ONE of my favorite LA bands is the Calder Quartet, who accompany another of my favorites, the Airborne Toxic Event — yes, the name comes from DeLillo — Friday night at Disney Hall.
I met the Calders soon after they graduated USC’s conservatory, and caught up with them a few weeks ago to discuss their latest travels. They’ve stretched outward, into rock and experimental music, as well as inward, intensely studying Haydn in Berlin, and they’ve begun to play internationally.
HERE is my piece in today’s LATimes: I talk to members of the band as well as Mikel from Airborne Toxic, who has become one of my favorite indie rockers.
Part of what I like about these guys is their commitment to the art of chamber music — not an easy way to make a living, for reasons having to do not just with economics but with the strange personal bonds and tensions. I also admire their ability to keep their eyes — and ears — trained on the outside world and the larger swim of pop culture. They’re both regular guys, in a sense, and something extraordinary.
Very much looking forward to this show.
Photo courtesy Calder Quartet