Stephanie Richards' trumpet sounds like deep space wrapped around your head, a flood in the endless void. She has worked with many of the modern masters — including Henry Threadgill, Laurie Anderson, John Zorn, Anthony Braxton and Butch Morris — and co-founded Bang On A Can's Asphalt Orchestra. Now, she's preparing her solo debut, Fullmoon. The composer and improviser mutes the bell of her horn with percussion instruments that resonate at buzzing, whooshing and whistling frequencies, with live manipulation by electronic artist Dino J.A. Deane. She then edits the live recordings, "re-configuring and reshaping the arc of the music," she tells NPR Music, in a process she calls "re-composition."For the composition "Gong," director and animator Cossa explains the surreal and striking Renaissance-meets-Pop-Art imagery of the accompanying video:
Fullmoon comes out May 18 via Relative Pitch Records. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.