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VITAL WEEKLY
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number 514
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week 8
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Vital Weekly, the webcast: as an experiment
for the time being, we offering a weekly webcast, freely to download.
This can be regarded as the audio-supplement to Vital Weekly.
Presented as a radioprogramm with excerpts of just some of the
CDs (no vinyl or MP3) reviewed. It will remain on the site for
a limited period (most likely 2-4 weeks). Download the file
to your MP3 player and enjoy!
http://www.vitalweekly.net
you can subscribe to the weekly broadcast using the following
rss feed:
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New broadcasts will be sent directly when uploaded. For more information
on
podcasts go here: http://ipodder.sourceforge.net/
* noted are in this week's podcast
ASMUS TIETCHENS - ZETA-MENGE (CD by Line)
*
SEBASTIEN ROUX - SONGS (CD by 12K) *
MCWAIN & BALGOCHIAN & COOK - VIGIL (CD by Fuller Street
Music)
THOMAS STRØNEN - POHLITZ (CD by Rune Grammofon) *
MOHA! - RAUS AUS STAVANGER (CD by Rune Grammofon) *
IVAN PALACKY & VJ VERA LUKASOVA aka CARPETS CURTAINS (DVD
by Errant Bodies)
JARROD FOWLER - TRANSLATION AS RHYTHM (CD by Errant Bodies)
YUKI KAWAMURA - SLIDE (DVD by Lowave)
JACK-JACK & DE WANDELENDE FEEDBACK (CDR by De Hondenkoekjesfabriek)
*
NETHERWORLD - OTHERWORDLY ABYSS (CDR by Deep Listenings) *
JIM DENLEY & JOEL STERN- TAPE AND PAINT GAME (CDR by Aject
Leader Records) *
MAURIZIO BIANCHI & SIGMAR FRICKE - ENDOKRANIOSIS (CDR By Tib
Prod) *
MIKRONESIA - TISSUE PAPER GHOSTS (CDR by Gears Of Sand) *
EDDIE THE RAT - DROP ME OFF IN DENPASAR (CDR by Comfort Stand)
*
CT POEM (CDR compilation by CT Collective)
PI CAB ALTER - MEMOIRE DE L'ETHER FLUCTUANT:1937-1947 (CDR by
Verato Project)
PI CAB ALTER - KINOTERPATIK (CDR by Verato Project) *
FILTHY TURD - DEATH LETTERS (CDR by Verato Project)
FAMOUS FOR 15MB (MP3 monthly by AA/Nosordo)
ASMUS TIETCHENS - ZETA-MENGE (CD by Line)
SEBASTIEN ROUX - SONGS (CD by 12K)
As a non-classical trained person, I don't know how many letters
the Greek alphabet has, but Asmus Tietchens reaches with Zeta-menge
the sixth letter, following Alpha, Beta, Delta, Gamma and Epsilon.
It's a specific group of works, like not is uncommon with Tietchens
to work in groups (one could think of his various works with water
sounds called 'Hydrophonie'), that deals with the processed sound
of sine waves and white noise. In all his work, the 'menge' series
is Asmus in his most reduced form. Somewhere there is a basic
hum, that in 'Teilmenge 37' sounds like someone is breathing.
Somewhere there is a sound that leaps in and out, sometimes there
is a slight variation in that sound. There is somewhere some change,
but not much. And that's about it. Highly reduced material, but
full of intensity. Play this loud and very detailed variations
will occur in the material. Play this soft and only the 'top'
sounds will be clearly heard, which would be a pity. In all this
vast emptiness there is a lot of stuff to discover. Maybe with
six albums, the concept of the 'Menge' series is quite clear,
but perhaps Asmus will give it another dimension in the future.
He can do that.
Sebastien Roux shouldn't be unknown by now, for his various releases
on 12K and Apestaartje, and 'Songs' is the follow up to 'Pillow',
which wasn't reviewed in Vital Weekly. The title implies that
we are dealing with songs here, and of course there are eight
tracks on the CD, which may be songs. But if we take songs literally,
as 'songs' than Sebastien Roux doesn't play traditional songs.
He plays guitar, and processes that playing through his laptop.
Sometimes his guitar sounds like a guitar, but most of the time,
it doesn't. It crackles, hums, sounds like an organ, like chirping
insects, or like a spacecraft landing in the ocean. All eight
'songs' are collages of sound, sometimes a small portion of it
forms what could be song, but sometimes the collage as such seems
like a merely random set of sounds. Sometimes they don't seem
to add up to a real song. Although it's all beautifully produced,
soundwise, I have some problems with the overall result. Maybe
my expectations are just wrong, based upon the title, but some
of the pieces sound a bit too haphazard for me. The real challenge
lies, I think in making them into real songs. Next time, perhaps...
(FdW)
Address: http://www.12k.com
MCWAIN & BALGOCHIAN & COOK - VIGIL
(CD by Fuller Street Music)
A trio of Andy McWain (piano) with Albey Balgochian on bass and
Laurence Cook on drums. Yes, a jazz trio. A classic format, but
- happily - not engaged in an revisionist exercise here.
Mcwain is a improvising pianist and composer from Boston. He has
several other things going on: a quartet named Starfish, the ensemble
Resemblance. Plus he played with many musicians. Still I think
McWain is a relatively new talent. Anyway, I guess he is younger
then Balgochian and Cook. Albey Balgochian is Cecil Taylor's current
bass-player. Laurence Cook started in the end of the 60s and played
with Alan Silva, Paul Bley and Bill Dixon to name a few. So different
generations and experiences meet in this trio. No problem because
all three speak the language of jazz fluently and they must have
enjoyed that day in october 2004 enormously, when they made the
recordings for this cd. The cd captures seven lively improvisations
in an excellent recording from three technically very advanced
players. The three form a great team showing real togetherness
in their playing. They play intelligently with the idiom of jazz,
avoiding cliches and offering some nice surprises from time to
time.
The drummer has a modest way of playing but he makes sure that
he is there. Always interested in the sound of color of instruments,
my attention was caught to the very characteristic sound of Balgochian
on bass. For instance, the opening of the last track opens with
a vibrant bass-solo with some nice dissonance. McWain is an original
and enthusiastic player with lots of ideas, crazy jumps and twists.
A very pleasant cd from an original trio. (DM)
Address: http://www.fullerstreetmusic.com/
THOMAS STRØNEN - POHLITZ (CD by Rune
Grammofon)
MOHA! - RAUS AUS STAVANGER (CD by Rune Grammofon)
So far I wasn't aware of Food, a quartet around drummer Thomas
Strønen, sax-player Iain Ballamy and the recently departed
bass-player Matts Eilertsen and trumpet player Arve Henriksen,
or in fact any of Strønen's activities, such as Humcrush
(a duo with Stale Storløkken of Supersilent) or his various
other improvising projects. 'Pohlitz' is Strønen's first
solo work. I learn from the cover that he plays 'beatable items,
live electronic treatments, music' and read in the press message
that he plays a variety of percussive instruments here, uses live
sampling from the percussion, thus in real-time stacking all the
elements together. I must admit, I am rather impressed by this.
His music is true cross-over of improvised music, electronic music
and composed music, but played with sheer elegance. The sampled
elements provide a nice, relaxed bed for the percussion to sleep
in. Minimal in it's playing, a bit Steve Reich like, but more
smeared out, a bit more empty, but always with a slow building
of the pieces, by slowly adding elements, real time percussion
and sampled elements thereof. In 'Natural History Of Creation'
Strønen reaches for a Gamelan sound, with a similar hypnotic
feel to it. Quite an amazing debut.
Nothing subtle however with MoHa!, a duo of guitar player Anders
Hana and drummer Morten Olsen, the two youngest Rune Grammofon
artists, but despite their age (23 and 24), they have been playing
together for eight years. Maybe it's their youth, but they like
to be a fine piece of noise music. But they keep their pieces
short and to the point. All ten pieces are heavy feedback guitar
pieces, scraping, scratching guitars and percussion, but each
of them explores a certain area of noise. You never get the idea
of listening to ten times the same track, but in all the improvised-no
overdubs-live-to-tape recording there is a great sense of communication
between both players. They exactly know each-other and know how
to play these ten blocks of highly concentrated pieces of free
form noise improvisation. Another great disc! (FdW)
Address: http://www.runegrammofon.com
IVAN PALACKY & VJ VERA LUKASOVA aka
CARPETS CURTAINS (DVD by Errant Bodies)
JARROD FOWLER - TRANSLATION AS RHYTHM (CD by Errant Bodies)
First I must apologize for not writing correctly the names of
the two artists mentioned above. They require dashes and other
marks that I do not have readily available in plain text. Secondly
I must state that I was very pleasantly surprised by this release.
The DVD contains five tracks, all with a very strong minimalist
approach to sound and image. Main concern of both artists, Ivan
Palacky the musician and Filip Cenek (aka Vera Lukasova) is the
play with mistakes occurring during live situations or the glitches
originating from flaws in hard- or software. This underlying concept
is expressed very minimally, with a keen sense of spacing and
timing and plenty of attention to detail. The music is very quiet,
with lots of (near) silences, giving enough space to the imagery
to stand on its own. The same thing can be said the other way
around: Cenek's visuals are quiet and evocative textures based
on almost negligible scenes from daily life with enough space
for the music to be worth listening to. So maybe audiovisual collaborations
are the future after all...
So, yes, this is something different: a conceptual artwork relating
to music and music practice, seen from a philosophical and percussive
perspective. Fowler's disc is a hermetic universe of thoughts
about music and its practice expressed in sound. Interesting?
Hell yes! Difficult to understand and get into? Hell yes! I just
had to check out his site (www.jarrodfowler.com) and learn more.
Did I? Hell no! So, what have we here? We have serious art, packed
in a normal CD case, presented to the public as music. Is it?
You tell me!
But it is certainly enticing en gets on one's nerves... (MR)
Address: http://www.errantbodies.org/
YUKI KAWAMURA - SLIDE (DVD by Lowave)
Lately more and more DVDs landed at the Vital Headquarters and
that's nice, but I doubt wether the music heads of the Vital reviewers
are capable to do proper reviews of them. At least, I am pretty
sure I am not the right person to review them. I can take the
art film purely face value: I view and can describe what I saw,
and give an opinion, but not exactly place it inside a tradition.
Japanese video artist Yuki Kawamura lives in Paris and on this
DVD are nine of his films, accompanied by the music of Yoshihiro
Hanno, who plays a rather glitch related soundtrack to the nine
films. Stuttering rhythms, made out of voices, guitar-playing
through digital effects. Nice music and one that fits the idea
of the images quite nicely. Kawamura uses also a highly digital
form of filmmaking, sometimes dream like, like the free floating
glass of 'VE', or heavy flicker in 'Scene H'. His images are abstract,
even when he takes them from the real world, such as people arriving
and departing from the airport. None of the films are very long,
capture one idea and does it well. Quite an enjoyable set of films.
(FdW)
Address: http://www.lowave.com
JACK-JACK & DE WANDELENDE FEEDBACK (CDR
by De Hondenkoekjesfabriek)
Jack-Jack And The Walking Feedback, that's how this translates.
When we see this coming from the Dutch Hondenkoekjesfabriek, we
know what to expect. Do we? I expected the full noise blast, howling
feedback, distortion, mayhem, screaming voices. Nothing so. The
twelve pieces deal with feedback alright, but throughout in a
more thoughtful way. The rhythmic beating on a contact microphone,
looping into feedback, the softly arising sound of feedback, the
collage/cut-up approach in some of these pieces and of course
some of the more nasty frequencies makes this a highly unusual
release for this label. Especially the rhythm approach is something.
Some of these excursions are bit too long to be interesting through
their entire length, but it certainly has potential. And then
the titles: they are hilarious! 'The Rebels Were Unable To Come
To An Agreement On The Amount Of Brutal Violence Necessary For
The Revolution' or 'The Beat Is A Fascist Dictator That Withholds
You From Being Free And Accustoms You To Systematic Oppression'.
Great move. (FdW)
Address: http://www.xs4all.nl/~tellab
NETHERWORLD - OTHERWORDLY ABYSS (CDR by
Deep Listenings)
Knowing that one Alessandra Tedeschi is behind Netherworld is
perhaps not the most exciting thing to know about the project,
but it's the only thing that we do know. He or she is from the
ever so lively dark ambient scene in Italy and that the instruments
used are loops, synths, gong, voice, field recordings. What misses
from this list is the vast amount of reverb, used in all five
of these cuts, that is used to expand the sound of all used instruments.
There was a time when the use of reverb was quite nice to create
dark textured music, but these days, I find it pretty much a cover-up
to hide imperfections in the music. I'd be curious to know how
this would have sounded without all this reverb, but I guess still
pretty decent, as this is quite nice dark atmospheric music, that
in a sparsely lit room would certainly create the right atmosphere
for a good spirit calling. Dark, austere music that fits any grey
winter day. (FdW)
Address: http://www.deeplistenings.it
JIM DENLEY & JOEL STERN- TAPE AND PAINT
GAME (CDR by Abject Leader Records)
Jim Denley isn't perhaps someone who is reviewed a lot in Vital
Weekly, but he is still one of the leading persons in the Australian
improvisation scene, playing with anyone (it seems) and everywhere
(that is a fact). Denley' skills lie in playing the alto saxophone,
but you never have the idea that it's one. Plus he is responsible
for field recordings and editing and teams up with a younger (?),
newer generation improvising musician Joel Stern, who lived in
London for a while, but I believe is now back in Australia and
who plays electronics, feedback and field recordings and does
a share of editing too. The editing is important. The material
itself was recorded through methods of improvisation, but all
the material was carefully looked at, added too, cut and reshaped,
and put together in a collage form of one kind or another. This
makes this still sounding improvised on a superficial level, but
if you listen carefully, then you notice all the editing parts.
The opening piece 'Cornish Tape Stratagem' for instance with it's
precise edits, is almost like a popsong. Multitracking plays a
bigger part in some of the other pieces, such as the more subtle
'Ancho-rubbed Ground' or 'Wild Game Crockpot'. Here it seems that
some specific layers form the backbone of a piece over which other
sounds were dubbed. The whole things sounds surprisingly electronic,
with the saxophone playing usually a sustained note, rather than
free-form melodies. The whole encounter of eight tracks breaths
a very vibrant and lively atmosphere. All together a most enjoyable
release, a well-done mixture of improvisation and composition.
(FdW)
Address: http://www.abjectleader.org/
MAURIZIO BIANCHI & SIGMAR FRICKE - ENDOKRANIOSIS
(CDR By Tib Prod)
Not just one voice from the past, but two. The resurrection of
Maurizio Bianchi has been noted before. Not just about everything
he ever did is being re-issued on CD or LP, but he's also producing
much new work, and much to my surprise in collaboration with others.
How this works, I am not sure. But if we see that this is produced
in Wilhelmshaven, I gather it's more a Fricke production than
Bianchi. But perhaps Bianchi likes to travel these days? Sigmar
Fricke released a bunch of synthi pop like tapes in the eighties,
did an ultra serious and ultra long in the making CD and book
with Giancarlo Toniutti and then disappeared, at least from this
perspective. I tried reading the liner notes of this release,
but medical english is always a bit difficult. As long as the
musicians understand it themselves, me thinks. So I didn't hear
much from Fricke in the last decade or so, but Bianchi's return
to the music wasn't always well spend on me. Too light hearted
ambient music, with a nod too much towards new age. So I started
to listen with some reservation, but I was pleasantly surprised
by these four lengthy exercises in tone and change. There are
hints of the old Bianchi, but less lo-fi and without the harshness
of some of the earlier work. The music is smeared together with
an extended use of sound effects which are responsible for creating
the changes in the sound. The ambient element of lately is still
a present feature, but the whole breaths alien worlds, decay,
darkness and other less pleasant things. The tracks are long but
one never has the idea that they are too long or that they collapse
under their own weight. There is always an escape route to another
alley, where new sound effects drop in. This makes this into a
most powerful ambient-industrial release. And a call for me! (FdW)
Address: http://www.tibprod.com
MIKRONESIA - TISSUE PAPER GHOSTS (CDR by
Gears Of Sand)
Gears of Sand is one of the more professional CDR labels. Nice
design, full color label artwork, printed on the CDR and great
music. It's a pity though that not much information is available
on some of the more unknown artists. Like: who is Mikronesia?
Since I got this, some two weeks ago, I have been playing this
a lot, but I can't make up my mind on what I think about this.
It's surely quite a nice release of melodic ambient music that
is throughout these eight pieces rhythmic oriented in a sort of
tribal/pseudo ethnic way, a bit like a more mechanical Rapoon,
with mumbling voices here and there, chilly synths and all other
fine ingredients for solid atmospheric music. But still it's not
easy to up my mind. I sit back and listen... I like what I hear
but it also moves out of the attention pretty easily. The music
doesn't grab one and forces to pay full attention, but perhaps
that's not the idea of Mikronesia. In another life, this would
be the more adventurous ambient house things, reminding me of
Meridian Dream (but I might the only one to remember). It's pleasant
music to whatever you do when you pleasant, not too demanding
music. (FdW)
Address: http://www.gearsofsand.net/
EDDIE THE RAT - DROP ME OFF IN DENPASAR
(CDR by Comfort Stand)
Pete Martin is the man behind Eddie The Rat, here a four piece
band that are named after a real living rodent. I'd say here a
four piece, because they have a fluctuating membership of up to
twelve musicians. Pete Martin is the main composer and there are
releases on Negativland's Sealand label and on Entartete Kunst.
Here five parts of 'Drop Me Off In Denpasar' (which is the capital
of Bali) which Martin wrote as a finger studio while playing the
piano. A bit like a drummer would use his arms and legs to create
a rhythm. The pieces were laid down on four track, with the help
of a drummer, percussion players and a second piano. The 'Denpasar'
reference is not just a reference for the sake of it, but throughout
these five pieces, one gets the idea of listening to Gamelan like
music, although it's less flowing and a bit more hooky. These
Gamelan like pieces are at the end, the first two a bit jazzy,
but with a very nice twist to it, making it not entirely jazz,
but still quite groovy. Personally the third and fourth track
are my favorite, with the gamelan influences and in the fourth
piece there also seems to be some electronic sounds, or something
that imitates an electronic sound. That for me was the best track
of the lot, but the others were pretty pleasant too. Nice one.
(FdW)
Address: http://www.eddietherat.com
CT POEM (CDR compilation by CT Collective)
Something new is The Chain Tape Collective, 'a community of individuals,
dedicated to creating an ongoing series of idea-based collaborative
CD compilations. The projects are organized and discussed through
an online mailing-list, and the discs are organized and produced
by members on a volunteer basis'. I am not sure what other projects
are organized so far, but the central focuses here is the poem
in any language and a create a background for the poem. Not always
the poem is a poem, but it can be a real song, such as the piece
by Klobuchar in 'It's About Shirts', set against some mediocre
rhythm-box and bass. His other two pieces are also not great.
Biffoz delivers a short (instrumental!) and long piece with guitars
and lots of distortion, semi-krautrock or Adam J Wimbush's looped
voice feeding through distortion. That is unfortunately the majority
of this CDR. The best pieces are short and at the beginning, such
as the spooky piece by Gydja, with it's traces of Nurse With Wound
or the laptop intimacy of Anders Ostberg. The two pieces by Tim
Nelson are nice, but already a bit more traditional with voice
processing and a variety of synthetic sounds, but still are quite
nice. And then follow the pieces that have, me thinks, not much
to do with poems or that are just not very nice pieces. This compilation
or this theme, just didn't have it for me. (FdW)
Address: http://www.ct-collective.com
PI CAB ALTER - MEMOIRE DE L'ETHER FLUCTUANT:1937-1947
(CDR by Verato Project)
PI CAB ALTER - KINOTERPATIK (CDR by Verato Project)
FILTHY TURD - DEATH LETTERS (CDR by Verato Project)
On the ever so lovely Verato Project label three new releases,
spanning the wide territory of experimental music. Pi Cab Alter
leaves us still in the dark as to who and what, but he's from
France and this is his fourth album. No more of the heavenly voices
as on the first two, but still working his way into the mood music,
playing his own fine blend of ambient music. Fifteen track, playing
over an hour worth of material - that is perhaps a bit too much,
but I strongly suggest listening to the entire album, since towards
the end there are a couple of more experimental pieces, with vague
metallic percussive sounds. The first say ten tracks are loosely
based on heavily processed radio waves (such is at least suggested
by the title), which altogether make up some pretty decent, not
at to clean ambient music. Say of the more adventurous kind.
In a lovely small film can we find another release by Pi Cab Alter,
together with a few stripes of film. The music has changed here
and tends towards a more rhythmical version of his own work. The
ambient as influence is still here, but in many of the tracks,
sampled, minimalist rhythms are used, voices of various media
are incorporated. Overall this is much more 'free' material than
the previous release. It's also a more varied release, with piece
that tend to be downright soft such as 'Entracte' or more present
and even a bit noisy, although it shouldn't be regarded as noise
with the big N. Quite a nice release again, but the other suits
the late night listening better.
Also up their fourth album are Filthy Turd from the UK. Now here
we speak noise with the big N. Three tracks, forty seven some
minutes of unrelentness noise, like the previous releases. Distortion,
feedback, noise, mayhem and chaos. It lacks the perfection of
say good ol' Merzbow, but again, for what it is, it's not that
bad. Noise is a genre which lacks progression, well most of the
time, and Filthy Turd will certainly not progress for a while
or two. (FdW)
Address: http://www.verato-project.de
FAMOUS FOR 15MB (MP3 monthly by AA/Nosordo)
Last week we mentioned a couple different magazines, and Famous
For 15MB is something a like, but then as a website. Each month
they introduce a bunch of music and film makers through small
MPEG films, MP3 music and introduction-airy text on a website.
This is all highly informative stuff, introducing a musically
wide variety bunch of artists, such as the ambient guitars of
Greg Kowalsky and Ljudbilden & Piloten, technoid music of
Crampcat, bad krautrock guitars by Fria Konstellationen, Oval
rippers Portabot, R'n'B/hip hop by El Chavo, Postrock by One Second
Bridge and Les Aus and the noise trip of Pistol Disco (reviewed
here before). Some short films by Iris Piers which are very nice
and Todosantos. As said, a highly varied bunch, which is best
in your whatever Mp3 programm (no adds here), and have it played
on shuffle. You can discover many nice things here and the presentation
is great. A well-worth initiative. (FdW)
Address: http://www.famousfor15mb.com
Correction: in the review of the CD by hhtp & Portablepalace it is said that the music was probably made via the exchange of sounds through mail. However the recordings were made by three musicians live in the studio. Nothing was added later on, save for some editing and mastering.
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