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Misha
Mengelberg was born in Kiev in 1935 - the son of a Dutch
composer/conductor/pianist and a German harpist - but is a
lifelong resident of Amsterdam, where he teaches counterpoint at
the Sweelinck Conservatory. He wrote his first piece for piano at
age four and has been composing pretty much ever since, in the
jazz and classical fields. Crucial early influences include jazz
pianists Thelonious Monk and Herbie Nichols, the composer John
Cage, whom he heard lecture at Darmstadt in 1958, and the
absurd-art movement Fluxus, with which he was involved in the
1960s.
Mengelberg
graduated from the Royal Conservatory in the Hague in 1964. The
same year he made his first issued recording, Eric Dolphys Last
Date. That album also features drummer Han Bennink, with whom Misha has had a longstanding duo. In
1966 Mengelbergs quartet appeared at the Newport Jazz
Festival in the USA. The following year Mengelberg, Bennink and
Willem Breuker founded the Instant Composers Pool, a landmark in
the development of an independent Dutch improvised music, which
draws on jazz but does not restrict itself to any one style or
aesthetic. (By the time of its 30th anniversary in 1997, ICP
Records was the longest running musician-owned label in
improvised music). In the same period he wrote several game
pieces for musicians, notably Hello! Windyboys
(1968), over a decade before such gaming became common.
In
the 1970s Mengelberg was artistic director of the electronic
music workshop STEIM (Studio for Electro-Instrumental Music),
served as first chairman of the Dutch improvising musicians
union BIM, and began leading the Instant Composer's Pool
Orchestra. He also recorded in trios with Bennink and either
South African saxophonist Dudu Pukwana or German reed player
Peter Brozmann, and in duet with is wifes parrot Eeko.
Along with Breuker, Mengelberg is largely responsible for the
creation of Dutch music theatre, which contains heavy
doses of absurdity and improvisation, musical and theatrical.
In
the 80s Mengelberg presented many music theatre productions
and embarked on repertory projects exploring the music of Herbie
Nichols, Thelenious Monk and Duke Ellington, with ICP (documented
on their CDs Two Programs - the ICP Orchestra Performs
Nichols-Monk and Bospaadje Konijnehol I,
both on the ICP label) and quintets with Bennink and saxophonist
Steve Lacy, heard on the albums Regeneration
and Change of Season (Soul Note). His
recordings in the 90s include two acclaimed trio CDs taped
in New York with drummer Joey Baron, Whos Bridge (Avant) and
No Idea (DIW); the solo piano recital Mix
(ICP) and a duo recording with Bennink, MiHA
(both on ICP), and Jubilee Varia, a 1997
recording by the ICP Orchestra (hatOLOGY). He also participated
with improvised meetings with various European and American
musicians, for several labels.
Mengelbergss
many compositions for reading musicians include 3
Pianopieces (1961) and In Memorium Hans van
Zweeden (1964 - early minimalism, from his Fluxus
years) for solo piano, Dressoir (1977) for the
wind orchestra De Volharding, Rokus de Veldmuis for
the electro-acoustic ensemble Hoketus (1983), and To a
Deaf Mans Ears, a 1996 cantata scripted by Dutch
writer J. Bernlef. His orchestral compositions include With
Well-Kind Regards from the Camel (1974), 3
Intermezzi (1981), Zeekip Ahoy
(1984) and Beestebeest versus Hertie (1995). Onderweg
(1973) and his 1980 saxophone concerto (played by Ed Boogaard)
can be heard on the CD Misha Mengelberg
(Pierrot Lunaire/Associazione di Idee) recorded by the Orchestra
del Teatro Comunale di Bologna, cond. Ernst van Tiel.
Mengelberg
continues to lead the ICP Orchestra, usually an octet with German
trumpeter Thomas Heberer, and the cream of musicians based in
Holland: drummer Bennink, reedists Ab Baars and Michael Moore,
trombonist Wolter Wierbos, cellist Tristan Honsinger and bassist
Ernst Glerum. That band serves as a forum for all
Mengelbergs interests: composition, improvisation,
conducted improvisation, and music theatre
Biography courtesy of BV Haast,
Amsterdam NL.
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