13 Joel ChadabeEmergence
Joel Chadabe
Intellegent Arts ARS-08 (joelchadabe.bandcamp.com)

Pioneering American electroacoustic composer Joel Chadabe (1938-2021), an early Robert Moog collaborator, was even earlier a student of modernist composer Elliott Carter. During his productive career Chadabe honed the cutting edge of innovation in his compositions and interactive musical instrument designs.

The career-spanning 18-track Emergence encompasses a wide range of his work from 1960s acoustic chamber music to recent electroacoustic compositions. All composed in 1967, 3 Ways of Looking at a Square for solo piano, the two-piano Diversions and the flute, clarinet, piano, cello quartet Prelude to Naples lean toward angular modernism.

Street Scene (1968) for English horn, tape, recitation and synthesizer on the other hand reveals Chadabe’s unexpected lyrical side – performed by the English horn melody – the spoken lyrics based on the tough/sensitive Lawrence Ferlinghetti beat poem The Long Street. This moody work deserves to be more widely programmed. 

The joyous Birdbath is a constant motoric burble of stereo synth 16th notes counterpointed by percussion interjections and birdsong. This short track demonstrates the composer’s deft command of synthesizer technique, instrumental timbre and wit. 

One World 2, an electronic dialogue between birdsong and globally-sourced human sounds, reflects Chadabe’s passionate environmentalism. He even posited three ways to sonically engage with the environment. “We can listen to the sounds of the world around us. We can listen through the ears, sensibilities, and talents of sound artists, which is more compelling and engaging. Or we can create sound art, which leads us to become yet more deeply and thoughtfully engaged.” This effective work illustrates the third path.

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