International Contemporary Ensemble’s debut London concert was a small-scale affair, tucked away in Hall 2 of Kings Place on a Sunday afternoon. But this talented group still gave us a great taste of why they’re such big news in the United States, with a pleasantly varied programme of new and recent music curated for them by Londoner and long-time collaborator Dai Fujikura.
Three representatives from the flexibly-sized ensemble had made the trip: flautist Claire Chase, clarinettist Joshua Rubin (both founder members of ICE), and pianist Jacob Greenberg. The concert’s eight pieces neatly rotated between the three of them, embracing musical styles from the entrancing sonic experimentalism of Alvin Lucier, via the modernism of Elliott Carter, to the madcap stylings of John Zorn.
Fujikura, one of the first composers to work with ICE on their establishment ten years ago, was represented by a solo piece for each of the three performers: Glacier for bass flute (2011), Returning for piano (2006), and Rubicon for clarinet (2006). All three couple an exploratory approach with a subtle lyrical undercurrent, emphasised live by three expressive performances. Chase’s performance of Glacier, which opened the concert, was a particularly communicative and tender reading of this attractive study in multiphonics and other rare sonorities.
Chase’s other solo was Alvin Lucier’s Almost New York, consists of two sine waves, one slowly descending in pitch and one slowly rising, and a soloist picking out and playing notes from first one sine wave, and then the other, on a range of different flutes from piccolo to bass. Creating a mesmeric effect over what seemed like quite a long time, it asked us to do something a little different with our ears. I obliged, and enjoyed it.