SOMA061 / Henry House Nate Wooley
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Tracklisting
- Acacia, Burnt Myrrh (19:40)
Russell Greenberg & Matt Moran – Vibraphones
Mat Maneri – Speaking Voice - Stump The World (11:10)
Megan Schubert – Singing & Speaking Voice - Clipped Prose of Juncos (17:42)
Peter Evans – Trumpet
Mattie Barbier & Weston Olencki – Trombones
Dan Peck – Tuba
Mat Maneri – Speaking Voice - Stump The World (11:22)
Megan Schubert – Singing & Speaking Voice - Aleatory Half Sentences (18:38)
Laura Barger & Cory Smythe – Piano & Quarter-Tone Piano
Mat Maneri – Speaking Voice
Recorded July 30, 2022, and October 30-31, 2023, at Oktaven Studios, Mt. Vernon, NY. Engineered by Ryan Streber. Mixed & Edited December 5, 2023, by Randall Dunn at Circular Ruin, Brooklyn, NY.
Cover images from the short film, Henry House, directed by Jen Mesch with her kind permission.
Henry House is a recurring dream song. Combining closely tuned instruments and sinetones, tape-music editing techniques, field recordings, and voice, this eighty-minute, five-part song cycle is an evolutionary step away from the spontaneity of the free jazz/noise aesthetic usually found in the music of Nate Wooley. Henry House expands on the ecstatic, durational work found in Wooley’s Seven Storey Mountain, a six-part composition that has been premiered over the last ten years by an ensemble that now includes multiple drummers, guitarists, a twenty-one-person choir, and the composer on amplified trumpet. But its ritual is more serene, more natural, slower.
Henry House is the first long-form piece that doesn’t feature Wooley’s trumpet. It is also the first to be constructed around his poetic writing. Wooley weaves a strange funeral mass for a fictional everyman from isolated phrases culled from essays, poems, and non-fiction written by Wendell Berry, John Berryman, Joseph Mitchell, and Reiner Stach. After organizing the fragments into a dream narrative, Wooley rewrote the text dozens of times, manipulating the stitched-together story until only glimpses of its sources remained.
These texts become a slowly developing story of care and too much care in living. They are spoken by Mat Maneri and Megan Schubert and set amidst masses of instruments. The outer and middle movements explore the interactions between slowly shifting sine tone frequencies and massed, slightly detuned instruments—vibraphones, brass, pianos—to affect a warmly wobbling harmonic pad that undulates and revolves under Maneri’s performance of the text. The remaining movements move quickly, combining field recordings with hard cuts of Schubert’s singing voice constructed into a massive, tape-affected choir interspersed with her readings.