Composer Lawrence Ball has long been fascinated by the intersection of subjective human emotion and algorithmic mathematical objectivity. In his 2012 Navona Records release METHOD MUSIC, produced by Pete Townshend of The Who and PARMA Recordings CEO Bob Lord, he took Townshend’s long-gestating concept of automatic musical portraiture first explored in LIFEHOUSE and WHO’S NEXT and turned it into reality, creating a system which could translate personal information and experiences into sound. ENERGY DIAMOND, Ball’s latest release, continues his exploration both of sheer intuitive as well as of systems-based composition. Featuring mainly live performances taken from Ball’s own Planet Tree Music Festival (praised by composer Terry Riley as "uncompromising in its artistic integrity… a rare and cherished event") from 1995 to 2011, the music includes the composer’s Harmonic Maths concept and create sounds and structures both expansive and dynamic. Ball’s approach is refreshing in its desire to avoid presuppositions. “Modulation, harmonic progression – I question the usual base definitions of those,” he says. “They are constructs to question, to look at and to reinterpret and redefine in meaningful ways. Modulation can be change of tonal set, one set of notes changing to another. It can also mean the same tonal set, but with a different tonal centre, or a shift of emphases.” Acclaimed by Pitchfork for his “wondrous, rippling, and startlingly tactile music” and with a four-decade long composition career at his back, Ball’s profound musical mind is really hitting its stride. KEY POINTS • Ball’s previous Navona release METHOD MUSIC (2012) featured “Meher Baba Piece”, which was featured on The Who’s 2006 ENDLESS WIRE (Universal Republic) as part of the track “Fragments” • Songs on the album were created using Ball’s algorithmic “Harmonic Maths” system of composition • A classical music based composer with over 170 scored compositions and 3,000 recorded piano improvisations, Ball is influenced by many other genres, including jazz, Indian, Moroccan, and rock music, often combining music with meditation and/or computer-generation