Fence Kitchen
http://www.northeastindie.com
styles: jazz, chamber music, modern dance score
others: John Zorn's Filmworks, Chicago Underground Duo/Trio
Beading
the Rook
Northeast Indie, 2006
rating: 3.5/5
reviewer: p funk
As a member of tarpigh and Cerberus Shoal, Tim Harbeson has helped create some
wonderfully deconstructed indie rock that's always managed to look beyond
bedheaded white dudes with guitars for inspiration. With Fence Kitchen – a solo
project that's been aiding and abetting kindred souls in other mediums such as
modern dance and theatre since 2002, but is just now making its recorded debut –
Harbeson strays even further from rock idioms, to the point that he nearly
abandons them altogether. Over the course of Beading the Rook, he dips
into the wells of post-bop jazz, compositional chamber music, ragtime, and
abstract ambience to beef up the Midwestern post-rock aesthetic he's cultivated
throughout his career.
Considering that many of this album's pieces have served as complements to
dances, puppet shows, and other forms of performance art, it's worth stressing
just how well all of these songs stand on their own. For instance, I can
scarcely believe that "Big His Britches" – an eight-minute piano piece in which
Harbeson exhibits masterful control of tempo, using his left hand to continually
manipulate the song's pace, while pulling down sparkling clusters of
impressionistic upper register notes with his right – was originally conceived
as a complement to a larger work of art. And yet, as fully fleshed-out as
Beading the Rook's 13 tracks are, a sense of absence seems to loom over
the listening experience. The absences of the accompanying dancers or actors, a
stylistic anchor, and sense of song-to-song continuity cast the longest shadows,
but more localized elisions also abound, especially in Harbeson's piano playing,
which draws its energy from melodic stutters and hiccups that jar without
being completely disorienting. His song forms jerk and pivot like his piano: "Shanty,"
"Sight," and "Reading the Wit" all lurch between ominous organ and brass drones
and spicy uptempo segments that approximate the Cantina scene in the first
Star Wars. As defamiliarizing as these turns may be, though, they're never
derailments, as even the most disparate segments of the album share the same
theatrical flourish and creaky stage plank timbre.
What I really find interesting about this work is the way it thwarts
generic expectations. We're socialized into thinking of compositional music as
the pinnacle of sound art and jazz as the most well-wrought of pop music's urns,
but the absences that bother Beading the Rook diffuse those notions. This
isn't a meticulously sculpted Great Work – it's a hodge-podge of tricky songs
existing apart from their original context. Everything about it is decentralized
– decentralized from stylistic categories, from narrative framework, from its
"pure state," even from general coherence. Beading the Rook isn't fussy
about being experienced The Right Way, but is instead happy to be experienced in
new ways. One might criticize Harbeson for deconstructing for deconstruction's
sake in his other projects, but Fence Kitchen herks and jerks magnificently,
backing up its sonic underminings with stronger conceptual ones.
1. Shanty
2. Alone in Water
3. Tombstone Pharmacy
4. Reading the Wit
5. Below Brio
6. Shuttlecock
7. Overture
8. Organic Chemistry
9. Hatio Salico
10. Big His Britches
11. Twine
12. Sight
13. Canoe from an Attica