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Daniel Büttner
The musical talents of composer, bassist, and improviser
Daniel Büttner unite elements of improvisation
with written and arranged music. Creating a technique
stylistically independent, the works of Daniel Buttner
utilize the musical expression from classical, jazz,
and contemporary music. This ability compliments his
combination of free improvisation and musical extemporization
where performers react instinctively to the surrounding
soundscape.
Daniel’s educational background includes a Bachelor
in Art from Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts
(UK); a Diploma in Jazz Performance from the Musikhochschule
Köln (D); a Master in Art from New York University
(USA), where he studied music composition with Dr. Tom
Boras and Jim McNeely. Daniel was a member of contemporary
music and improvised electronic music ensembles by Prof.
Dinu Ghezzo and Dr. Esther Lamneck.
As a bassist, Daniel is grateful for the opportunities
to have performed classical and improvised music at
Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, Merkin Hall, Knitting
Factory, Birdland and many of the small venues throughout
NYC. Daniel was honored to receive a 2-year stipend
by the DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service) to study
music performance and composition at New York University.
With this grant he has been able to work and study under
Mark Dresser, Dave Douglas, Jim Black, Steve Coleman,
Don Byron, George Garzone, Tony Moreno, and perform
with musicians such as Mike Holober, Tom Boras, Robert
Dick, Tim Newman, Matt Shulman, John Savage and David
Mason. Daniel is looking forward to the future, bass
ready.
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The Music of Daniel Büttner
Daniel's appreciation of contemporary art shows through
his music as a coalesce of the harmonic language, organizational
and developmental techniques and multi-sectional formal
structures of European music as well as melodic and
rhythmic language and improvisational approaches derived
from jazz.
Daniel uses the development technique of pointilistic
textures, melodic, and abstract sections of clustered
sounds and notes. Then takes the fragmented melodies
and creates free improvisation, where performers react
instinctively and instantly to become part of the compositional
process live on stage.
The aleatoric aspect allows the music to grow and illuminate
with and differentiate from each performance.
Daniel’s written music with the focus of conventional
large and small jazz ensembles utilizes traditional
western music notation as well as graphic notation,
varying the degree of instruction to the performer.
He enjoys working and sharing his ideas and concepts
with each performer to reach this goal.
While many artists in a variety of cultures and genres
have influenced him, Daniel is proud to observe that
his primary influences are derived from abstract works
and ideas by Elliott Carter, Witold Lutoslawski, George
Crumb, Anton Webern, Samuel Beckett.
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The Performance
coming soon...
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