SOUNDTRACK: SO PERCUSSION-Tiny Desk Concert #205 (April 2, 2012).
So Percussion is a quartet who plays nothing but percussion. When we think percussion we often think rhythm, but these guys (Eric Beach, Josh Quillen, Adam Sliwinski and Jason Treuting) also provide great melody.
The band is inspired by John Cage. He’s “their guy.” They have written songs inspired by him and also perform his pieces.
Though audiences are still often puzzled or even infuriated by Cage, the composer brought essential joy and optimism to his work. Music is everywhere, Cage taught; frame sound, even the sounds of everyday life, and hear what is there. In the signature mix of serious play (or is that playful seriousness?) that So Percussion brought to this unusual Tiny Desk Concert, the group mixed a work by Cage (the first movement of his Living Room Music) with two pieces by Treuting: Life Is [ ] and 24 X 24, in which the text Quillen reads aloud comes from Cage’s own writings. Inasmuch as many of their instruments are quotidian tools, the sounds they create can be magical.
The first piece was written by the band’s Jason Treuting, called “Life Is [ ].” It’s just under three minutes and is primarily wood blocks. But there are also xylophones and bells (and many other things).
All four have mallets and are clacking on the wood blacks. But each player has something else that makes a melody–tiny cymbals, the xylophone, bells that you tap with your hand–and they create a pretty melody (and the wood blocks provide interesting counterpoint rhythm).
Since John Cage is their guy they made a piece that celebrates the way he made music: “24 X 24.” Cage celebrated “time-based structures and task-based sound things.” So this piece is flexible and malleable. They are going to play an 8 minute version of the song which includes a spoken word of a Cage lecture [the entire lecture is reprinted at the bottom of the post].
The narrator counts down from 8, which is interesting. Then he recites (including coughs and other noises) a piece by Cage about music and art. While he is reciting, instruments include the melodica and harmonium, a musical saw, a coffee cup full of change (at one point instead of tapping the cup, he takes the change out and state each denomination out loud). They also play the side of the desk, a cactus plant (that is pretty cool to see), even plucking the Emmy on the desk.
The final piece is a John Cage composition. It is the first part of a longer piece called “Living Room Music.” Back in the early 40s Cage wrote a piece called “Living Room Music” which was supposed to take place in a living room. And this is our living room. They play the first part called “To Begin.” It’s just under a minute, but the sounds they get from a waste basket (like a bass drum), a package of paper towels, a stapler, the desk and the coffee mug is really cool.
Even people who don’t like John Cage have to appreciate what he was going for with this kind of music.
[READ: March 3, 2016] Johnny Boo & The Happy Apples
In this third book of the series, Johnny Boo, Squiggle and the Ice Cream Monster are back.
Johnny eats some ice cream and then shows off how strong it has made him. But when Squiggle accidentally “pops” Johnny’s muscle and it gets all floppy, there is much concern. Things are even worse for Johnny when the ice cream monster (from the first book) comes and shows off his huge muscles that he got from eating apples. If Squiggle laughs at Johnny’s floppy muscle you know there will be hurt feelings. And there are.
Johnny runs off to find some happy apples to make his muscles strong, but he winds up eating apples from the ground, which makes his muscles super floppy (pretty hilarious looking). (more…)


















