There is something quietly mischievous about an album called "Jeux d’eau" that refuses to splash. Instead of grand, impressionistic cascades, Copenhagen Clarinet Choir and Anders Lauge Meldgaard offer water as process: seepage, condensation, circulation. This is music that prefers currents to climaxes, ripples to rhetoric.
At the center is Meldgaard’s New Ondomo, an instrument that already feels like a historical echo with a passport stamp from the future. Modeled on the ondes Martenot but less interested in nostalgia than elasticity, it doesn’t dominate the ensemble so much as destabilize it gently, like introducing a new chemical into a familiar ecosystem. The Ondomo slides, hums, and flickers, often blurring the boundary between pitch and texture, while the Eurorack electronics behave less like machines and more like weather conditions.
Around it, the Copenhagen Clarinet Choir does what it does best: turning homogeneity into richness. Six clarinets - some dipping into bass register, others hovering in reedy brightness - merge into a single organism that breathes, pulses, and occasionally grins. This is not a choir in the choral sense; it’s closer to a murmuration. Individual voices surface briefly, then dissolve back into the collective, leaving behind a faint afterimage.
Meldgaard’s compositional approach - open frameworks rather than rigid architectures - proves crucial here. The pieces feel guided rather than governed. You can hear the influence of minimalism in the looping figures and incremental shifts, but this is minimalism that has read poetry and learned how to hesitate. Repetition doesn’t hypnotize so much as invite attention to micro-variation: a clarinet phrase slightly revoiced, a rhythmic cell nudged off-axis, a harmony that blooms and then thinks better of it.
Tracks unfold like short chapters in a hydrological novel. "Joyfully, we leave the tended garden" sets the tone with a sense of departure that is more curious than dramatic, while "Entering the fray" introduces friction - overlapping lines rubbing against each other with quiet insistence. "Uncharted streams" and "Diffuser dream" lean into flow, their interlocking patterns creating the illusion of forward motion even when the harmony stays put, like water convincing you it’s going somewhere new while recycling itself.
There’s humor here, but it’s dry - almost bureaucratic. Titles like "Xerophyte" and "Unabashed waveforms" wink at both botany and synthesis, as if the music knows it’s operating in a space where academic language and childlike wonder coexist uneasily. And then there’s "’Til seas do us part", which clocks in under a minute and manages to feel both like a joke and a thesis statement.
What makes "Jeux d’eau" particularly absorbing is its sense of collective listening. You can hear the musicians paying attention to one another in real time, adjusting density, tone, and articulation as if negotiating shared responsibility for the sound. This is where Meldgaard’s long-standing interest in aleatoric processes and performer agency becomes audible - not as chaos, but as trust.
The recording captures this beautifully. There’s air between the instruments, enough room for resonance to matter. The clarinets retain their woody warmth even when stacked thickly, and the electronics never flatten the acoustic space. Instead, they shimmer at the edges, like reflections you only notice once you stop staring directly at the surface.
As a meditation on water - and, by extension, fragility - "Jeux d’eau" avoids sermonizing. It doesn’t try to sound “environmental” in any literal sense. Rather, it mirrors natural systems through form: adaptability, interdependence, responsiveness. The music changes because it has to, not because it’s told to.
In the end, this is an album that rewards patience without demanding reverence. It flows, pauses, eddies, and occasionally surprises itself. Like water, it doesn’t ask to be understood all at once - only to be followed, attentively, wherever it decides to go next.