Ontophony

Michael O'Neill

16,9934,49
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Original Recording Format: PCM 88k
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Ontophony documents Canadian composer-performer Michael O’Neill‘s interest in expanding the Scottish piping tradition into new realms of sound and expression – four works composed over 15 years for pipes and various percussion instruments (taiko, djembe, tabla, Tibetan and Chinese cymbals, etc.). Each piece takes a different approach. The earliest is “Horse of a Different Colour.” Michael describes it as “the most Philip Glass-influenced piece, with short motives repeated, but with as much dissonance as I could get out of the bagpipes at that time….I was also using hocketing devices that I think were in my mind from Balinese gamelan, creating a melody that travels note by note between the four bagpipes.”

Next came “Being and Doing,” a ceremonial or ritual work for pipes and Hare Krishna-style percussion in seven sections (tracks 1-7): “I was always fascinated with the pipes because you can walk and play them. I got the idea that I could make a piece that would mirror a walking journey through life, and that I could also speculate through music on the afterlife. I called the part about life Being, and the part about death or the beyond Doing. When I finished the whole Being section I realized that there could be no walking to it, because what I thought was simple to play wasn’t really. In the Doing section, the idea was to create a piece that was more about sustain and tuning than actually trying to get anywhere.” Half an hour long, “Being and Doing” is a grounded yet ecstatic musical meditation on inner and outer states of being, and the kind of direct experience of duration, stasis and change that only music can provide.

“Jedaya” is much more playful, but with a dark side too. “The piece was inspired by sailing trips in Georgia Strait, near Vancouver and Jedediah Island. One particularly blustery day we were all ‘hiked’ way out, desperately trying to counterbalance the tilt of the boat – that’s the kinetic effect I’m trying to recapture.” The hearty yet relentless 12/8 riffs and percussion outbursts might even evoke images from pirate movies. The dirge-like end section draws on “a sobering experience with an incompetent sailor who crashed the boat into the beach after turning it over in the lake.”

Finally, “Luffness” is a major collaborative piece for pipes and taiko (plus shakuhachi and didjeridu). Members of Vancouver’s Uzume Taiko composed not only percussion parts but some of the pipe parts as well. It grew out of an image suggested by Scottish musician Phil Cunningham to Uzume in a bar in Aberdeen: a pipe band and a taiko group encountering each other on a misty moor. Some sections are rather lyrical, others are very dynamic and feature the different taiko drums extensively. A piping innovation here is the lowered drone note, creating a major scale by means of extensions to the drone pipes.

So within the apparently restricted expressive range of the bagpipes O’Neill has brought forth a wide variety of moods, the results of a passionate response to the unrealized potential of a deep tradition. For all their structural sophistication these are far from academic works. The surround mix adds a rather phenomenal extra dimension to the music.


Michael O’Neill
Mearingstone
Michael O’Neill, bagpipes, percussion
Andrew Bonar, Andrew Douglas & Andrew Hayes – bagpipes
Uzume Taiko
Bonnie Soon, Boyd Seiichi Grealy & Jason Overy – taiko, percussion
Neelamjit Dhillon, tabla (7)
Alcvin Ramos, shakuhachi (8), didgeridoo (8, 9)
Duncan Millar, snare drum (9, 10)

Tracklist

Please note that the below previews are loaded as 44.1 kHz / 16 bit.
1.
A Walk Supreme
05:47
2.
Migration of a Triad
05:28
3.
Ontophony
04:06
4.
The Shiftings
04:44
5.
Astralis
02:43
6.
Ogdoadic Zone
02:41
7.
Re-entry
04:15
8.
Luffness
15:11
9.
Jedaya
07:32
10.
Horse of a Different Colour
13:58

Total time: 01:06:25

Additional information

Label

SKU

SGLSA24052

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Original Recording Format

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Recording Engineer

Sheldon Zaharko

Recording Location

The Factory, Vancouver, BC

Mixing

John Raham

Mastering

Graemme Brown

Release Date November 21, 2025

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