Number 538

AUDIOTOOP (CD compilation by Korm Plastics)
JAZZKAMMER – PANIC (CD by Bottrop-boy) *
ANTOINE BERTHIAUME & MICHEL DONATO & PIERRE TANGUAY – ELLEN’S BAR – (CD by Ambiances Magnetiques)
PIERRE CARTIER – CHANSONS DE LA BELLE ESPERANCE (CD by Ambiances Magnetiques)
SGNL FLTR – CHRONO (CD by Databloem)
OBJEKT 4 – HER FACE AMONG THE SHADOWS (CD by Ravenheart) *
BLACK HAPPY DAY – IN THE GARDEN OF GHOSTFLOWERS (CD by Silber Records)
HELLER MASON – MINIMALIST & ANCHORED (CD by Silber Records)
VERTONEN – STATIONS (CD by C.I.P.) *
FRANCISCO LOPEZ/MICHEAL GENDREAU (LP by C.I.P.)
LIAM GILLICK – LOS ANGELES: A FILM BY SARAH MORRIS (CD by Semishigure)
MAJA RATKJE – ADVENTURA ANATOMICA (CD by Semishigure) *
THE MOGLASS – SPARROW JUICE (CD by Nexsound) *
COURTIS/THE MOGLASS/ANDREY KIRITCHENKO (CD by Nexsound/Gold Soundz/Tib Prod/1000+1 Tilt)
HATI VS Z’EV – #1 (CD by Ars Benevola Mater) *
ROTHKAMM – FB02:ASTRONAUT OF INNER SPACE (CD by Flux Records)
BARDOSENETICCUBE & IGOR V. PETROV – THE PERPETUUM MOBILE SPACE VEHICLE (CD by Mechanoise Labs) *
TIDAL & PETER DUIMELINKS – ABLUTION (miniCD by Alluvial Recordings)
SILVESTER ANFANG – SATANISCHE VREDE (LP by Kraak)
R.O.T. – L’ECURIE (LP by Kraak)
COLIN POTTER – IT WAS LIKE THIS… (2CDR by ICR Distribution) *
ANDREW DUKE/AKUMU – SPLIT (CDR by Cohort Records) *
FRANK DIFFICULT – DIARY PT. 2 (CDR by Retinascan)
SYSEXBUGFIX – OBLIQ (CDR by Retinascan) *
ZACH WALLACE – WATER (CDR by Lichen Records)
ZACH WALLACE – ORGAN 2 (CDR by Lichen Records)
CADUCEUS MUSIC – INFLUENCES VOLUME EIGHT (mp3 by Caduceus Music)
CADUCEUS MUSIC – INFLUENCES VOLUME NINE (mp3 by Caduceus Music) *
ARTURAS BUMSTEINAS – GLOCKENSPIEL (MP3 by Alg Label) *
ARTURAS BUMSTEINAS – SECOND SEQUENTINA (MP3 by Earlabs Laboratorie Moderne)

no announcements this week

AUDIOTOOP (CD compilation by Korm Plastics)
This CD documents some of the radioplays that took place as a live event in Extrapool, Holland. Audiotoop is a sympathetic try to revive this old medium. But it is more than that, as everything took place live before an audience. Also this release is accompanied by a beautiful book with artworks and a textual contribution by Felix Kubin. So several media are combined for this project.
Extrapool invited several musicians and (sound) artists for this project, most of them being new for me: Jana & Bertin, Jan Schellink, Lem & Lemmoineau, Vernon & Burns, etc, etc. Not all of them obey to – what I think is – the first law of radioplay, namely it has to have a narrative structure. A radioplay always tells a story, isn’t it? “De Sinuskapel” by Quinten Dierick for example is a dark piece just consisting of low noises, evoking the wind that blows over a deserted place. In that respect a perfect radioplay as it leaves room to our own phantasy to imagine a story, a world, etc. The contribution by Freek Lomme and Remco van Bladel is more close to a soundpoem. “Spatial Transition” by Marten de Wind And Tamar Frank opens with environmental sounds from Extrapool, to be followed by a loud and high tone – not very pleasant for my ears – that continues for the rest of this piece. No voice, no story.
All three pieces are very short, so may be there were meant as an interlude. All other pieces go from 6 up to 11 minutes, and come more close to the medium of radioplay. The opening track by Jana and Bertin is the best one. In the form of a english teaching lesson they tell little stories, nicely decorated with simple tunes and noises. In “Robosapien en de 6 baby poppetjes” Jan Schellink tells an absurd childstory, without the addition of any other sounds. “The notebook of Elisabeth Hojesky” by Jörg Piringer and Elffriede is another highlight on this CD. We hear a voice reading from a diary, with it’s typical short descriptive sentences that tell what happened, on day x, z, etc. The soundtape to this one is very interesting and perfectly integrated with the reading voices. Listening to this varied CD you ask yourself why is the radioplay such a sadly neglected medium, as it is a very powerful and imaginative artform. Let’s hope that Extrapool and Korm Plastics will continue their Audiotoop-adventure. (DM)
Address: http://www.kormplastics.nl/

JAZZKAMMER – PANIC (CD by Bottrop-boy)
Ah the Norwegian lover boys of noise, John Hegre and Lasse Marhaug, also known as Jazzkammer returns once again. Their previous slab of music, ‘Metal Music Machine’ didn’t make it into these pages, which was a pity, since that saw a shift from the laptop noise into the world of six strings. Actually a pair of six strings. ‘Panic’ is an epic piece for the city. Not the glorious big city life, but rather a picture of decay, emptiness and loneliness: the city at its most ugly. This doesn’t lead to ugly music though, as there is a lot of beauty in this decay. Just like the booklet has pictures of decay, beautifully shown by Yuen Chee Wai, this dueling guitars take the listener to the beauty beneath the sewer, with desolate, sustaining strumming, haunted by effects. That is roughly in the first fifteen minutes, but after that the ugly face is shown and we are full blown in the streets: guitars howl about with great intensity and furious like hell. It’s like being in a car at night, driving a great speed and the street lights flicker by. All of this until we collapse. We are left on the sidewalk and we can see the city in full decay. No-one is there to help, everybody is afraid and the gangs roam the streets. A city in panic. The final part is an illusion: it seems nice on the surface, yet no-one is happy. The panic is still there and the silenced music is just a facade. The perfect soundtrack for a movie about cities in the late twenty-first century or the soundtrack of today’s reality? My city is too small, but I can imagine a few where this is reality. A great work. (FdW)
Address: http://www.bottrop-boy.com

ANTOINE BERTHIAUME & MICHEL DONATO & PIERRE TANGUAY – ELLEN’S BAR – (CD by Ambiances Magnetiques)
PIERRE CARTIER – CHANSONS DE LA BELLE ESPERANCE (CD by Ambiances Magnetiques)
With “Ellen’s Bar” guitarist Berthiaume delivers his third album for Ambiances Magnétiques. He debuted with “Soshin”, a free improvised record with duos with Derek Bailey and Fred Frith. His second one was also a free improvised record with some young musicians of Berthiaumes generation. For “Ellen’s Bar” Berthiaume formed a trio with Pierre Tanguay on drums and Michel Donato on bass. No free improvised explorations this time, but a true jazz album. And a very nice one too. Nicely grooving from beginning to the end. Tanguay and Donato turn out to be perfect partners for Berthiaume who does some nice solowork with great control. Most pieces are the same in mood and tempo, not fast, not to slow. But always very captivating. No loose ends on this one.
Pierre Cartier also returns for his newest cd to the classic jazz period. With Jean Derome (sax and flutes), Jean René (viola), Tom Walsh (trombone), Bernard Falaise (guitar) and Pierre Tanguay (drums), Pierre Cartier (voice and bass) offers a new collection of jazz-inspired songs. As in earlier song cycles Cartier uses poems from diverse french-speaking poets. For his new album, he choose poems from Quebecois poets (Michel Garneau, Gaston Miron, Pierre Perrault, Paul-Marie Lapointe), plus one by Apollinaire and another one by himself. To be more precise, for this new cycle of songs Cartier sought inspiration by jazz standards and Broadway love songs. Nevertheless his songs have a definitely french flavor, and not that typical american character of the predecessors that Cartier inspired. They are for example not so smooth, because Cartier has his very own way of placing accents in his singing style that is sometimes close to dissonance. Most ballads continue in their own slow tempo giving plenty of room for nice solowork by Derome, Walsh and the others. (DM)
Address: http://www.actuellecd.com/

SGNL FLTR – CHRONO (CD by Databloem)
Hot on the heels of the ‘Vebra’ release of Sgnl Fltr, aka Danny Kreutzfeldt from Denmark, comes ‘Chrono’, another ten tracks. Kreutzfeldt studied physics and will be studying philosophy and aims for ‘a personal, escapist and reflective expression’. One of the things Kreutzfeldt really likes is his reverb unit. In all of the ten tracks the reverb is set to a time, anywhere between 1 and 20 seconds, and each of the tracks is spiced up with this. In general a Sgnl Fltr track consists of a 4/4 beat drum, with a little bit of percussive sounds dropping in over the course of a piece and the whole thing is fed through a bunch of reverb and delay lines, and most likely a couple of filter units. The result is a slow, dubby sounds that tries (and sometimes succeeds) to evoke atmospheres that are best described as ‘mildly grim’ to ‘really grim’. Anything ‘light’ seems not to be in the interest spheres of Kreutzfeldt. Despite ‘dance’ rhythms used, it’s hard for me to see people actually dancing to this, so it’s a bit hard to see what Sgnl Fltr aims for: the dance floor or the home head nodders? I think the latter ones are those who would like this CD better. It’s good music to work to, or do a bit of relaxing. It may seem that I am not overtly enthusiastic about this CD, and even when I think it’s not something highly new, I must say I was quite pleased to have it on as a form of ambient background. At that it’s quite alright! (FdW)
Address: http://www.databloem.com

OBJEKT 4 – HER FACE AMONG THE SHADOWS (CD by Ravenheart)
It was only six weeks ago that we reviewed ‘Extermination Processing Tower’ by Swedish Objekt 4. Back then we entirely forgot to mention that this CD as well as many other works, including the new ‘her Face Among The Shadows’, are available as Dolby 5.1 Surround Sound. I am sure that will expand the listening experience, but I only have a stereo set up. The previous release sounded a bit ambient industrial, whereas on this new one, rhythms started to play a more important role. Away from the Muslimgauze inspired pseudo tribalism, and into the land of trip hop rhythms. Slow, hypnotic, led by a bass and with sizzling, sparkling and hissing sounds underneath. Not every track is like this, as there are still the ambient industrial atmospherics that were also part of the previous release. But unlike that one, there are no weaker brothers here, all of the tracks flow nicely into each other, thus forming a good head trip. Highly atmospheric, this is beautiful but haunting soundtrack through a vast, empty, post nuclear world. A greatly matured work, compared to the previous release. (FdW)
Address: http://www.ravenheart.myseria.cz http://www.objekt4.com

BLACK HAPPY DAY – IN THE GARDEN OF GHOSTFLOWERS (CD by Silber Records)
HELLER MASON – MINIMALIST & ANCHORED (CD by Silber Records)
How can a black day be happy? Maybe an oxymoron? It’s also the name of a collaboration between Tara Vanflower (of Lycia fame) and Timothy Renner (of Stone Breath), the latter of whom I never heard. I must admit it’s a strange affair this, but not an unpleasant one. It’s a very odd combination of vocals by both Vanflower and Renner, who have quite opposite voices: one beautiful angelic like and one quite low. The instruments used are furthermore guitar, banjo and dulcimer. This however doesn’t lead to Lycia like lyrical, heavenly voices music (which I used to put down as gothic, quite untrue of course) – at least not all the way through. There are some pieces in that quasi mediaeval style. In fact there make several traditional songs into something new, but in all their further treatments, Black Happy Day, are way more experimental than say Lycia or Dead Can Dance. Some of the other pieces just use voice, but then dubbed around, in combination with feedback and reverb. This however doesn’t lead to some harsh noise, but rather beautiful pieces of haunting and somewhat frightening music. The beautiful, mediaeval style in combination with experiments of the twenty-first century: that is indeed a strange affair, but strangely enough it works really well.
Not experimental at all on the CD by Heller Mason, from Little Chute. Behind this is one Todd Vandenberg (not to be mistaken with that Dutch guy of the same name), who plays guitar and sings. He is helped by a whole bunch of musicians, playing drums, bass, more guitars, piano, trumpet and cello. Apparently he worked for three years on this album, and originally was indeed just his guitar and voice and later on expanded. All good and well, but this singer songwriter stuff is not very much alike what Vital Weekly writes about and that is not a problem, since that happens more. But I simply can’t relate to this music at all. It’s too soft, not really outspoken and simply too much ‘i love you, but you don’t love me’ lyrics. Not my coffee at all. (FdW)
Address: http://www.silbermedia.com

VERTONEN – STATIONS (CD by C.I.P.)
FRANCISCO LOPEZ/MICHEAL GENDREAU (LP by C.I.P.)
To see the new (fourth) CD by Vertonen as the logical next step since the previous release ‘Orchid Collider’ (see Vital Weekly 482) is not possible. There is some distinction between Vertonen in the studio and live, and ‘Stations’ is a collection, or rather a best of, of Vertonen’s live performances from 2003 to 2006. In the studio he crafts these days deep drone works, not unlike Eliane Radigue or The Hafler Trio, but live things are more about rhythm and noise. Using records, turntables, synths and sound effects, Vertonen’s sound pallet seems limited but these sixteen tracks show that he is a man of many talents. Harsh sounds play a big role, and they are cut to the edge, but Vertonen is never a full blown noise maker. The rhythm aspect, made by locking grooves on a piece of vinyl, remind the listener of Boyd Rice’s alter ego Non, but it’s all less minimal than that. As such ‘Stations’ and Vertonen’s live work harks back to the old days of industrial music and that’s ok in as far as he does a great job at that. It would perhaps be an idea to see if he could re-create the sonically richer material of the studio to the concert space as well.
Vinyl releases by Francisco Lopez are pretty rare. As far as I recall there is one LP on Mego and various 7″ releases, four or five, but that might be it. Perhaps it’s no surprise, since it’s not easy to translate his music to vinyl, the sheer inaudibility that is part of perhaps 80% of his work. Here he shares a LP with Micheal Gendreau, formerly of Crawling With Tarts. Micheal’s work deals with using all sorts of records, turntables, hand cut recordio disks, creating music out of the crackles, hum, static, pops, run out grooves. It’s funny to see that Lopez does the same. His piece, ‘Untitled #184’ is audible throughout, and is a densely layered carpet of sound all sorts of sounds coming from vinyl. It hisses, pops and cracks in all sorts of ways, but never in an overtly rhythmic manner. It seems to me that Lopez created all of this by making many layers of sounds and removing any possibility of repetition. The piece by Gendreau uses similar sounds, but here musical elements leak through, or perhaps are created by the various possibilities of playing the records with motors, swift speed change and such like. Whereas Lopez creates a mass of sound, Gendreau presents an audio collage. Two possibilities of working with material like this. Two great examples of those possibilities. Richly textured and no doubt will go down for the very adventurous DJs. (FdW)
Address: http://www.cipsite.net

LIAM GILLICK – LOS ANGELES: A FILM BY SARAH MORRIS (CD by Semishigure)
MAJA RATKJE – ADVENTURA ANATOMICA (CD by Semishigure)
In the imperium called Bottrop-boy there are three angles: Bottrop-boy, En/Of and Semishigure. The latter is a label that releases works from visual artists and brought us great works by Christina Kubisch and Steve Roden. It now offers Liam Gillick’s soundtrack to ‘Los Angeles’, a film by Sarah Morris. To some, Los Angeles is the city of film, of glamour, of sunshine, or as the press text says: ‘everyone wants to be centre stage in bustling Los Angeles’. Morris shows us the villas, film studios, cosmetic surgeries etc. I found Los Angeles awful: way too big for my country taste, driving on end to this vast conglomerate of sub-cities. Liam Gillick’s soundtrack is entirely electronic, played on a keyboard with it’s built-in rhythms. Gillick uses many string like sounds, sometimes a piano, all with laid back rhythms: the soundtrack of a city of glamour and glitter. Laid back driving on Sunset Boulevard, expensive sun-glasses on. I hope this is all thought to be ironic and not serious. Then it might be something to enjoy, since if this is serious, I am not sure if I like it that much. Twenty-six some minutes are well enough.
The other release deals with music for the choreographer Odd Johan Fritzøe and the music is by the ever so active Maja Ratkje, one of Fe-mail (see also Vital Weekly 536), but also working with somebody like Lasse Marhaug. The voice is her primary instrument, in conjunction with a live sampling instrument called ImproSculpt, but also harmonica, whistling, flute, metal objects, dictaphone and in this case also the sound of the dancer’s body. The pieces here are exactly the pieces as they are used in the dance piece, and the whole thing is about fairy tales, wolves and innocent girls, all in the dark wood. That’s at least what I read, since it’s hard to tell from the music. I would have as easily believed when it was totally different story. The music seems highly improvised, which seems unlikely if it is used for a more or less planned for a theatre thing. Sometimes dreamy and indeed fairy-tale like, sometimes however the nightmare version thereof, but things end well. It’s a good solid CD of experimental music, that however doesn’t hold too many surprises. It walks a common path. (FdW)
Address: http://www.bottrop-boy.com

THE MOGLASS – SPARROW JUICE (CD by Nexsound)
COURTIS/THE MOGLASS/ANDREY KIRITCHENKO (CD by Nexsound/Gold Soundz/Tib Prod/1000+1 Tilt)
‘Sparrow Juice’ is the sixth full length release by The Moglass, a trio from the Ukraine. They play a variety of instruments, such as electric and acoustic guitar, bass, computers, synth, voice, treatments, field recordings and alto saxophone. The Moglass are perhaps best described as an ‘improvising post-rock’ band. Everything they do is based on improvisation, but they always try to play gently and melodic. Most of the times they are trying to create textured, atmospheric sounds which are drone related, but in a rock context. Post-production plays an important role for them. Once the recordings are made, everything is treated on the computer in order to edit, combine and reduce sounds and to come up with what is on ‘Sparrow Juice’: their most refined work to date. Softly speak the humming of guitars, synths wail about, and occasionally there is hum and distortion to be discovered, but they fit wonderfully into the mix. Cut into no less than nineteen tracks, there is a great sense of homogeneity in these recordings. The Moglass have invented their own form of post-rock. Not endless clusters of guitar drones, or krautrock like drones; not jazzy inspired songs, but a powerful yet ambient rock like sound. An almost cinematographic trip of music. Very, very nice.
The Moglass are also present on a three way compilation, together with Andrey Kiritchenko and Anla Courtis (of former Reynols fame). A release by Nexsound, but also on Gold Soundz, Tib Prod and 1000+1 Tilt. This compilation presents various works by each artist/band, but each of them uses sounds from the others. The Moglass pieces are a bit heavier than on ‘Sparrow Juice’, dwelling more distortion and psychedelic sound effects. The result is nice, but doesn’t match up with their own full length CD. Anla Courtis has three tracks in which he works with the sounds of The Moglass, but fails to set a difference with the group’s own sound. Quite spacey and cosmic sound. In the two pieces using Kiritchenko’s material, things are also spacious, but less closed. The best pieces are by Kiritchenko, who takes the various sources from Courtis and The Moglass into the world of the computer treatments and processing, creating with their sounds, a music that bears similar markings, but then entirely in the digital domain. Ambient and glitch related, but both at it’s very best. (FdW)
Address: http://nexsound.org

HATI VS Z’EV – #1 (CD by Ars Benevola Mater)
This is my introduction to Hati, a Polish band that play ‘trance-gong-drone-music’. Via various psychedelic and rock band in the nineties it transformed to Hati in 2001. So far they have a few releases out, of which I heard the most recent one (here to review) and the previous ‘Zero Coma Zero’. Hati plays on a whole bunch of instruments: animal horns, bamboo pipes, steel jingle bells, wooden pipe, plastic tubes, cymbal, steel lids, wood wind chimes, and much more. Their pieces are usually slow affairs, with resonating objects forming the back bone of the pieces, and percussive rumblings on top. It’s a combination of drone music, sometimes quasi new age and sometimes ritualistik music. For their latest release (their fourth one) they send a whole bunch of their recordings to Z’ev with a request to him to treat the material in anyway he sees fitting. Not a strange request, since Z’ev worked with percussive material since the late sixties and worked in many sorts of percussive music but also the world of sound/studio treatments is not a stranger to him. I played first ‘Zero Coma Zero’ and then “#1′ and I must say that even when Z’ev did a great job, it may not necessarily mean that he radically altered the material, like he did on his ‘Headphone Music’ or his collaborations with Chris Watson and KK Null. Rather he stays close to the original only subjecting some of the finer nuances of the material, sometimes adding some effects to accentuate the sustains and make it more drone related, and sometimes the whole thing seems a matter of editing the material down. Z’ev did a great job on this, but then I believe that Hati delivered him material that he could easily relate to, it’s common ground for him to get the best out of this. It doesn’t work the more radical textures that Z’ev is also known for, but it’s a strong and subtle work of subconscious sound. (FdW)
Address: http://www.arsbenevolamater.com/

ROTHKAMM – FB02:ASTRONAUT OF INNER SPACE (CD by Flux Records)
Only early this year we reviewed ‘FB01’ by Frank Rothkamm (see Vital Weekly 509), of which I now learn it’s a three year old recording. ‘FB02 – Astronaut Of Inner Space’ was recorded between 2003 and 2006 and is thus indeed his most recent recording. This new recording is ‘a feast for the mind and the ears of anyone interested in the ancient past and utopian future of electronic music” because it easy to access yet complex. Rothkamm likes his ancient synth masters, like noted before both the serious Cologne masters of the fifties as well as the sci-fi soundtracks of the sixties. The pieces are best enjoyed on a 4.1 speaker system, two speakers beside the listener, two in front and a sub-woofer. All the pieces are linked through their titles and thus should be heard as one piece, indexed into nine different pieces. It’s all highly mathematical music, moving away from the pop format of the previous release and the music certainly benefits from that. The length here is certainly more pop LP wise (thirty-four minutes), and tension is well kept in mind: that’s certainly the way to do it! A major leap forward. (FdW)
Address: http://www.fluxrecords.com

BARDOSENETICCUBE & IGOR V. PETROV – THE PERPETUUM MOBILE SPACE VEHICLE (CD by Mechanoise Labs)
Alright: I admit right away I never heard of Bardoseneticcube and their website doesn’t list that much information. On ‘The Perpetuum Mobile Space Vehicle’ they work together with a saxophone player from St. Petersburg Igor V. Petrov. I played it a couple of times, but it seems to be from space, or at least another planet than I am on. Jazz music, drones, up temp rock like pieces, electronica: everything seems to be passing by, but none of the six tracks make a genuine, solid impression on me. There isn’t much homogeneity in this record, like they couldn’t agree on what to play, or perhaps they agreed to try and do everything. Some of the moments are ok, but throughout, this wasn’t well spend on me. (FdW)
Address: http://www.mechanoise-labs.com

TIDAL & PETER DUIMELINKS – ABLUTION (miniCD by Alluvial Recordings)
Perhaps by intent, but Peter Duimelinks is one of the few well-known names who however never released a full length CD on his own. He is part of THU20, Kapotte Muziek and Goem, did sound installations, recorded with Frank Bretschneider a CD in the Brombron series (see Vital Weekly 530) and could probably easily do one due to interest, but he just never did. This release doesn’t change that. On ‘Ablution’ he works with Tidal, aka David Brownstead from New York. The two exchanged sound files back and forth in 2004-2005, going through various stages of rework. “In Judaism, ablution is the process of washing away physical and mental impurities. Upon completion, the mind and body are cleansed and renewed.” This miniCD with one track is a twenty minute deep dark rumble of colliding sounds. The basic is deep and dark, like highly processed field recordings, although the processing might have been generated by radical equalisation. On top there are light sparks flickering at a highly irregular shape. When listened on headphones, static and hiss seem to be part of the piece. It’s a good and solid piece of music of highly dark ambient music. There isn’t a specific role for either Tidal or Duimelinks: the mark of well made collaboration. (FdW)
Address: http://www.alluvialrecordings.com

SILVESTER ANFANG – SATANISCHE VREDE (LP by Kraak)
R.O.T. – L’ECURIE (LP by Kraak)
File under: Funeral Folk. Funeral Folk? I never knew existed, but the label compares Silvester Anfang to bands like Davenport, German Oak and Träd, Gräs Och Stenar, so perhaps there is something like Funeral Folk. Silvester Anfang are from the Eastern part of Flanders, Belgium, near the battle fields of the first world war. A rural area, and it seems that Silvester Anfang take their inspiration from the area. The title of the record translates as Satanic Peace, and the five members are depicted with Ku Klux Klan like hats on the cover and a goat. Very Satanist indeed. The music was recorded with one microphone onto a four track machine. Based on what it looked it, I expected the worst of gothic like electronic music, but I was pleasantly surprised. These five boys (and you can tell, despite their hoods) play a variety of instruments, such a guitar, vocals, Christmas bells, shakers, flutes and effects, and more and their music is far from gothic, and perhaps also a bit removed from folk. They improvise their pieces on the spot, turning into long sessions, of which the five pieces on this record is just an example. Not unlike No Neck-blues Band, Jackie O Motherfucker or Vibracathedral Orchestra, this is surely fine improvised drone music in a rock context. Funeral Folk? Let’s hope the Wire doesn’t get hold of it and declares it the next important step in music.
Along a bit of similar lines moves the music of R.O.T. ‘L’Ecurie’ is their first record, following a whole bunch of CDRs and cassettes. R.O.T. was founded by members of Toss, who had two releases on Kraak, bringing in more people on the spot, and going to various unusual places to play their music, such as abandoned churches, old factories and such like. Like Silvester Anfang they improvise everything on the spot on an almost similar bunch of instruments, but the outcome is quite different. Also loosely improvised in an abandoned administration building and a horse stable, R.O.T. plays music that is free from anything satanic or folk, but rather a noisy form of ambient music. Again, the recordings are not the best around, but it certainly adds to the flavor of the music. Unlike Silvester Anfang the music is not overtly present, but ‘reduced’ and ‘quiet’, with sounds arriving from a vast swamp of sounds. If Silvester Anfang bears more relation with the US counterparts of drone music, R.O.T. is more alike the somewhat older groups from New Zealand, like K-Group or Sandoz Lab Technicians. Even when R.O.T. may sound like that, they can hardly be called copy-cats, as they add surely their own blend to the proceedings. Quite a nice record. (FdW)
Address: http://www.kraak.net

COLIN POTTER – IT WAS LIKE THIS… (2CDR by ICR Distribution)
Over the past twenty-five or perhaps even more years Colin Potter has been active in experimental music. Just recently I realized he did release the ‘Flowmotion’ compilation LP, which happened to be one of my personal classics from the mid-eighties, and that should be re-issued on CD. Since the early nineties or so, he plays an important role as a member of Nurse With Wound and has his solo career taken an enormous flight. Perhaps lesser known is that Potter takes his studio qualities out of the four walls of the studio and to the stage. Just like perhaps everybody he tapes all his performances and now the time has come to select the best gigs from recent years and compile this double CD. No artwork, just two discs in a box. It’s hard to tell from these discs what it is that mister Potter does on stage. Let’s assume he brings some sort of sampler, some prepared audio material (synths, field recordings? who knows) and a stack of sound effects. That may sound like nothing new under the sun and perhaps it isn’t. It’s not the sources that count, because if we’d be honest: who cares? Its the result that matters, and presented as naked as this, we can be all the more happy. Nothing to distract the listener, just two hours of pure electronic music of a highly atmospheric and drone like nature. Disc one contains recent concert, while disc two has three older (1999 and 2000) cuts, which displays Potter’s older love for incorporating rhythm into his work. This side is perhaps lesser known, since it’s all drone these days, but if one is familiar with his work for Nurse With Wound, these mechanical rhythms shouldn’t sound too strange. But here too, atmospherics play an important role, be it of a more nervous and hectic character. Great collection, and no doubt there is more where that came from. (FdW)
Address: http://www.icrdistribution.com

ANDREW DUKE/AKUMU – SPLIT (CDR by Cohort Records)
Despite being a well-known musician, Andrew Duke doesn’t feel himself to be too good for CDR only releases, as he proofed in the past with his release on Bake Records and now with this latest addition to the Split series on Cohort Records. He shares it with Akumu, of whom I never heard. In his thirty minutes, Duke presents ten tracks, more or less all quite short (between less than a minute up to four minutes), working in the realms of deep and atmospheric tunes. Here the emphasis lies less on using rhythm, but there are some loops there. Not made with rhythm machines, but rather looped acoustic sounds, such as the sound of bottles. But they form only the icing on the cake, as for the bigger part these tracks are deeply atmospheric and highly experimental. It’s not the kind of ambient music to lull the listener to sleep, but highly processed electro-acoustic sound material, transformed to great ambient textures.
Akumu has three lengthy tracks. As said I don’t know much about him. His three pieces are however great examples of digital drone music. Richly textured humming about with a rather minimal set of sounds. In each of three pieces things slowly built up, adding changes and sounds, usually small clicking sounds. Especially in ‘Structure 6’ this works rather well. Nothing much new under the drone sun, but Akumu plays his pieces with great care, skill and with a keen eye for structuring his pieces. (FdW)
Address: http://cohortrecords.0catch.com/

FRANK DIFFICULT – DIARY PT. 2 (CDR by Retinascan)
SYSEXBUGFIX – OBLIQ (CDR by Retinascan)
Only very recently we were introduced to the music of Frank Difficult, via his ‘Diary Pt. 1’ (see Vital Weekly 431) and now comes ‘Diary Pt. 2’. Much of what was said about part 1 can be said of part 2. Again it seems many of his sources originate from all sorts of media, and are collated together, but throughout it seemed to me that there is to a lesser extent an emphasis on noise and more on collating the pieces together in a more thoughtful manner. Again the old Nurse With Wound pops to mind in the release, even when the hectic is bigger with Frank Difficult than with the old Wound releases. As with the previous release, there is still a fairly odd change of a hit and miss, but sometimes he bangs the hammer right on the head. A small step forward anyway.
Of an entirely different nature is the release by Frederic Paulus from Belgium, who records as sysExbugFix. I haven’t heard his previous album ‘192 tHz’ album, but his ‘Obliq’ is quite nice. It is inspired by the ‘Popol Vuh’, not the band, but the ‘book of power’ from Quiche indians. I am not sure how to relate that to the booklet depicting electric circuits, but I am sure there is a reason somewhere. Or perhaps how the electronic, drone like music with a dash of rhythm fits in. Played on what seems to me to be low fidelity keyboards, the sound is a bit roughly shaped. Some of the pieces also end quite abruptly. I have no idea wether this is intended or by accident. But overall it left a nice impression. There is certainly room for change and improvement, but it bears promises. (FdW)
Address: http://www.retinascan.de

ZACH WALLACE – WATER (CDR by Lichen Records)
ZACH WALLACE – ORGAN 2 (CDR by Lichen Records)
So far Zach Wallace has been very busy: playing with rock bands such Flashpapr, His Name Is Alive and Low, improvising with Memorize The Sky (together with Matt Bauder and Aaron Siegel), Greg Kelley, Sean Meehan, Fred Lonberg-holm and Anthony Braxton but still having time to run Lichen Records to release his drone based works. These days this forms a bigger part, bigger than his collaborative works. ‘Water’ is a work that was originally for twelve channel, running for an entire day at the lovely Bard College. Reduced to two tracks and only one hour (I’m sure if this is cut or edited in such way that we hear multiple layers), it still makes a fairly good impression. The water sounds are bit processed, but can still be recognized as such; there is a slightly more metallic feel to it. It’s hard to tell wether there is any actual change, or wether this is intended. Maybe the intention is to present a nice sound environment. In that case ‘Water’ succeeds well at its job.
An Aria quarter tone pump organ is played on ‘Organ’ for twenty five minutes. Here too drones is what we are dealing with, but in a much more musical context. The piece slowly evolves by gradually fading notes and tones, making beautiful, waving clusters of sound. Not unlike Jim O’Rourke’s ‘Two Organs’, this is a simple piece, using simple equipment and instrument executed however with great care. I prefer ‘Organ 2’ over ‘Water’, since it’s the more musical one, but both are quite nice.
Address: not given

CADUCEUS MUSIC – INFLUENCES VOLUME EIGHT (mp3 by Caduceus Music)
CADUCEUS MUSIC – INFLUENCES VOLUME NINE (mp3 by Caduceus Music)
So far I managed to trace the influences pretty, the influences of Caduceus that is. In 2006 they will present every month a MP3 release, usually three or four tracks, of their remixes of music that had a major influence on them. In the previous seven I pretty much knew what they were talking about, but in these two, ‘eight’ and ‘nine’ I have no idea, simply because I don’t know ‘Blown’ by Twisted Science (on Lo Recordings) and ‘Low Voltage’ by Submania vs Ekmoah (on Background Records). So what can we say then about these remixes? Certainly not that they sound alike the original, as we don’t know the original. In the remixes of Twisted Science the minimal aspect, dwelling heavily on bass sounds seems to be the most important thing at play, but in Submania vs Ekmoah matters evolve, revolve more around dub like structures, with sounds falling in and out the mix, certainly in the lengthy ‘Infl090’. It all sounds quite alright, but it seems also that the whole project suffers from tiredness. It’s getting a bit too much perhaps to find new angles every month and then create another three or four pieces. Maybe at the end there should just be a best-off with the twelve best tracks. (FdW)
Address: http://www.caduceusmusic.net

ARTURAS BUMSTEINAS – GLOCKENSPIEL (MP3 by Alg Label)
ARTURAS BUMSTEINAS – SECOND SEQUENTINA (MP3 by Earlabs Laboratorie Moderne)
Work by Arturas Bumsteinas has been reviewed before. Currently he is active with the Laptop Quartet, interpreting classical (and no so classical) scores from the past. On these two works, released as MP3 on the internet, he however performs them solo. The first one is entirely based on the Glockenspiel, that instrument that you probably found annoying in music class in high school (I know I did). It’s a most curious piece for processed recordings of that instrument. Cut short to cut off the sustaining part, this is a highly minimal work. Half way through some siren like sound drops in and obscured rumbling that adds nicely to the texture.
‘Second Sequentia’ is of an entirely different nature. There is a hectic, nervous kind of sound processing going on here of orchestral sounds. It’s the electronic sequel to ‘Sequentia’ for orchestra, so if I understood rightly, this is some sort of electronic mix of his own work. It has a similar minimal approach, but there is a certain hectic involved that makes this less easy to hear. When things are dropped to a more introspective level, it’s quite nice. The orchestral like sounds, repeated in a minimal blocks reminded me of Steve Reich’s mid seventies pieces, and that is certainly not bad at all. (FdW)
Address: http://www.alg-label.com
Address: http://www.earlabs.org

Vital Weekly is published by Frans de Waard and submitted for free to anybody with an e-mail address. If you don’t wish to receive this, then let us know. Any feedback is welcome <vital@vitalweekly.net>. Forward to your allies.
Snail mail: Vital Weekly/Frans de Waard – Acaciastraat 11 – 6521 NE Nijmegen – The Netherlands
All written by Frans de Waard (FdW), The Square Root Of Sub (MP <sub@xs4all.nl>), Dolf Mulder (DM) <dolf.mulder@hetnet.nl>, Robert Meijer (RM), Gerald Schwartz (GS), Niels Mark Pedersen (NMP), Henry Schneider (SH), Jeff
Surak (JS), TJ Norris (TJN), Gregg Kowlaksky (GK), Craig N (CN), Boban Ristevski (BR), Maurice Woestenburg (MW), Toni Dimitrov (TD <info@fakezine.tk>), Chris Jeely (CJ), Jliat (Jliat), Freek Kinkelaar (FK), Magnus Schaefer (MSS) and others on a less regular basis.
This is copyright free publication, except where indicated, in which case permission has to be obtained from the respective author before reprinting any, or all of the desired text. The author has to be credited, and Vital Weekly has to be acknowledged at all times if any texts are used from it.
Announcements can be shortened by the editor. Please do NOT send any
attachments/jpeg’s, we will trash them without viewing.
There is no point in directing us to MP3 sites, as we will not go there. Any MP3 release to be reviewed should be burned as an audio CDR and send to the address above.

the complete archive of Vital Weekly (1-494) can be found at: http://staalplaat.com/vital/