7/12/13

Architecture Should Not Be a Monument to Ego

UMass FAC and library--two awful buildings in one photo!  Note FAC interior below--just as comfortable as it appears. And, yes, those are balcony seats in the back--like watching an event in Iowa from Indiana.

Years ago I was sitting at a faculty meeting in which plans for a new student center were unveiled. They were impressive–sculptural angles, exposed wooden beams, and a soaring glass atrium entrance. When the ooohs and ahhs ended I raised my hand and noted that the atrium had a southern exposure. “So what?” I was asked. “So are we building a student center or a greenhouse?” I asked. “I’m sure the architects have thought of this,” was the answer. “Don’t presume this,” I replied, “Western Massachusetts is littered with campus buildings that are architectural mistakes. And while we’re on the subject, the current blueprint is an impressive design, but the interior space is rather impractical.” Let us just say that the building was rethought and its atrium now has a northern exposure.

This week Amherst College halted construction of its new science center when it was revealed that the site was more difficult than architects had anticipated. (It was being built on a hillside, with parts of the building tunneled underground.) Moreover, faculty members complained that mundane things–such as labs–were either absent or had been given all the design consideration of a broom closet. I applaud President Biddy Martin’s courage in saying “Enough! This is a mistake!” and putting the kibosh on the project. (To be fair to her, the project was conceived by her predecessor, a known egoist.) Too bad the mistake cost Amherst a whopping $19 million. That’s a pretty dramatic “My bad!”   

On the other side of Amherst–at the University of Massachusetts–sit two monumental architectural follies, and I do mean “monumental.” There is, first of all, the 26-storey university library, as ill-conceived an idea as ever imagined. The whole point of a library is that one can browse in it. Try that on 26 floors. Try finding a book in a run that might begin on floor 17 and continue on floor 14. Spalling bricks have also plagued the building, a potentially fatal problem if one was struck by a chunk falling at 32 feet per second. This necessitated the construction of a concrete canopy around the structure as well as limiting access to one side. There have also been problems with weight distribution, which meant that books had to be limited to every other floor and the library’s final four floors are below ground level, which means there have been major moisture problems (which is why the archives are on the 24th floor).

As bad as the library is–and it’s horrible–it’s a Taj Mahal in comparison to the Fine Arts Center (FAC). A poll of Massachusetts residents recently declared Boston’s City Hall–allegedly cutting edge architecture designed by wicked famous architects when it opened in 1968–as the ugliest building in the Commonwealth. That’s because more people live in Boston; I’m sure if they ventured west they’d agree that the UMass FAC is way uglier. Legend holds that the  FAC is supposed to look like a piano from the air–as if musical instruments were built from un-faced concrete slabs. That story may be apocryphal, so let’s dismiss it. I’ve always said the FAC was proof Albert Speer got out of Germany after World War II. It is a (mostly) windowless monstrosity of gloom and soullessness. The FAC has a wonderful arts series each year, but I have to really want to see an event before I subject myself to Spartan conditions that would have made East Berlin residents tear down the Wall decades earlier.

Architects must not be allowed to use their reputations as a way of duping the public. I am aware that the public is generally conservative and that such great structures as the Eiffel Tower and the Empire State Building were once ridiculed as eyesores. (My own bias is that I simply hate glass-and-steel functionalist architecture.) I’m not against innovation or design, but no building–especially one underwritten by taxes or tuition payers–should ever be approved by administrators, CEOs, or management alone. Such decision-makers are too susceptible to clever sales pitches and often don’t understand how a building must function. Designs should have to pass muster of, first of all, independent engineers to determine if the site and design are even doable. It’s also a good idea to make sure that users and workers approve the plans as well–they are the ones who understand how the building needs to function, not some guy fiddling with a CAD program. Finally, somebody with moxie needs to have the guts to say from the outset, “No–this isn’t good enough” if it’s not. Who wants to spend $19 million on a mistake, or be condemned to decades of cheerlessness because of some architect’s lousy idea?

7/10/13

Annalivia Goes Down Easy (Too Easy at Times)

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 ANNALIVIA
The Same Way Down
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“Snag,” the midway point of Annalivia’s new nine-track Kickstarter-funded CD, is an original tune from Flynn Cohen that sounds like variations of the famed Irish tune “The Little Beggarman” as done by an Appalachian string band. It encapsulates the ways in which this Boston-based quartet blends Celtic, bluegrass, and Americana influences. Appropriately, the album opens with “False Sir John,” a jaunty arrangement for two fiddles and Liz Simmons’ sweet voice that’s a southern Appalachian variant of older English ballad. The albums also closes with a traditional, “Turtle Dove,” which is evocative of Alison Krauss’s cover of the gospel song “Down to the River to Pray.” The Same Way Down often leaves you wondering if you’re in Asheville or County Antrim. Fiddlers Emerald Rae and Mariel Vandersteel have a definite flair for old-timey sounds, but mandolin/guitar wizard Flynn likes to dislocate us. The “New Mown Meadow,” for instance, sounds like something from Jay Ungar’s set list; that is, except for Cohen’s nouveau Celtic bridge to the breakdown finish. Think you got him pegged? The very next track finds Cohen singing “Bright Sunny South” and, title aside, it too is ambiguous–the mood is south of the Mason-Dixon Line, but his lead is where a hint of twang meets northern reediness.

This is a goes-down-easy album, which is both its strength and, perhaps, a small drawback. Liz Simmons handles most of the songs and hers is a voice of great beauty and delicacy. If “Restless for a While” reminds you of Crooked Still, the effect is magnified by Aoife O’Donovan’s harmonies. Simmons... Krauss… O’Donovan… Three glorious sopranos, but each is quiet, fragile, and high. I’d like to see the band add Cohen’s voice into the mix more dramatically to add contrast, especially to give grit to the harmonies and bite to the darker songs. Even roses need thorns.   --Rob Weir


7/8/13

Elsten Torres: Triumphant Waiting for Clouds

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ELSTEN TORRES
Waiting for Clouds
Self Produced
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Elsten Torres was a mainstay in the 1990s Latin rock scene, but he’s moved over to the acoustic side of the ledger. He also has a few Grammy nominations under his belt and a listen to Waiting for Clouds will quickly reveal why–he has a serious set of pipes that ranges wide. The Cuban-born, New York City-based Torres cites everyone from Billy Joel, Paul Simon, and U2 to both Elvises (Presley and Costello) as influences. You’ll hear hints of that. Torres, for instance, channels a chilled out Bono on “A Perfect World,” but among his gifts is the ability to evoke styles without being derivative. Waiting for Clouds is a confessional and personal album that’s mostly about love gained, lost, or misplaced. Theme albums can become redundant, but Torres dodges that problem by blending and bending genres. “Sitting on Your Throne,” for example, evokes the Lesley Gore hit “I Will Follow Him,” but adds a reggae backbeat; “It’s About Time” is a masala of blues and Stax-style soul; “Bleeding HeartsClub” is akin to a quirky string band; and “Keeping Me waiting,” where hand jive meets rockabilly, moves both physically and emotionally. The project has ten tracks and Torres pays attention to how they stack. “Half-Hearted” is a darker song in content and tone, which he follows with “Through Her Window,” which is shimmery and hopeful. This thoughtfulness also shows up in the decision to place the title track last, as it’s an experiment that listeners will either love or loathe. It opens quiet and mysterious, and Torres slowly unpacks his voice and emotions for an effect that’s at once dramatic, dreamy, and off-kilter. I liked it and you can mark me a new Elsten Torres fan.

Rob Weir