Thursday, May 12, 2022

10 More miniatures

June Tyson from the Akestra
The miniature painting of June Tyson is probably my favorite of the 65 I've done this past month. Tyson sings on the Sun Ra epic Space is the Place and was a member of the Akestra. The following nine are some other of my favorite miniatures, embedded in the 100 Faces from the Top 100 2022 painting I haven't shared with you yet. Each of the paintings is about 3 inches tall.
David Blair Stiffler
Last year I couldn't find a decent image to paint of the American ethnomusicologist David Blair Stiffler and used the only (blurry) image that a Google image search yielded. Stiffler recorded more than just the Music from the Mountain Provinces he recorded in the Philippines and I had known him for. The Top 100 2022 features recordings of Indians from Costa Rica he recorded. I found a recent interview with Stiffler on-line which means I have all access to many images of him, be it as an aged man.

Iannis Xenakis
The most exciting thrift store haul of 2022 was a collection of modern classical records including three discs with compositions by Iannis Xenakis. His works had just previously, in 2021, debuted in my Top 100. The painting I did then is one of my favorite from last year's series. Thus far three compositions by Xenakis have entered the list.
Cuna Indian from a vintage photo
This individual stood right next to the one I used last year (in a vintage photo) to illustrate a song of a Cuna medicine man from Colombia. The same track is in the list again and now much higher (at #2 for the time being). Some of the miniature paintings, like this one, only took 10-15 minutes to complete. The quick ones are also the best ones.
Esma Redzepova

This one was perhaps even less than 10 minutes and honestly, I'm not even sure if her song Jalandi Coban will make it into the list of the Top 100 2022. I painted her because of the context of how the single came to me. I revived my old Musical Thrift Store Treasures just for this one. Here's that post: http://musicalthriftstoretreasures.blogspot.com/2022/05/nine-years-later.html

From the cover of  Music of the Indians of Panama
  
A great impulse for the selections for the Top 100 2022 was supplied by the record store Vinylarchive in Nijmegen, the Netherlands. Due to unfortunate circumstances I had to spend a lot of time in this city whre I had grown up. Every visit to the city included a visit to this record store, the only one I know of with an excellent collection of ethnomusicological recordings. Music of the Indians of Panama: The Cuna (Tule) and Chocoe (Embera) Tribes is only one of a dozen records to be featured multiple times.
Rung-Shun Wu
The Taiwanese musicologist Rung Shun Wu recorded the Vunun tribe in Taiwan. Pasi But But is becoming a regular in the Top 100.
Music of Thailand (cover)

Howard Kaufman
The record Music of Thailand from Folkways has been with me for many years. I've painted bot the cover for it, and a portrait of the recorder before. This year the opening track Suksanaen makes the list. The tune is played on an instrument called can.
Sun Ra
Last, but not least, is a portrait of Sun Ra. A number of his recordings will feature in the Top 100 2022!




Wednesday, May 11, 2022

The Top 100 2022

100 Faces from the Top 100 2022, oil on canvas, 24x36" 
The above painting is still in progress. The process of it is establishing the concept for the series of a 100 paintings for the Top 100 2022. The series, like last year, will be double portraits, but the focus will not be on difference but on equality, or similarity, or familiarity. Different too will be that the 100 paintings will not follow the list by the letter. While the list is a ranking of 100 songs, the paintings will not be depending on the rankings. This will give me greater flexibility in my choices of who to paint. The one aspect of following the list I grew tired of last year was that I had to paint certain individuals over and over again. Last year I painted six portraits of Hugo Zemp for example. Even though there are already several duplicate performers in this year's list (that is not even half way compiled), the above painting has no duplicates, yet every song is represented and there are already more than 60 people portrayed (out of a list of 40 songs). The following 10 details are likely to be repeated in the series that will become The Top 100 2022.
Austin Grasmere and Brian Elliot of Cromagnon
The two members of Cromagnon were painted side by side. The song Caledonia is nothing short of spectacular. Experimental garage rock featuring a bagpipe. It has it all. I had never heard of the band but was introduced to them via the No Wave Facebook group. Their record Orgasm (later reissued as Cave Rock) was produced for the New York based ESP records. The 'E' in ESP stands for 'Esperanto'. The label was founded with the intention of releasing recording with lyrics in Esperanto.


Rundi women performing Ubuhuha
One of my favorite tracks from the treasured LP Burundi:Musique Traditionelles is back in the list this year. For earlier paintings (and written commentaries) click on this link.

Klaudia Schiff and Marlene Marder of LiLiPUT
A return after about 15 years to the list for the Swiss post-punk band LiLiPUT. This time not with their high scoring Eisiger Wind, but with the equally exciting single Split. LiLiPUT used to be called Kleenex but had to change their band's name because of the threat of legal action by the company who used Kleenex as a brand name.

Swedish music anthropologists Ake Egevad and Cajsa Lund
The record Musica Sveciae: Fornnordiska Klanger means a lot to me as I'm interested in prehistoric art and the origin of music. Professor Cajsa Lund, who produced the record, and her collaborator Äke Egevad are professionals who research bot interests and use archaeological evidence to reconstruct sounds from the prehistoric era. Two tracks from the album are listed in the top 100: the sound of a bull-roarer and a performance on the Kantflöjter (flute).

Albert Ayler and Sunny Murray
Sunny Murray is the percussionist on Spiritual Unity, an album by Albert Ayler from 1965. Gary Peacock (not depicted) is the third member of the trio. Ghosts, First Variation is the opening track that also features in my continued top 100, which records and adds points for a recording going all the way back to 1983, the year I started the Top 100.