, novation peak, Linnstrument controllers  

John Fugarino – trumpet, flugelhorn, slide trumpet, trombone, nord stage 3, orchestral anvils, xylophone, spring & chime rod box

Bob Moores – space trumpet, flugelhorn, pocket trumpet, lfo synths, spring & chime rod boxes, prophet, nord stage 3, moog subsequent, novation peak, Linnstrument controllers, voice​

Eric Dahlman – trumpet, pocket trumpet, throat singing, recorder, tiny bells  

Duane Reed – double bel euphonium, throat singing, spring & chime rod boxes

Scott Samenfeld – bass

Jared Seabrook – drums, gongs, plate gong, Tibetan bells & bowls, almglocken, balafon, xylophone, brontosaurus & tank bells, wood & temple blocks

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

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Liner Notes by PEK

I formed Turbulence in 2015 as I started to assemble players for the Leap of Faith Orchestra. Turbulence, the extended horn section for the Orchestra (along with guests on other instruments), also records and performs as an independent unit. As if this writing in 2021, we have recorded over 30 albums on Evil Clown with greatly varied ensembles. All the smaller Evil Clown bands are really more about a general approach, rather than a specific set of musicians. A session gets credited to Turbulence when it is mostly horn players and the only musician on all of them is me. A session gets crediting to Turbulence Orchestra when the size of the band reaches 8 or more performers. The sessions range from an early duet with Steve Norton and me (Vortex Generation Mechanisms) to a 5-horn band with bass and two percussionists (Encryption Schemes) to four albums by the side project Turbulence Doom Choir which feature myself, multiple tubas, percussion, electronics, and signal processing and many other configurations.

Currently, the Evil Clown Roster has about 20 horn players. When I schedule Turbulence sets, I put one on the weekend and one on a weeknight since some players can only do one or the other. Finding the Loophole is the first of two Turbulence Orchestra sets for Spring 2023. Since there are more horn players in the Roster than any other instrument groups, the ensemble is often bigger than the other bands and this is the fifth fairly recent set to be credited to Turbulence Orchestra. This time we had nine musicians – three reeds, four brass, bass and drums.

Several of the recent sets have included a drummer. Bonnie Kane (tenor sax and electronics) has brought her drummer (John Loggia) with her when she has come in from Western Mass – They will be coming to the 4/22 set in a week. This time I got a new drummer, Jared Seabrook, and a relatively new bass player, Scott Samenfeld, who has attended one prior set with Simulacrum. Scott is a bit more jazz than most of the bass players who participate in any of the Evil Clown bands. The result is kind of a free big band set up with a two-man rhythm section. With all the doubling that goes on in one of these sets, there are lots of sections with various keyboards, electronics and percussion to round out and fill up the sound.

I’m super happy with this session. The regulars and the newer arrivals really played extremely well together, listening intently and exercising admirable restraint. Generally speaking, as ensemble size increases, so increases the difficulty of making music which is well-formed and tight. I’m very interested in the aesthetic problems of larger group pure improvisations. My Broad Palate concept is a solution to this problem which works by introducing many different possible sonorities. Over the duration of the work, the combination of instruments undergoes tremendous variation, leading to a sequence of very different movements.

Anyway, I like this set and I bet you will too…

PEK – 4/15/2023


Paul Brennan Photos