Crosscut Tout: a percussive revolution

The Seattle Percussion Collective, performing its spring concert this week (April 1), has developed an eager following since forming two years ago.

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Thomas May

The Seattle Percussion Collective, performing its spring concert this week (April 1), has developed an eager following since forming two years ago.

“Percussion music,”  declared John Cage back in 1939, right in the middle of his  stint at Seattle’s Cornish College, “is revolution. Sound  and rhythm have too long been submissive to the restrictions of 19th-century  music. Today we are fighting for their emancipation.”

No question: The emergence  of percussion-centered composition over the last century has opened  up a new universe of creative possibilities. And the Seattle Percussion Collective (SPC) gives state-of-the-art demonstrations of this brave new world of musical  liberation. Since first appearing on the local scene in 2009, the SPC  it has developed an eager following with its intriguing blend of avant-garde  pioneers like Cage and contemporary composers.

This flexible chamber  ensemble of locally based musicians, which also collaborates with other  soloists and artists from different fields, has a knack for highlighting  the kaleidoscopically ranging colors and theatrical flair of percussion  music. On offer for their spring  concert on Friday (April 1) are three world premieres by Seattle-based  composers, three works by well-known mavericks, and a pair of pieces  by American composers Roger Zahab and Larry Polansky. The concert is  one of the wonderfully adventurous happenings presented by the Wayward Music Series at the Good Shepherd Center in Wallingford — a vital contributor  to Seattle’s new-music scene.

The brand-new works  include "Music for Magnets" by the SPC’s own Paul  Kikuchi (inspired by “rhythmic phenomena such as rain sounds and old  radiators as well as drumming traditions of Cuba and Tahiti); a percussion  trio by Sarah Bassingthwaighte ("Letters from the Earth")  that promises to travel “from the cacophonous world of industrial  society” to “the natural world that exists just outside the boundaries  of our urban existence”; and a trio for drums, vibraphone, orchestra  bells, and maracas by Nat Evans titled "Transition."

As a tribute to the  recently deceased Milton Babbitt, the collective has programmed his marimba solo  "Beaten Path." Two pieces from the early 1960s will  also highlight the mind-boggling diversity of postwar experimentalism:  Giacinto Scelsi’s mesmerizing "I Riti: Ritual March"  and "In Memoriam…Esteban Gomez" by American maverick  Robert Ashley. The latter is a graphic score (realized by four players)  that was inspired by the explorer credited with mapping the eastern  shore of North America.

If you go: The Seattle Percussion Collective performs at 8 p.m. Friday (April 1), at the Chapel  Performance Space of the Good Shepherd Center, 4649 Sunnyside  Ave. N, fourth floor. Suggested donation: $5-$15.

Donation CTA