Dude Weather Subscribe to Secrets Minneapolis / St. Paul
More than a composer, Mary Ellen Childs devised a neat trick to lure skeptical listeners to her contemporary chamber music concerts. The Northeast Minneapolis resident is known nationally in avant-garde music circles for supplementing cutting-edge sonic experiences with any number of visual hooks. With Dream House, for instance, which premiered at the Southern Theater in 2004, rhythmic music for live string quartet and innovative theatrical lighting played against time-lapse video of a demolition and subsequent construction at the site of Childs’s own home. Twin Citians haven’t heard (or seen) much from Childs in the intervening years, but she is presently putting the finishing touches on a retrospective for Crash, the “visual percussion” ensemble she has worked with for the past twenty years, whose members have backgrounds in everything from marching band to dance and tai chi. Drumming in Motion: Mixed and Remixed incorporates drummers on wheels, giant illuminated gongs, and a marimba powered by stationary bicycle. And, of course, it wouldn’t be a Childs performance without a collaborating video artist—in this case, Daniel Polsfuss. Hints of what inspires these irreverent and, at times, oddball creations can be found in this annotated list of Childs’s favorite albums:
1. Rivers and Tides, Fred Frith
Spare but perfect music written for a beautiful film about a fascinating subject. Every time I listen to it the images from the film come flooding back.
2. Accordion Tribe, Guy Klucevsek,
Maria Kaleniemi, Lars Hollmer, Otto Lechner, and Bratko Bibic
The accordion has always been one of my favorite instruments for which to write. And what could be better than one accordion, but five? The sound of these fine musicians playing together is nothing short of amazing.
3. Volver, Alberto Iglesias
I loved this Almodóvar film and was so enchanted by its sonorous and evocative music that I bought the CD the very next day.
4. Eislermaterial, Heiner Goebbels
For some this is an acquired taste. For me, I can’t tell you why I am so taken with Heiner Goebbels’s music except that it’s not quite like anything I’ve heard before. It has an ineffable “something” that completely captures my imagination.
5. The Essential Michael Nyman Band, Michael Nyman
Years ago an enthusiastic Michael Nyman fan introduced me to his music and I thought “So?” Recently, however, I listened again—and I’m riveted. This music goes straight to my heart.
Baseball:
Warning Track Power by Alex Halsted
Sports:
On the Ball by Britt Robson
Weather:
Dude Weather by Jimmy Gaines
Fiction:
Write Now! by Terry Faust
Hockey:
Spazz Dad by Todd Smith
Style:
Hook & Eye
Misc:
Is This News?
Fiction:
Yo, Ivanhoe by Brad Zellar
Food:
Consider the Egg by Stephanie March
Wine:
Beyond the Cask
Food:
Food Fight!
Media:
To the Slaughter
Misc:
Outrage by Staff
Food:
Chef's Table
Guest Commentary:
Just Passing Through
Humor:
Spazz Dad by Todd Smith
Cars:
Road Rake by Chris Birt
Commentary:
Read Menace by Tom Bartel
Society:
The Adventures of Melinda by Melinda Jacobs
Politics:
Defenestrator by Rich Goldsmith
Food:
Breaking Bread by Jeremy Iggers & Ann Bauer
Books:
Cracking Spines by Max Ross
Music:
Hear, Hear by Staff
Art:
The Vicious Circle by 6 Critics
Secrets:
Secrets of the Day by Kate Iverson
Theater:
Seen in the City by Staff
Film:
Talk About Talkies by Staff