Album: Where Here Meets There (Nov. 19, 2013)

Cover of the Where Here Meets There album

—Featured on PRI's The World, WNYC New Sounds, and jazz stations worldwide.

"Wonderful!"—Jazz Weekly

"Best CDs of 2013"—Panamerika

"…a timeless magnum opus."…"—World Music Report

"9/10 for Music and Sound. It's over way to too fast."—Analog Planet (Michael Fremer)

"…no band on the planet sounds remotely like [them]"—Lucid Culture

"…extraordinarily enjoyable…"—The CA Modernist / Eichler Network

"…absolutely amazing…"—Inside World Music

"…certainly a must for exotica fans…."—World Music Central

"I have a massive record collection and can't recall a single album sounding this good. Fantastic!"—Kevin B, Owner, StingRay Records

Our Quartet's Quintet's Second Album

Release Date: Nov. 19, 2013

The quartet's sophomore album re-imagines exotica as a modern genre blending jazz, chamber music, and global sounds. Artistic Director Brian O'Neill highlights his latest originals (Music From Here) and interesting arrangements of classical and popular works (Music From There) such as Manuel de Falla's "Ritual Fire Dance," and Gershwin's "3 Piano Preludes."

  • Sold out, but you can join the wait list re: our upcoming reprinting (~2024/2025).
  • 12" 180-gram (33 1/3 RPM) virgin vinyl audiophile-grade release (lacquers cut at Masterdisk in NYC)
  • Includes free Digital Download card (FLAC files. MP3/WAV on request when you buy from this website.)
  • Limited First Edition Pressing (300 copies). Includes custom artwork, color insert featuring technical recording information, and special liner notes
  • Originally available in black and red options. The special test pressings only come in black.
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Music From Here (side a)

1. Chiseling Music B. O'Neill
2. Sansaz B. O'Neill
3. Maracatune for Chalco B. O'Neill
4. Would You Like Bongos With That Fugue? B. O'Neill

Music From There (side b)

5. Ritual Mallet Dance Brian O'Neill, M. de Falla, D. Gillespie, C. Pozo
6. Prelude for Piano I G. Gershwin
7. Prelude for Piano II (Feat. The Siamese Cat Song) G. Gershwin, P. Lee, S. Burke
8. Prelude for Piano III G. Gershwin
9. Black Orchid C. Tjader

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Mr. Ho’s Orchestrotica Travels to a Future Moment Where American Music is as Exotic as its Past: Where Here Meets There to be released November 19, 2013 on CD and Audiophile Vinyl

"Deliciously entertaining" —Wall Street Journal

View this press release, liner notes, and online EPK at RockPaperScissors.com

From the moment you see the album cover of Where Here Meets There by Mr. Ho’s Orchestrotica, you step into an era that never existed. That’s because the album draws from the past and the future, from nearby and faraway. The musical adventurism of the 1950s and ’60s introduced armchair safari-ism long before “world music” became a thing. The American-based Mr. Ho’s Orchestrotica explores the timbres, rhythms, instruments, and melodies of different places and eras with a decidedly American and modern sound Here, while referencing a wider range of influences There. The CD and 12” audiophile-grade vinyl hits the laminated shelves November 19, 2013.

With Mr. Ho, all things are up for grabs from genre and time period to the size of their ensemble. Led by vibraphone player and percussionist Brian O’Neill, the group kicked off their “Exotica for Modern Living” with a big band formation, and followed that with two quartet albums.

“As the series title suggests, we don’t really describe our sound as vintage ‘exotica’,” says O’Neill. “Exotica of the past was often kitschy, harmonically and rhythmically tame, and heavily reliant on sound effects and Hollywood-style arranging to transport the listener. But I love the root of the genre: being an outsider who invents imaginary moods and places through music. I think our sound is a modern upgrade on the past rather than a tribute; an interpretation we call ‘global jazz and chamber music.’”

Centered around O’Neill’s vibraphone and Geni Skendo’s bass flute and other flutes, along with Jason Davis on acoustic bass and the classical-meets-global percussion of Shane Shanahan (known for his work in Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road Ensemble), the new album invokes Aaron Copeland, tiki sculpture, Brazilian maracatú, Gershwin and Gillespie, Time-Life Records, Bulgarian women’s choirs, Bach, and scratched vinyl.

All the album covers in the “Exotica for Modern Living” series were created by illustrator Javier Garcia, whose work can be viewed on his blog No Barcode (www.javiergd.com/blog). “A mid-century modern nut, he collects old Jim Flora record covers and geeks out to typography on vintage vacuum cleaner manuals,” says O’Neill. “I had a feeling he’d jump at the chance to design in this evergreen aesthetic.”

Whether skipping between eras, record grooves or musical traditions, tracks on the quartet’s new album tend to fall into one of two themes. “Each piece is either an original work heavier on improv, dissonance, moodiness, jazz, and escapism; or a scaled-down classical work we put into a chamber music context, often with humorous additions and perhaps a little jazz or global sounds to surprise the listener. Those are the ‘Here’ and ‘There,’ respectively, from the album title.”

Like an album from a past which has yet to arrive, whether they are playing a piece from Here or a piece from There, Mr. Ho’s Orchestrotica’s new recording brings the background to the front and the future to the imaginary.

About the Compositions/Arrangements

Mr. Ho’s Orchestrotica’s Where Here Meets There

Music From Here

1. Chiseling Music (5:41)
2. Sansaz (4:46)
3. Maracatune for Chalco (7:34)
4. Would You Like Bongos With That Fugue? (5:05)

Music From There

5. Ritual Mallet Dance (6:53)
6. Prelude for Piano I (3:10)
7. Prelude for Piano II (Feat. The Siamese Cat Song) (6:14)
8. Prelude for Piano III (2:43)
9. Black Orchid (5:12)

1. “Chiseling Music”

Imagery is an important factor in O’Neill’s work. “Chiseling Music” came from his curiosity of tikis, the Polynesian carvings of people and/or deities (and the name of a subculture that adores them). “While the mid-century carvings were reproductions of authentic artifacts from the islands, they became their own collectible art form too. I imagined an army of walking palm trees going off to their ‘death’ to be carved.” O’Neill built a miniature Marching Machine, a novelty instrument he discovered in classical repertoire, to initiate the sound of the trees’ march. Later in the music, one hears the woodchips fly.

2. “Sansaz” 3. “Maracatune for Chalco”

“Maracatune for Chalco” has the Brazilian maracatú rhythm as its inspiration. “Traditionally it is played by a battery of percussion,” says O’Neill, “so I assigned those parts to non-percussion instruments and used that as a compositional basis for the work.” Sometimes O’Neill’s ideas take unusual detours, as with “Sansaz,” which pitches the tanbur (long-neck Turkish lute) of guest Tev Stevig against the rest of the ensemble, creating the tension of the brittle metal strings against the warmth of vibes and flute. (Stevig will shortly become a full-time member, making the quartet into a quintet.)

4. “Would You Like Bongos With That Fugue?”

“Would You Like Bongos With That Fugue?” incorporates a fugue into a modern composition befitting the quartet. It became that, and a very ’60s beatnik tribute to J.S. Bach turned inside out. A quote from “Toccata in D Minor” plays over a backwards Balkan berance rhythm, while another from the “Fugue in G Minor” is slipped into 7/4 with a solo over the top. It’s a world through the looking glass.

5. Ritual Mallet Dance

This arrangement is based on the melody from Manuel de Falla’s famous ballet piece titled “Ritual Fire Dance.” O’Neill wrote original material for this piece and added a reference to Guachi Guaro, composed by Dizzy Gillespie and Chano Pozo (a tune made famous by Cal Tjader’s version and album titled “Soul Sauce”).

6-8. Gershwin’s “Three Preludes for Piano”

Adaptations of work by other composers feature heavily in the quartet’s repertoire, and O’Neill is constantly looking for material that fits the line-up of percussion, double bass, and bass flute or C-flute. While most of his exotica forebears looked to imaginary faraway places, he realized that American composers had plenty to offer, with Gershwin’s Piano Preludes a cornucopia of possibilities for a modern mash-up.

On this album, the group has arranged Gershwin’s Three Preludes for piano inserting some of O’Neill’s own music. The second Prelude was influenced by O’Neill’s visit to a Disney-themed international sandcastle competition in Belgium. “There was Disney music coming from speakers shaped like rocks. ‘The Siamese Cat Song’ from Lady and the Tramp was playing and I realized it was in a similar feel as the second Prelude. It was so random, but it worked and I soon began to picture cats walking on the piano and wondered what would happen if they got mischievous. ” The mischief comes in the form of the band’s free improvisation chops, with flutist Geni Skendo’s parts instructing him to interpret “Ornette Coleman shaking a cat.” The result is an interesting ballad that respects a trio of American composers, celebrates jazz improvisation, but sounds uniquely Orchestrotica. A wink to Aaron Copland and Bulgarian choral music can also be heard in the group’s rendering of the third Prelude, which rounds out the trio.

9. Black Orchid”

A version of Cal Tjader’s “Black Orchid” offers a direct nod to the past and to scratched vinyl. Tjader was the Latin vibraphone player of the 1960s and the quartet has played several of his compositions over the five years of its existence, but hadn’t recorded this one. O’Neill’s version converts the melody into 3/4, the first hint that something is awry. But the most notable variation from the original is in the way the solo vamp features an oud solo played by Stevig in an uneasy 15/8 meter, making it sound like a skipping record.

release: 11/19/13

More info: Read this release online via RockPaperScissors.com

Exotica for Modern Living

In 2010, Mr. Ho decided to release a series of albums over the next few years under the title "Exotica for Modern Living." These records will attempt to take the best elements of mid-century living, music, and culture and merge them with modern life to provide listeners with a "retro futuristic" listening experience. The old sounds of space-age pop meet the new sounds of global jazz, and chamber music influenced by jazz, world music, and orchestral/classical works too. We hope you enjoy these new recordings (and the beautiful series of artwork by Javier Garcia)!

The series includes:

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The recording features:

Production

Produced by Brian O’Neill and John Weston. Recorded and mixed by John Weston at Futura Productions (Roslindale, MA). Mastered by Mark Donahue at Soundmirror (Boston, MA). Vinyl mastering supervision by Brother Cleve. Lacquers cut by Scott Hull at Masterdisk (NYC). Artwork designed by Javier García. More about Brian O’Neill (artistic director & executive producer) at crashandboom.com.

LINER NOTES:

Where Here Meets There is not an exercise in nostalgia for Mr. Ho (Brian O'Neill), who isn’t pining for a bygone musical paradise. You may hear overtones of Les Baxter and Brian Wilson, but they’re ports of call, not destinations. There's innovation, as the Orchestrotica reinvents Gershwin and De Falla while channeling mid-century Exotica. Adherence to any musical stylebook is confining, and Mr. Ho & cohorts prefer redefining. Mr. Ho calls it "global jazz and chamber music," which seems equally suitable for a fine-art gallery, concert stage, or tiki bar. The quartet has concocted a savory soul sauce whose ingredients include Stravinsky, Dizzy Gillespie, and Martin Denny. For seasoning there's Bach and backwards Balkan dance beats. Would you like bongos with that fugue? The inclusion of unusual instruments such as pandeiro, oud, bass cajon, and udu provide surprising colors and reinforce the genre-bending. It's a strange musical landscape for which Mr. Ho provides the GPS. Sit back and let him do the navigating—passport not required.
—Irwin Chusid, WFMU Radio

"A technicolor dreamscape of faraway places—welcome to the new age of Exotica."
-—Brother Cleve

FROM THE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR:

Somewhere in the middle, Here meets There. The Orchestrotica is always searching for that place: the one where Macedonians dance backward while Bach takes another chorus over his latest fugue. Now look over There: where two mischievous Disney cats dash across Gershwin’s piano, their paws igniting a blaze of free improvisation. To cool off, dive into the flip side of the record and you’ll find yourself right back Here, just a few miles from Chalco. And that’s where we’ll be, drumming up the next “maracatune” just for you.
—Mr. Ho (Brian O'Neill)

Thanks!

Special thanks to the O'Neill clan: Ronda, Larry, Fran, Bill, Alli, and especially Jennifer. Additional thanks to John Weston, Mike King, Joe Ranft, and Hal Ranft, and all of our PledgeMusic fans especially The Nuernberg Boys, Jack Fetterman, Gina Haase, Amit Segal, Dave Rasmussen, Kristin Chisesi, David Sparkman, Dr. Zarkov of Dr. Zarkov's Tiki Lounge on Radio Fairfax, and Irwin Chusid.

We used PledgeMusic to help create this recording. This is Mr. Ho's introductory video about the album and the campaign (ended Oct 3, 2013).

SKU #

888174272405 (CD)