other titles...

Many Have No Speech (2022 reissue)
  1. Intro
  2. Just As Someone
  3. Ce Qu'a De Pis
  4. Alles Scheint Rand
  5. Imagine
  6. In The End
  7. Vieil Aller
  8. Rien Nul
  9. Tant De Temps
  10. En Face
  11. Chaque Jour
  12. Pss
  13. En Cadence
  14. Something There
  15. Comrade
  16. Den Atem Ausget Ausget
  17. A L'abattoir
  18. And What
  19. D'ou La Voix
  20. Fous Qui Disiez
  21. Merk, Jetzt
  22. Son Ombre
  23. Reve
  24. Life Connects
  25. Prisonniers
  26. Silence
  27. Viele Haben Keine Sprache

Michael Mantler

Many Have No Speech (2022 reissue)

ecm

Reissue of Michael Mantler's 1988 WATT/ECM album featuring Jack Bruce, Marianne Faithfull and Robert Wyatt on vocals.

The Austro- American trumpeter Michael Mantler has been concerned with the reciprocal relationships between music and literary texts for years. He's set texts by Samuel Beckett (No Answer), Edward Goerey (The Hapless Child) and Harold Pinter (Silence) to music. In all of those recordings, Mantler used more traditional, smaller ensembles.On 'Many Have No Speech', he uses an orchestra for the frst time. Here he set texts by Samuel Beckett, Philippe Soupault, and Ernst Meister to music. The work on this production took a year and a half: the recordings took place in London, New York, Boston and Copenhagen. This was due in no small part to Mantler's choice of singers; in addition to Jack Bruce and Robert Wyatt (with whom Mantler had worked on previous albums), Many Have No Speech also features Marianne Faithfull - another of those "broken voices" that Mantler holds in such high regard. Rarely does the translation from text to music succeed in what Michael Mantler accomplishes on this production: he fnds a perfect unity of text and music, treating them as equals, not as one medium in the service of the other. In the music, the improvisational elements are reduced to a minimum in order to preserve the greatest possible coherence. The music refects the tenor of the texts: extreme concentration and precision in the (musical) language, a brittleness that goes as far as abstraction, leaving enough room for the listener's own interpretation.