Four years after the release of their debut album, WORK, Buffalo-based new music collective Wooden Cities returns with their second release, PLAY. Embracing lighter, more whimsical subject matter than its predecessor, the album leans into the playful—and occasionally volatile—absurdity that regional audiences will know from the ensemble’s live performances.
The album is structured around four realizations from Baltimore composer Will Redman’s graphic score magnum opus, Book. In these spirited interpretations, the musicians survey a range of textures from dense, sinewy counterpoint to threadbare pianissimos, while always taking advantage of the piece’s deeply-rooted expressive freedom.
The remainder of the album explores three lively sound poetry pieces, beginning with a riotous four-voice arrangement of Berlin Dadaist Kurt Schwitters’ Ribble Bobble Pimlico. The band ludicrously alternates between reassuring whispers and clamorous chants while articulating the titular nonsensical words in ever-sillier combinations, as can be seen in the music video for the piece made by director, Britty Lea. This vein of exploration continues on two pieces by members of the ensemble: trombonist Ethan Hayden’s setting of an excerpt of Gertrude Stein’s poem “In”, and violinist Evan Courtin’s setting of Marina Blitshteyn’s “Good Form,” the latter a darkly comic rendering of a discomfiting interior monologue.
Formed in 2011 as a structured improv orchestra, Wooden Cities has since garnered a reputation for their dynamic performances of both improvised and notated works of new and experimental music from a wide variety of composers. PLAY is the second in a trilogy of albums (WORK/PLAY/REST), with the third coming in 2024.
For complete credits and liner notes, download the PLAYbill.