In
Spite of Wishing and Wanting
In Spite of Wishing and Wanting is a soundscape David Byrne produced
for the Belgian dance company Ultima Vez.
A CD of this project was only available on-line for a limited time
and at the performances of Ultima Vez and recent David Byrne shows,
The album "In Spite of Wishing and Wanting" contains both new compositions
and remixes of songs from the Feelings album.
Tracks:
- Horses (4:31)
- Sleeping Up (12:13)
- Speech (5:26)
- Saïd & the Ants (4:18)
- Fear (2:32)
- Fuzzy Freaky (DJ Food Mix) (6:19)
- Danceonvaselinesuperextendedremix (19:45)
linernotes by David Byrne:
I first saw a performance by Ultima Vez/Wim Vandekeybus in Seattle
in 1991. I was knocked out. The piece was inspiring and inventive.
Wim, the dancers and I managed to talk afterwards and we more or
less kept in touch after that. Time passed.
After some years we talked about me doing music for a film that
Wim had in mind based on a Paul Bowles story. The film did not happen,
but the project managed to get us back together and talking... and
wondering if there wasn’t some other project we could collaborate
on. This is it. It also began with a story. In this case two short
pieces by Julio Cortázar, the Argentine writer.
The stories are more or less evident in the film which appears
as part of the performance, but the stores also served as a kind
of springboard and inspiration of the dance and performance as well.
I had done music for dance and performance before... So, I knew
the problems and pleasures of working alongside another creative
artist. I knew that sometimes my work would be rejected... and I
knew that music would sometimes need to be altered to fit some movement...
I also knew that when the music and performance work together they
both benefit... My working method was, after reading some materials,
to see a very early rehearsal... at the company’s studio in Brussels...
I saw the very beginnings of the dance sections and some early
improvisations on the dramatic and performance ideas. I also heard
that Wim was already using, among other things, some of my music...
So, although Wim originally approached me to do only a couple of
pieces, I offered to try to do as much as possible. The whole piece,
if Wim and company liked what I did. I see that this piece is pulling
together so many elements, both physical, emotional and musical...
I see movement and dance grammar based on patterns and gestures
found outside the normal dance vocabulary... and music and sound
found outside the pop, rock and dance music vocabularies... but
containing and referring to elements of all of them.
This is one of the things I love about the pieces of Ultima Vez...
the willingness to ignore all rules except that the piece must ‘connect’
to an audience and ‘work.’
David Byrne
New York City
February 26, 1999
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