The hits keep coming.

On Wednesday afternoon, I interviewed guitarist Kevin Gallagher for an upcoming TONY article about an exciting three-concert series devoted to the music of Jacob ter Veldhuis (a.k.a. Jacob TV), which will be presented at the Whitney Museum on May 2, 3 and 4. After we’d wrapped up that business, we talked a bit longer about his own activities: Gallagher is a highly regarded classical guitarist who also leads the band Electric Kompany, a group at the forefront of a current wave of rock-oriented combos playing formally scored pieces by contemporary composers. (A few folks over at Sequenza 21 might drub me for that bit of shorthand, but you get the basic gist.) Under John Zorn’s aegis, Gallagher also coordinated two lively mini-festivals, Full Force: The New Rock Complexity, last July and October at the soon-to-be-late, already lamented Tonic. I blogged about one of those shows here.

Not long ago, Gallagher sent me a terrific demo CD his band had made, so I asked if he was shopping it around to labels. He is, he said, but he’s also considering alternate routes to reach an audience. Specifically, Gallagher was intrigued by the potential of YouTube. As an example, he cited the current success of another local guitarist, Dominic Frasca, best known for playing technically daunting solo-guitar pieces — transcriptions of Glass and Reich, new works by Marc Mellits, and his own attractive compositions, which he charmingly referred to as "New Age music for people who grew up listening to Black Sabbath" in a TONY feature that ran in August 2002.

A Frasca video titled "Impossible Guitar" was posted on YouTube in July 2006. The music in the clip, mostly Frasca’s own (save for the first piece, correctly identified by commenter Gerald Blackhammer as Marc Mellits’s Dometude — thanks, Gerald!), demonstrates his dextrous style in music that draws equally upon classical technique, the mellifluous complexity of the late New Age guitar phenomenon Michael Hedges and the rock-gamelan style of ’80s-era King Crimson. Since it was posted, Gallagher noted, the video had racked up "a million views," helping Frasca sell CDs and, maybe even more importantly, secure bookings. As far as Gallagher was concerned, Frasca had thrown open the doors to an entirely new means by which to circulate and promote new music.

I didn’t doubt Gallagher’s logic for a moment, but assumed that his claim of "a million views" was hyperbolic shorthand, and couldn’t possibly be accurate. Turns out it wasn’t, not exactly: As I type this on Thursday night, Frasca’s video has been viewed 1,793,238 times. But don’t take my word for it. See for yourself…

Playlist:

Black SabbathHeadless Cross, Tyr, Cross Purposes and Forbidden (IRS)

Jacob ter VeldhuisRainbow, Shining City and Suites of Lux (Basta)

Giuseppe VerdiLa Traviata – Anna Moffo, Richard Tucker, Robert Merrill, Rome Opera Orchestra and Chorus/Fernando Previtali (RCA Red Seal)

Napalm DeathUtopia Banished (Earache)

AmiinaKurr (Bláskjár)

The Bad PlusProg (Do the Math/Heads Up, due May 8)

Rob Brown TrioSounds (Clean Feed)

Maria McKeeLate December (Cooking Vinyl, due April 24)

Amy Cervini QuartetFamous Blue (Orange Grove Jazz)

GenesisDuke and A Trick of the Tail (Atlantic/Rhino, due May 15)

4 responses to “The hits keep coming.”

  1. Gerald Blackhammer Avatar
    Gerald Blackhammer

    That Frasca YouTube video is truely amazing! But I thought you should know, the music is not entirely Frasca’s own. The first tune is by Marc Mellits, and is called Dometude.

  2. Hey Steve,
    Thanks for checking out the music. I hope you enjoy! I read your blog regularly and was surprised and honored to see my name in your playlist.
    Amy

  3. Thanks for the correction, Gerald. I’ve inserted it into the body of the post, with attribution.
    And thanks for stopping by Amy. Readers are advised that Ms. Cervini is celebrating the release of Famous Blue with a free gig on Monday, April 23 at the 55 Bar in the West Village. Here’s the listing I wrote for TONY:
    Singer Cervini and her bandmates celebrate the release of a new CD, Famous Blue, on which Cervini neatly straddles the line between confessional balladeering and breezy swing. Covers of Leonard Cohen’s “Famous Blue Raincoat” and Fiona Apple’s “Extraordinary Machine” are worth the price of admission all by themselves, but pianist Michael Cabe’s solid accompaniment, bassist Mark Lau’s deft counterpoint and drummer Ernesto Cervini’s lithe timekeeping move the entire set along nicely.

  4. I also came across Dominic Frasca. Really impressive stuff. But richly melodic and very inspiring. I didn’t even know you could buy 10 strings classical guitar????

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