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Over Nine Waves
- by Eby Tim Barsky
review in SF Weekly by Michael Scott Moore
June 25, 2003
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- A blend of storytelling with beatbox, cello, bass guitar, and flute
that's flat-out cool
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- Tim Barsky is a "battle flutist." What this involves, mainly,
is playing tunes on his flute over a beatbox rhythm from his own lips,
tongue, and chest -- sometimes half a dozen lines of melody and rhythm
at once. He would like to compete with other battle flutists the way beatboxers
compete in clubs, trading tricky phrases and riffs, but no one else plays
hip hop flute well enough to keep up. So Barsky tells stories instead,
and Over Nine Waves is a collection of three of them within a kind of variety-show
framework, featuring guest artists like the break-dancing Fillmore Rocks
Crew or the incredible Andrew Chaikin (who can mimic not only some rather
intense turntabling, but also electronic music like techno and house).
Two of the tales here -- one about an arrest in Oakland and the other about
the Seattle WTO protests -- are engaging; when Barsky talks to the audience
in his direct, open way and blends the facts with his unusual music, he
carries the storytelling form in unheard-of directions. When he indulges
his taste for myth and subjects his audience to "epics" like
the Irish tale of Midr and Eideen, however, the results are tedious. Barsky's
enthusiasm for mythic material feels a bit bookish and forced. He also
has mannerisms -- like a high-pitched Jewish chant -- that cloy when he
relies on them to make his yarns interesting. But his work is one-of-a-kind:
The blend of storytelling with beatbox (sometimes accompanied by Bryan
Neuberg), cello (Jessica Ivry), bass guitar (Shree Shyam), and flute is
flat-out cool, and the music alone is worth the price of admission
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