Press

Extraordinarily Rich

CD Title: Live from the Center

Exercising both the inside and outside of the piano means that you are dealing with the entire instrument.  It means that you are dealing with all of the piano’s dynamics.  And discovering what is possible within the realm of possibilities which you know, as a musician, you cannot possibly exhaust.

David Arner’s piano vocabulary in his new solo recording is extraordinarily rich.  He has augmented his musical vocabulary with this one instrument volumetrically.

His sense of the piano is extremely acute.  He knows the piano’s relationship to how the sound will rise out of it.  The key to the relationship is the attack he will choose: planting his fingers on the keys, using his fingers to pluck the strings on the sounding board, holding a mallet to bounce on the strings.  Then, comes the music.  How the notes are put together, how the phases become sensible, and how pushing the envelope on repetitions of phrases imbues great power in a sonorous atmosphere to build its omnipresence and incessant tempo.  This atmosphere is juxtaposed to quietude, and equally present are runs and trills, silence and deeply felt and internally driven accents and sustenutos and dampening resonance.  The music is in a perfect balance.

Arner’s playing has characteristics that qualify as signature. There are times when he executes his music as if it were played on a piano roll.  It is really quite amazing.  He can manufacture brilliant continuity with the left hand which simultaneously is countered by a right-handed series of separated single, double, triple notes.  Then the two hands switch roles and the continuity evolves in another way. Just as intense as the multiplicitous ranges of note and phrase series could be a repeated, very evenly timed single note cadenza.  Arner’s choice of how to combine the tonal with the percussive gives substance to the origin of both, which is the same.

Arner approaches his improvisations with exquisite conception.  The rapidity and clarity with which his pieces precisely unfold are remarkable.  It is with certainty that I feel that his idea of time corresponds with its passage.  It is as if he doesn’t want to let one increment of time pass unnoticed, undocumented, unused.  In this way, he is bearing witness to time in its penultimate form.  For the process of improvisation is, in itself, a means to document time.  It is a means for the mind, emotion and universal view to blend into an unfettered, irrevocable, inimitable sound force.  The ramifications of that marriage are completely absorbing and a lesson in how vast is the capacity of this pianist to create exciting, energized and unforgettable music.

Arner steps beyond the academic.  It is that step which takes him into musical zones that not only require rapt attention but also render rapt attention an automatic response to the music.

Reviewed by: Lyn Horton 2005

Improvised & Otherwise Festival 2005

Choreographer Susan Osberg’s Workwith Company

As the ultra gentrification of Manhattan continues, “downtown” artists have responded with an amoeboid exodus into the hinterlands of Queens and Brooklyn, where lower overhead expenses enable venues to support avant experimentation.  The Improvised and Otherwise festival, an outgrowth of this burgeoning “across-town” scene, is fast becoming an important forum for the continuing “researches” of these sonic scientists and their visual-kinetic collaborators.

The festival’s forth annual edition opened Thursday night [May 5th, 2005] with HorseEyeless, a dipsomaniacally dancing duo accompanied by percussion and electronics.  Mary Halvorson (guitar) and Jessica Pavone (viola) followed with a musical dialogue that alternated pointillistic exchanges with sustained, soothing sonorities wandering in and out of tonality. In the next piece, Estelle Woodward’s statuesque sensuality provided a kinesthetic counterpoint to John Hughes’ intimate “dance” with his bass, concluding in a poignant moment when the improvisors made I-contact…

Ubiquitous Gestures & Found Object

The Susan Osberg Workwith Dancers Company performed Ubiquitous Gestures & Found Object featuring five dancer-narrators and the emphatic yet empathetic piano of David Arner…

Blue Collar, including downtown mainstays Tatsuya Nakatani (percussion), Steve Swell (trombone) and Nate Wooley (trumpet) concluded Friday’s festivities with a strong set. Swell played disassembled horn parts, Wooley experimented with multiphonic textures through simultaneous singing and blowing, while Nakatani expressed himself with Japanese “singing bowls” and dramatic body-English…

[Saturday] evening ended with a powerful set by Ken Filiano & Collected Stories, a dynamic group cross-fertilizing European free music sensibilities with In a Silent Way-era Miles Davis; compelling solos, a houserockin’ solo from trombonist Steve Swell, frenetic “fiddling” from cellist Tomas Ulrich, and Jackson Krall’s cookin’ drum gumbo brought the festival’s final night to a satisfying closure.

As it continues to build momentum and expand its aesthetic scope, I&O remains a reflection and extension of its communal roots: a melting pot-pourri of improvisational artistry.

Thomas Greenland,  Signal to Noise,  Fall 2005

WAMC-FM on David Arner

“David Arner has done what many have thought undoable.

He has welded the formalism of a commanding technique to the wildness of Jazz and the seductiveness of creativity.  The result is

a musical ménage a-trois, that holds and transports listeners through the incredible maze of his seemingly unflagging imagination.”

Paul Elisha,  Host of Performance Place,  WAMC-FM,  Northeast Public Radio,  January 2003

October Festival of Words and Music

One of the Valley’s most consistently inventive and stimulating musical improvisors.

Whether glissading over the keyboard or wailing on the balafon, David Arner is one of the Valley’s most consistently inventive and stimulating musical improvisors.  This Saturday, October 16th [1993], he’ll be joined by Futu Futu’s Joakim Lartey and instrument designer Steve Silverman for an all-percussion concert at the Artist’s Co-op, 60 Broadway, Tivoli, at 8:30 p.m. Drums, bells, cymbals, kalimbas, and one-of-a-kind percussive devices will make for a most irresistible gig– the penultimate performance in the Co-op’s October Festival of Words and Music, which Arner and friends organized.

Mikhail Horowitz,  Woodstock Times (NY),  October 14, 1993

Downtown Music Gallery Review of Out/In the Open

One of this year’s best piano trio offerings.

Featuring David Arner on his 1968 Steinway L piano,

Michael Bisio on contrabass and Jay Rosen on drums.  I hadn’t heard of pianist David Arner before four discs of his recently arrived at DMG, one on CIMP, two self-produced and this one. While the CIMP CD is based on the music of “Porgy & Bess”, this disc is mostly spontaneously improvised with one piece by Mr. Arner and one standard. “Double Nature” is a sublime, dreamy piece that starts slowly and builds to a grand conclusion. I am not sure how often this trio has played together but there is a most magical connection between each member“Swirl” is an aptly titled piece which flows superbly like the wind whipping slowly through the branches of a tree on a fine fall day.  Michael Bisio remains amongst the best of the crop of current bassists that I’ve been lucky enough to hear locally on numerous occasions.  Michael’s  solo on “Swirl” and overall playing throughout this disc is consistently stunning and often angelic.  I would imagine that the third piece is dedicated to him as it is called “Mr. MB”, his playing on this piece sublime and inspired.  Another integral part of this trio is the ubiquitous Jay Rosen who mallet work on this piece is quite special.  Mr. Arner’s one original work is called “Intensities” and it is indeed quietly intense.  Arner’s playing on this piece is harp-like and especially haunting as if it has drifted in from a familiar dream.  Commencing with Rogers & Hart’s “My Romance”, the trio brings this disc to close with a lovely, soothing and exquisite ballad. A most fitting conclusion to a most enchanting disc. Each of the six pieces on this wonderful disc seems complete and like a work unto itself.  I look forward to hearing the CIMP CD as this CD is one of this year’s best piano trio offerings.

– Bruce Lee Gallanter, Downtown Music Gallery, September 2009

Going Where the Love Is

Deep Listening Space (Kingston, NY)

Attending this first concert of 2006 was an easy choice for me to make.  It was the very idea of the duo performance of David Arner on piano and Michael Bisio on string bass that took me the distance from where I write here to where I could hear them.  And the music transcended the miles I traveled.

Arner chooses his musical syntax from an encyclopedic knowledge of the capacity of the keyboard.  Bisio rewards the listener with a soft and dedicated approach to the bass strings. Every sound that the two make is simple.  It is in the interaction that those same sounds can promote a blended complexity.  It is in the interaction of an orientation to detail, which is paramount to Arner’s precise address to his instrument, with Bisio’s tender and broad strokes that can paint a complete musical picture.  A wedding of opposites.

The concert took place in an informal setting in the Hudson Valley.  As the music was about to begin, Arner was poised over the sounding board of a grand piano.  Bisio stood in the space shaped by the curve of the piano, his fingers ready to engage the strings at the neck of the bass.

The sound commenced.  It spread out invisibly in small, quiet motion.  Both players were plucking and tapping their own strings in a conversation with one another, cementing the space as the groundwork for the upcoming dynamic.  The two carefully picked where they intersected.  It was like foreplay before they thrust their coherence and persistence and dove into the place where the vibrations of the strings merged, ringing and full.

Arner moved his fingers to the keyboard as Bisio charted out a dreamy, beautiful melody.  A quickly captivating rhythmic content crossed through the terrifically stringent and abstracted sound constructions and eventually took over.  The power of the rhythm was not inconsistent with the endlessly repeated cascades of notes on the piano complemented by slow grooves on the bass, thumbed and plucked over the strings.

The drive and climb to the next configuration of time was all that mattered.  To be so ensconced in the activity at hand was all that mattered.  The poetry of the musician’s becoming one with the instrumental interplay was all that mattered.

Chordal shifts in the piano aligned with snaps of the strings on the bass.  The bass notes were squeezed and pushed and eventually met the bow.  The piano music transformed into a drone for a while.  Bisio bowed adamant, large, classical gestures which were pitted against exquisitely small detailed ones on the piano.  Arner’s fingers evoked grandeur with a tact completely different from that of Bisio.  They both produced resonating tones unparalleled for the rest of night.  The potency of the resonance overcame anything that could follow.  The sound seemed electronic; the two instruments had reached the same tonal arena: as the sound became larger, so was influenced its largeness.  The sound surrounded itself.  No drama: only indeterminate determinacy.  Arner flickered with his little finger in the treble seeming to signal the sight of the end of this road.  Bisio applied force on his bow, vibrating one string after the other.  Arner came back to center with careful placement of his fingers and his foot on the pedal.  The pitch on the bass ascended.  Bisio scraped a high finishing note.

After an arresting statement of virtuosity, calmness bathed the audience.  The musicians took a deep breath.

Arner introduced the next piece with a tuneful basis.  From there, with the rhythm an underlying constant, he worked to map out his process.  Bisio entered slowly with a relaxed pizzicato.  Midst the lacey pianistic structure made of chords, trills and atonal clusters, Bisio strummed, played staccato and snapped the bass strings.  Then Arner stamped out double-handed marching phrases permitting himself to charge into a group of changes that seesawed between chords and fluid swirls and landed into a set of phases.  Bisio spread himself to correspond sweepingly with the rapidity with which Arner traveled dryly and then coloristically over the piano.  With one finger wagging over the strings constantly, Bisio fell into a nearly Spanish guitar type fluttering’he was echoing Arner’s playfulness.  The musicians were consumed in the rhythm that had developed.  And once again, a groove overwhelmed the gathering of the senses.  The music was joyous.  Each player spoke to one another unremittingly.  The atmosphere the music expired was one of captivation and immersion.  Bisio grunted with the pulse.  Arner repeated one series of tumbling notes after the other.  The bass exuded tightness, yet that tightness was paradoxically supple and elastic.

After passing through a hiatus or two, in relation to Arner’s gradual slowing of pace in the treble, Bisio played with the edge of his bow, instead of its width, to pull away from depth of the sonority for a bit.  Then he applied the bow’s broadside again to submerge into rich, embracing tones.  Bisio rounded out the sharpness of Arner’s retracing of thematic phrasing.  A deconstruction of the tune ended the second piece.

The last piece of the set began with a Bisio solo.  His bow moved to me and away from me.  The series of tones he played interlocked into a velvet fabric of energy so smooth that the distance between the bowing and the coincidental fingering was undetectable.  His large strokes mapped a seemingly endless journey to a distinct melodic line in which a low to high pitch movement introduced a synchronicity with the piano as it returned to the soundscape.  Bisio goes nowhere except where he is at any one point.  How he stretches the boundaries of his instrument is through his state of aural mind.  How that transfer matches with Arner’s pianistic intelligence is one reason the musicians could so easily converge.  Even in the silence, even in the blossoming of “Angel Eyes”, I had the jitters.  I counted the pulse the whole time.

Someone once wrote that music has to have meaning and, further, that music meaning itself is nonsensical.  I disagree.  Music may have meaning and music that means itself is music that is being explored for how its form can become its content.  Music that means itself is music that has been crafted and honed to the quintessence that each individual musician can identify. The quintessence arises out of a strange simultaneity of involvement and detachment.  At this concert was manifested that quintessence, times two.

Lyn Horton, January 12, 2006

Out/In the Open: Exploratory Piano Trio Music

A pianistic touch that conveys intensity, even when dancing lightly over the keyboard

Pianist David Arner suddenly appears to be everywhere.  He’s released four different recordings in the past year: two solo piano discs and two trio recordings done with Bisio and drummer Jay Rosen.   Out/In The Open is the second recording from this aggregation.   Arner has been active since the ‘70s but mostly under the radar, including stints with Meredith Monk and Charlotte Moorman.

He has a pianistic touch that conveys intensity, even when he’s dancing lightly over the keyboard, and seems comfortable dealing with both compositional frameworks and spontaneous interplay.

On Out/In The Open, the balance leans toward the latter with four out of the six tracks being free improvisations.   One can’t get a much better rhythm section for this type of music than Bisio and Rosen.   The former can always be counted upon to shore up the lower end of an ensemble with thick, dense lines that flesh out but never overpower the music.   Rosen is equally deft in his approach.   He’s a colorist and melodist par excellence, yet he’s also capable of laying down an all-over percussive underpinning, pointing to myriad directions for the improvisers as well.   Together this trio offers tracks (in addition to the improvisations there is an Arner original and a take on Rodgers-Hart’s “My Romance”) that indicate, exploratory piano trio music is still out there moving forward rather than wallowing in the well-worn path of history.

Robert Iannapollo, July, 2010

Virtuoso of the heart and mind

Chronogram review of Live from the Center

Deep Listening Gallery’s adventurous Thursday night jazz and

improvisation concerts are organized by the brilliant pianist David Arner.

Despite scant pay, there’s a parade of prime musical talent from all over the U.S. of A.

The attraction is the high standard set by Arner’s own musicianship and integrity,

and the small but dedicated audience attracted by the same.

Evenings when Arner puts his hand to the keyboard are a special delight.

I had the good fortune to attend Arner’s 2003 solo performance at the Center for Performing Arts in Rhinebeck that’s the source material for this new disc.  “Cosmos II,” its 26-minute centerpiece, stretches the piano’s sonic possibilities via mallets and plucking of the harp, gentle use of the piano case for percussion, and careful planning of overtones captured by close miking, but minus the usual New Music extreme effects of smashing keyboards with elbows and placing objects on piano strings.

Everything is open to question via mercurial shifts of tempo, tonality or lack thereof, lyricism versus dissonance, loud and soft, and timbres of a hundred shapes.  It takes a virtuoso of the heart and mind, as well as of the hands, to make this questioning succeed.  And succeed Arner does.

Philip Ehrenshaft, Chronogram (Mid-Hudson Valley), December 2005

Arner continues musical journey with new CD

A Supremely Gifted Pianist

Review of  “Live from the Center”

The Hudson Valley music community is certainly lucky to have David Arner.  Besides being a supremely gifted pianist the Port Ewen resident and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute jazz history professor has also been the curator of Kingston’s vital weekly New Vanguard series of creative improvised music for the past few years.  In its current home at the city’s Gallery at Deep Listening Space, the series’ performances boast some of the leading local, national and international artists of the free jazz/avant-garde world.  Outside of Manhattan, few cities have anything close to the surprising showcase of innovative music Arner presents like clockwork every Thursday night.  It’s an evening of high musical adventure.

Of course, many listeners don’t want adventure.  They want something they find easy to hum along to when they’re working out or staining the deck.  Fair enough.  We all love our comfort food, be it classical or classic rock.  But sometimes it just feels great to through away the roadmap, to use a side of the brain we normally leave dormant and surrender without judgment to whatever random sounds come our way – be they soothing or abrasive.  Anyone who appreciates Jackson Pollock’s paintings should have no trouble with this approach.

A Journey to the Outer Reaches of Discovery

Like Arner’s 2002 debut, “Solo Piano” (Dogstar), “Live from the Center” stars the pianist in unaccompanied mode.  Culled from his December 26th 2003 performance at the Center for the Performing Arts in Rhinebeck, the 70-minute disc features four of his lengthy “spontaneous compositions,” beginning with the nearly half-hour “Cosmos II.”  The classically trained Arner is often favorably compared to free jazz piano giants Cecil Taylor and Matthew Shipp; his use of thundering chords and runs of frantic, scrambled high notes make it easy to understand why.  Yet his style is equally marked by an ability to create deep chasms of almost unbearable tension, wide-open gaps that challenge the listener to the point of insanity by keeping him or her hanging on the eternities between every plinked key, every scraped piano string.  It feels good.

But as uncompromising as Arner’s technique is, the roots of tradition are still there for those who look hard enough: while “NY Nocturne’s” glittering free-flowing whirlpool appears completely un-tethered, one can actually pick out snatches of Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue” as well as the Harlem stride players like Art Tatum and James P. Johnson whom Arner sites in his liner notes.  (The tune inspired a poem by award-winning writer and former Freeman editor Mikhail Horowitz,  reprinted in the CD’s booklet.)

As Arner’s performances always are, “Live from the Center” is a journey to the outer reaches of discovery for both the artist and the listener.

Your ticket, please.

Peter Aaron, Kingston Daily Freeman (NY), October 21 2005