Other Minds' Conlon Nancarrow: Lost Works, Last Works assembles several of the odd bits and leftovers within
Nancarrow's oeuvre that fall outside of the comprehensive five-disc Wergo set that contains "everything," Conlon Nancarrow: Studies for Player Piano. It also includes a 30-minute interview with
Nancarrow himself, conducted by executive producer
Charles Amirkhanian at
Nancarrow's home in Mexico City in 1977. Therefore, the 60-minute Other Minds disc works out to roughly half music, half documentary material, and some may feel this is rather short measure on the musical part of the program. But Lost Works, Last Works is not intended so much as an appendix to the larger set as it sheds some light on projects
Nancarrow undertook that are not well-known, such as his never-finished pneumatically controlled percussion orchestra, a few early pieces from the 1930s, and his late collaboration with Seattle-based master instrument builder Trimpin.
Trimpin's involvement in this project is of particular interest; as a rule, one experiences Trimpin's work only in gallery installations, and he has never permitted its circulation on commercial recordings. Nevertheless, Trimpin has relaxed this restriction in order to make available
Nancarrow works in which he was involved. Although in some cases Trimpin is merely piloting the Pianola on which posthumously punched rolls of
Nancarrow's music is being played, both the Blues for Piano and Contraption No. 1 are heard reproduced on Trimpin's "Conloninpurple," a sort of suspended-in-mid-air marimba played with mechanically controlled mallets. The remaining rolls come from recordings where
Nancarrow himself was at the controls, including a fascinating study for prepared player piano from around 1960 for which the roll exists, but not the preparation.
Nancarrow's Piece for Tape is not a European-styled musique concrète piece, but consists entirely of percussive sounds and may have been a simulation of what his pneumatic percussion orchestra would have sounded like, had he ever managed to make it work.
The interview is fun, although it is a little sad in that the inordinately time-intensive nature of his punching piano rolls by hand precluded
Nancarrow's achieving the full range of polyrhythmic and textural concepts he was interested in pursuing. Listeners already devoted to
Nancarrow will hardly need convincing that Lost Works, Last Works is a necessary acquisition. Those who are coming to his work for the first time could also benefit through seeking this out, as it is as friendly an introduction to a key avant-gardist as may be found on disc, and has the additional benefit of being illuminated by
Nancarrow's own words.