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"mmmmmmmmmm,
this is new music at its best." -- Rick Walker, live looping impresario
"The queen of multiphonics. The best flutist in the Bay Area."
-- Celeste Hutchins, composer and Other Minds Board member
Reviews
of Polly Moller live
"For better or for worse,
Hammer Girth provided the single most memorable moment: The quartet threw
itself into a sloggy parody of a grand rock opera like a nerdy Zeppelin,
complete with hooded cloaks and incoherent mysticism. Get down with
Mercury retrograde, flautist Polly Moller sang in an overwrought
falsetto, adding lightly tripping La la la vocals as if she were
gamboling through the Swiss alps. As a finale, one slow and bombatsic
riff kept building and building and building, but to no end -- just starting
over again and again until the audience was literally moaning and screaming
for release from the rock 'n' roll equivalent of blue balls. 'Now let's
see whose song gets stuck in your head,' bassist Vicky Grossi crowed as
the crowd continued to chant the riff once the band finally finished,
amid cries that might as easily have been 'uncle' as 'encore'.
'Kill them!" someone shouted." -- Sam Hurwitt reviewing the
Rock Lotto, East Bay Express, April 20, 2005
"Polly Moller is
a performance artist who has expanded her classical flute training and
more traditional avant-garde background with diverse influences such as
Celtic, new wave, and trip-hop. To close the evening's program, she was
joined by Grant Gardner, guitar, and Jim Carr, bass. Each of Moller's
four selections utilizes a text of some sort which is frequently associated
with some sort of movement/choreography. The spoken sections were sometimes
inaudible, which may have been intentional or possibly just a problem
with the sound system. Especially effective were the alternation of flute
with spoken word in "Three Quarters" (Nubanusit & Contoocook)
and the hypnotic repetitive patterns in "Taste the Wall." --
Susan Waller, SF Classical Voice (02/24/04)
"Polly Moller,
an artist from the San Francisco Bay Area, delivered a song-like poem
about a bayou spirit that receives a familiar sacrificial gift. Using
her breath to draw out each word, she hung on each tone and sound. With
sounds from a self-produced ambient creation oscillating in the background,
her performance had an ethereal yet ceremonial flavor." -- Amy
Coombs, Santa Cruz Sentinel, September 24, 2003 (covering Polly's
performance of "Plaquemine Brulée" at the Woodstockhausen
festival)
Reviews of Polly Moller -
Diogenes
POLLY MOLLER "DIOGENES"
"Others describe Polly
Moller as an 'urban assault flutist'. Polly masterfully performs in the
boundaries between art, music, poetry, and the human condition. Her 2003
CD 'Diogenes' 'was named after the legendary Greek Cynical philsopher
who prowled the land day and night with a lit lantern, in search of an
honest man.' Be prepared for punctuated poetry and percussion. Reminiscent
of a beat generation combined with the current age, Polly generates a
mental engagement that doesn't let go of you and awes you in wielding
her prose and the unimaginable sound of what a flute can do in a poet's
hands. Heading towards in 'E ticket' for the spiritual path." --
Austin Space, KFJC
POLLY MOLLER - DIOGENES
- SILVER WHEEL MUSIC
"This is quite probably as strange and diverse an album as you will
ever hear. American Polly Moller has basically played all instruments
on the album with the flute and autoharp featuring just about more prominently
than any other instrument. She has a curious 'spoken word' delivery to
her vocals and covers a number of topics with her off the wall lyrics.
I cannot give comparisons as this is totally different to just about anything
I have heard before. I suppose if anything comes close then you would
have to imagine a Suzanne Vega type poet. Strange and bizarre!"
REVIEWED BY TERRY CRAVEN, THE
CLASSIC ROCK SOCIETY, UK.
"Polly Moller is an adventure! I love Diogenes!" -- Kate
Klein, Music Director, KMUD
"Diogenes is very
nice and surreal. This CD rocks." -- Xavier Vasquez, KCR/KPBS
"Alter your impression
of the flute
forever and expose yourself to the angst-ridden beat of Polly Moller.
Spawned from an orchestra that no doubt harbored repressed anger, in 1995
Moller rebelled, taking fragments of instrumental sections with her. Abandoning
the traditional classical fare, Moller transforms her lifes traumas
into spoken beat pieces that twitch and taunt. The urban assault
flautist will call you out with her driven beat-conscious voice
and draw you in with angry instrumental interludes during which you will
chew on her vivid descriptions. When she whispers, you will listen. Occasionally,
she busts out with a high voice featuring operatic overtones, but only
briefly before she reclaims her monotone rant, hypnotic and disturbing,
compelling yet unsettling. Note her novel percussion used to accent her
words as a counter-beat that is just as random as her speaking. According
to Moller, inspiration for her daring dissonance goes to Diogenes, a Greek
Cynical philosopher whose quest for honesty she has adopted as her own.
Join her evolution. Make it yours." Amanda Martinez, Good
Times (Santa Cruz), 4/17/03
Reviews of Polly Moller
- Summerland
Reviewed by Jim Foley, KXCI, Tucson, AZ
"If all else fails, we can
whip the horses' eyes, and make them sleep, and cry." (Jim Morrison and
the Doors, "The Soft Parade")
It was quite an ear-opener
when, back there in seminary school, Jim Morrison and the Doors revealed
to me not only that you cannot petition the Lord with prayer, but that
lyrics can thoroughly dominate a musical experience, yet remain deeply
dependent upon that music for thematic support. Polly Moller demonstrates
a visceral comprehension of this dynamic on "Summerland," her second recording.
She delivers her allusive blank verse as if from a trance, at times babbling
brooklike, at others reluctant and coy, but ever dramatic, to the tribal
accompaniment of her flutes and clattering percussion, and the bass of
Jordan Avon. "Summerland" demands the listener's full attention, but richly
rewards it.
In "Don Dorcha's Revel," Moller
informs us in hypnotic yet insistent tones that everything we know is
wrong, things are worse than we can suspect, but that truth can be accommodated
if not necessarily impaled on certainty if it does not overly "matter
to you at whose party you are seen." The flute warbles dreamily on the
verses, and the chorus ("One day becomes seven at his revel") is underlined
by pulsing percussion, at times suggesting the work of Jenifer Smith or
Laurie Anderson. "Io" is dreamlike yet emphatic, flute a hollow harmonic
dirge, Mollers' delivery magisterial, viscous but erupting into vehemence
("I want to wear those garlands") or subsiding into reverie ("we're the
last ones in this empty city. May I have this dance?").
The drum machine appropriately
drives the breathless "Aurora," supplication to an antique yet returned
goddess "who is no longer rosy-fingered Dawn, but a machine unbounded
by the laws of flight." As the flute shrieks, Moller mutters imprecations.
Have mercy on us. "Deal gently with your people when you next appear."
Thomas Dolby's "One of Our Submarines" illustrates the synergy between
poetry and music, beginning with a sung, a cappella, almost Celtic, underwater
history lesson punctuated by sonar squeaks, before breaking into a galloping,
bass-driven reprise. The Celtic influences become more explicit in Diarmit
MacDiarmada's wave-swept "Gaoth Barra nd'Tann" and the martial, vindictive
"Song of Coinchend Cennfada."
Back there in seminary school,
I used to obsess on what all this might mean. These songs, these incantations,
might indeed have discernable meaning, but even Polly Moller might not
be able to clarify them further, at least not without loss of force. So
feel the force, immerse yourself in "Summerland," and contact the Silver
Wheel web site for a copy of the libretto.
Reviews of Polly Moller:
Taste the Wall
reviewed in Sonic Boom - Feb. 1998
1. Taste The Wall 4:59 2. Keeny
Zuke 4:31 3. Smoke 7:02 4. Skara Brae 7:42 5. The Swan 6:29 6. Four Lives
3:49 7. Road Spiders 4:26 8. Aerodynamic 6:03
Polly Moller definitely
has created one of the most unique hybrid projects in my memory with the
release of "Taste The Wall". The core of the music is jerky electronic
percussion and bassline, overlayed with a real flute and spoken poetry.
The majority of this music was all written solely by Polly Moller, and
would be impossible to recreate in a live session because of the sheer
variety of instrumentation utilized. Nevertheless, this is the kind of
thing I think would go over well in a modern coffee bar, with a DAT machine
playing most of the electronics and the solo artist standing at a microphone
with her flute interspersing it with various vocal diatribes.
The whole album has a really
hip Bohemian feel to it that would certainly make it a hit in someplace
like the East Village in Manhattan. Kudos to Polly Moller for being daring
enough to develop an unique style of music with the potential to crossover
into the mainstream under the right circumstances.
Polly Moller: Taste
the Wall
Reviwed by Daniel Sanford
As much as we all joke about
the seventies, quite a bit of good came out of the musical industry of
that time. Much of the best material from bands such as Genesis and Jethro
Tull, came out of that decade. The end of the psychedelic era of rock
occurred in the early to mid-seventies, and progressive rock was at an
all time high. Though I am not interested in revisiting the seventies,
many influences from that decade can be found in today's music.
Contemplative, brooding, and
haunting, Polly Moller brings a fresh new approach to psychedelic
music. Not entirely inspired by the seventies, Polly amalgamates aspects
of ambient/techno, progressive rock, psychedelic rock, and alternative
rock into an audio rumination for the ears and spirits of ambient and
psychedelic rock fans.
A former member of Octagon
New Music Ensemble, Polly Moller brings twenty years of classical training
and her flute into a deep form of music. Much of her presentation, lyrical
and vocal performance styles on her new album, "Taste the Wall," reminds
me of the early works of the band Hawkwind. Often esoteric, the English
and Gaelic lyrics are mysterious and thought provoking. The listener is
left to come to their own conclusions about the music and the theme.
Harsh flute work on tracks
like "Road Spiders" and "Keeny Zuke" are reminiscent of Jethro Tull and
their use of the flute to alter mood and texture in a variety of ways.
The rhythm and percussion is reminiscent of Trent Reznor on a couple of
the tracks, though a more ambient, Katherine Blake feel is often the key
to this album's mood.
Many tracks, such as "The Swan"
and "Aerodynamic" hold together a dynamic yet mild blend similar to the
works of Miranda Sex Garden. The dancy overtones are comparable to Siouxsie
and the Banshees, while some of the more smooth and syncopated moments
sound like some of the synth-melodies on the first Deep Forest album.
Though aspects of her music
are comparable to many other styles, Polly Moller does blend all of those
styles together to create a musical confection that is unique. Some Miranda
Sex Garden fans may find an entertaining thread in her music. I believe
that fans of the early seventies works from Hawkwind will find this a
bit mild, but quite enthralling. Any of you who like contemplative or
psychedelic music ought to check this out. There are sound clips available
for sampling at http://www.silverwheel.com/tastethewall.html (Silver Wheel
Music).
Until the next time I inflict
my observations upon you, I'm Daniel Sanford, Freelance Reviewer.
"For though I fly, I too may
die if I lose my grip on the firmament Have you time in your heart to
sing for the planes that fell from the sky" -Polly Moller, from the song
"Aerodynamic"
Review of Polly Moller --
"Bullet the Blue Sky"
on the Mindspore Records comp cd, Distributed Shared Memory
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
(Pennsylvania)
December 27, 1998, Sunday, NORTH THIS WEEK EDITION
Mindspore's first release, "Distributed Shared Memory," is a
compilation of artists who were asked over the Internet to submit music.
Synthesizers and samplers are prominently featured. Blended are the hummings,
buzzes and bleeps of electronic machines that fans refer to as ambient
soundscapes.
The oddball of the bunch is the only unplugged number, "Bullet the
Blue Sky." The U2 cover, performed and barely whispered by Polly
Moller, combines flute and hand drum in a jazzy and witty work notable
also for its simplicity.
(from Polly: I feel obliged
to point out there's no hand drum in "Bullet". I made all the
non-vocal sounds using the flute, in this case key percussion.)
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