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Tristan Honsinger

 
Artist: Tristan Honsinger
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Cello
  • Representative Albums: "Map of Moods," "A Camel's Kiss," "Double Indemnity/Imitation of Life: 1980-1981"

Biography

Born in New England, the cellist Tristan Honsinger studied at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore. By the '70s, the Trans-American had moved to Amsterdam and formed the Instant Composers Pool with drummer Han Bennink and radical pianist Misha Mengelberg. With this avant-jazz group, his music transcended the classical conservatory background he had and he began to incorporate wild, free improvisation, jazz, and European folk music into his cannon, not to mention a kinship with Bertolt Brecht theatre, which would put an edge on performances and recordings that take on experimental strategies, some of which include what could be considered violent attacks on the instrument. Here he would find a kinship with Cecil Taylor, who also liked to make small explosions inside his piano. Honsinger worked with the great pianist in Europe, with Steve Lacy, Lol Coxhill, and Louis Moholo among them in the European free jazz community -- which, in the '70s, was thriving as far away as Florence, Italy. Honsinger found a home there in 1978 for a number of years. Working with the more extreme experimental Gruppo Du Improvisazione Nuovo Consonanza (Improvisational Group for New Consonance) members Giancarlo Schiaffini and Gianluigi Trovesi. Having worked with many groups and ad hoc improvisation setting through the years, interests in theatre, dance, and opera influenced his performances considerably.

His optimum is as a solo cello improviser, and on the album A Camels Kiss, he extracts a dense and unworldly combination of jazz techniques, text-less vocalizing, total free improvisation, hints at J.S. Bach, quotes from Kurt Weill, and flirts with the fantasia of gypsy folk music. All with an astounding technique that surpasses many of the greatest of contemporary music interpreters. Often compared to the late Tom Cora, another outlandish jazz cellist whose love for folk and classical music inflected his improvisations. The range of emotions that is covered in a piece by Tristan Honsinger is striking in that it is very accessible for so-called avant-garde music. In the '80s, he recorded for the prestigious FMP label and in the '90s, numerous companies, including Winter and Winter, I.C.P., and legendary jazz archivists Hat Hut from Switzerland. Performing with the Instant Composers Pool, the group was highlighted at many European jazz festivals if not only for their astounding improvisational musicianship, but for the theatrical antics -- spectacles even more unpredictable than there schizophrenic jazz structures. All written in real-time of course. ~ Sylvie Harrison, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Tristan Honsinger
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Tristan Honsinger; original photo courtesy Seth Tisue

Tristan Honsinger (born October 23, 1949) is a cello player active in free jazz and free improvisation. He is perhaps best known for his long-running collaboration with free jazz pianist Cecil Taylor and guitarist Derek Bailey.

Born in Burlington, Vermont, Honsinger was given music lessons from a very early age on, as his mother had hopes of creating a chamber orchestra together with his brother and sister. At the age of 12, Tristan would give concerts on a nearly weekly basis. He studied classical cello at the prestigious New England Conservatory in Boston [1] before moving to Montreal in 1969 to avoid the draft. While in Canada, he became interested in improvisational music. Honsinger moved to Europe in 1974 and was active throughout the continent. [1] He currently operates from Amsterdam in the Netherlands.

Honsinger has a striking appearance, with body language reminiscent of that of a slapstick actor. His theatrical side surfaces in every combo he has played with.

He has experimented with a combo of three string-players (violin, cello and double bass) and drums in 1991, under the name Fields in Miniature, and has worked in other musical fields, including collaboarations with UK post punk band The Pop Group in 1979, The Ex during the early 1990s and Ig Henneman Tentet. More recently, his group This, That and The Other's influences from Italian folk music are ever present.

According to Dutch Volkskrant journalist Erik van de Berg, "Honsinger is someone who hasn't lost his childhood fantasy entirely. His compositions are like a child's drawing, or even more like a story from Winnie The Pooh: awkward and touchingly simple, yet full of deeper meanings for those who want to see them." In the same article, Honsinger commented: "Simple things fascinate me, simple stories and simple characters. It's not that I write for children in particular, but I think they would understand it very well. I usually get the best reactions from an audience with a good mix of children and adults. I don't like to play for one particular age group. It is almost a necessity for me to compose in the form of stories and texts. It gives me ideas and it does help the musicians in their improvisation if they can think: this story is about a little man who takes a walk and experiences this, that and the other. It also helps the audience, it gives them something to hold on to."

External links

References

  1. ^ a b "Tristan Honsinger". European Free Improvisation pages. http://www.efi.group.shef.ac.uk/musician/mhonsing.html. Retrieved on 2008-08-31. 

 
 
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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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