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Ko'mm Percussion Performs at Strathmore's "Art After Hours" series

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  • Ko'mm Percussion Performs at Strathmore's "Art After Hours" series

    Ko'mm Percussion Performs at Strathmore's "Art After Hours" series

    MUSIC

    The Washington Post
    Saturday, March 26, 2005

    By Andrew Lindemann Malone

    We don't get enough all-percussion concerts, despite the fact that
    today's wide-ranging percussion ensembles can provide hypnotic melodies
    in addition to hard grooves and explosive outbursts. So it was
    enterprising of Strathmore's Art After Hours series to host a concert by
    Ko'mm Percussion in the mansion on Wednesday night. The group,
    consisting of local percussionists Leon Khoja-Eynatyan, Richard
    McCandless, Rich O'Meara and Joseph Jay McIntyre, presented works by the
    latter three.

    Three of the eight works Ko'mm played stood out. The mesmerizing
    minimalist-style marimba arpeggios of O'Meara's "Island Spinning"
    wobbled dangerously after some subtle metrical twists, but the piece
    righted itself like a top given an extra spin. O'Meara followed that
    with "301," a work commemorating the official conversion of Armenia to
    Christianity, in which Khoja-Eynatyan played breathtakingly quiet
    ruminations on the marimba as his daughter Tatevik rang an Armenian hymn
    on hand bells. The concert ended with a piece by McCandless called "Pile
    Driver," which he introduced with the half-boast "This piece is not
    subtle," but the poetry McCandless found in the cacophony made "Pile
    Driver" absorbing.

    Yet even the less successful pieces were interesting; for example, the
    world premiere of McIntyre's "Negative" found the composer using real
    mallets to strike a nonexistent drum, cuing two bass drums behind him to
    stop rumbling and thus "playing" silence. The reverberations of the
    drums prevented the silence from cutting sharply through sound, but it
    was fun to see the idea tried. And as the members of Ko'mm worked hard
    to make the music sound good, they proved that the sheer athletic
    spectacle of a percussion concert can be a lot of fun to watch.
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