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VITAL WEEKLY
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number 701
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week 43
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Vital Weekly, the webcast: 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!
complete tracklist here: http://www.vitalweekly.net/podcast.html
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* noted are in this week's podcast. We finally have a feed again. 1000x times to Maximillian for his endless patience & help. Its here: http://www.vitalweekly.net/podcast.xm
ROSS HAMMOND - AN EFFECTIVE USE OF SPACE
(CD by Prescott Recordings)
ALEX JENKINS' SOUND IMMERSION - GENEROSITY (CD by Prescott Recordings)
TONY PASSARELL 5TET - THE PATH (CD by Prescott Recordings)
BYRON BLACKBURN - THINGS TURN BLACK WHEN THEY TURN (CD by Prescott
Recordings)
VERTONEN - WE HAD A FEW SPRINKLES TODAY, BUT NOT ENOUGH TO HELP
OUT IN THE GARDEN (CD by C.I.P.) *
FRANCISCO LOPEZ & RICHARD FRANCIS - BROMBRON 14 : IN DE BLAAUWE
HAND (CD by Korm Plastics) *
ANDREA BELFI & MACHINEFABRIEK - BROMBRON 15 : PULSES AND PLACES
(CD by Korm Plastics) *
FUCK BUTTONS - TAROT SPORT (CD by ATP Recordings)
LOIC BLAIRON - X/O (CD by W.M.o/r) *
MAJA S.K. RATKJE & LASSE MARHAUG - MUSIC FOR GARDENING (CD
by Pica Disk)
V/A WHAT PLEASING THE LORD LOOKS LIKE MARRIAGE: EXTREME NOISE
AND TERROR FROM JAPAN AND ISRAEL (CD by Heart & Crossbone)
GRIM KIRBY/ THE SHOCK TECHNICIAN SPLIT (Cdr by Hirnmetastase Records)
ALPHATRONIC - SONIC LANDSCAPES (CD by Everest Records) *
CHRISTOPHER ROBERTS - LAST CICADA SINGING (CD by Cold Blue Music)
*
CHRISTOPHER HOBBS - SUDOKU 82 (CD by Cold Blue Music) *
SMALL COLOR - IN LIGHT (CD by 12K) *
OPTIFONICA (DVD by Line)
PURE NOISE / ART ZOYD STUDIO EXPÉRIENCES DE VOL # 7 (CD
by Art Zoyd /
In-possible Records)
MARINA ROSENFELD - PLASTIC MATERIALS (CD by Room40) *
AUS - LIGHT IN AUGUST, LATER (CD by Someone Good) *
FREIBAND / BASS COMMUNION - HEADWIND / TAILWIND (3"CD by
My Own Little Label) *
NURSE WITH WOUND - FLAWED EXISTENCE (BOXSET by Vinyl On Demand)
PANICSVILLE/FRANKIE & THE S.E.M.M. - STUNTS/BRAIN IN THE CAT
(LP by Nihilist/TQR&R)
KONATUS - BARUCH (CDR by Disorder) *
BARRY CHABALA - AN UNRHYMED CHORD (FOR 25 GUITARS) (CDR by Confront)
*
SEASONS (PRE-DIN) (CDR by Mystery Sea) *
AKOS GARAI - PILIS (CDR by 3Leaves) *
EMERGE - EMANCIPATION (CDR by Verato Project) *
OLEKRANON - IDENTI (CDR by Inam Records) *
SUJO - MORTE E DESCIDA (3"CDR by Inam Records) *
announcements
ROSS HAMMOND - AN EFFECTIVE USE OF SPACE
(CD by Prescott Recordings)
ALEX JENKINS' SOUND IMMERSION - GENEROSITY (CD by Prescott Recordings)
TONY PASSARELL 5TET - THE PATH (CD by Prescott Recordings)
BYRON BLACKBURN - THINGS TURN BLACK WHEN THEY TURN (CD by Prescott
Recordings)
These four releases offer view into the jazzscene of Sacramento.
Prescott Recordings is an outlet for local jazz and improvised
music. The label is run by Ross Hammond who engineered, produced
or recorded all of these four releases. As a guitarist he is present
on two of these releases.
From what I understand Hammonds divides his time
between his improvising projects, his work as a sideman for singers
and songwriters, and teaching an curating local new music events.
But before we continue first the sad news. Bass-player Byron Blackburn
died from cancer last september. Blackburn decided to record this
album after he heard from his doctor that the cancer returned.
So I do not have to tell you these recordings have a special meaning
for all those involved. Except for 'Getting Ready to Escalate
into a Whole Other Level (or Conflict)' (Hammond), all other pieces
are composed by Byron Blackburn. The music is very laid back.
Blackburn and his mates enjoy to have time and space together
for what became their last session. The guitarstyle of Ross is
very special. Sometimes I had to think of Henry Kaiser, at other
moments I detect african - echoing - influences. Most of the solo
work is done by him. Drummer (Alex Jenkins or Tom Monson) and
bassplayer roll out a grooving carpet.
On 'An effective use of Space' we hear more of Hammonds guitarwork.
A solo album with the assistance of Lisa Mezzacappa (bass) and
John Hanes (drums). This is the most experimental of all four
releases, opening with drones and ambient moods in 'Immigration',
a solo piece on lap steel. With two other solo tracks these are
recorded in the studio. The other ones are recorded by Myles Boisen,
catching Hammond and his trio live in several jazzy jams. Not
mindblowing stuff, not as adventurous as it started, but worthwhile.
Alex Jenkins' Sound Immersion is a quartet of Tony Passarell (soprano
and tenor sax, flute), Randy McKean (alto sax, bass clarinet),
Mike Turgeon (upright bass) and Alex Jenkins himself (percussion).
The compositions were not what me surprised on this one. Just
plain timeless jazz music. However the drums by Alex Jenkins are
another story. Especially in tracks like 'Jump Cut' his drumming
has an atractive ethno-feel reminding me of Sun Ra. 'Next Generation'
is a nice grooving tune. 'Power Outage' has inspired solowork
by both sax players. In 'All Them Cows' we come across an unexpected
appearance of a banjo played by McKean in a very free piece of
music. Jenkins and Passarell we meet again on the CD by the Tony
Passarell 4tet: Tony Passarell (saxophone, piano), Alex Jenkins
(drums), Scott Anderson (tenor sax), Clark Goodloe (saxophone,
piano) and Harley White jr. (bass). This quartet moves along similar
lines as the quartet by Jenkins. Again the characteristic drumwork
by Jenkins. But of course there differences. There is more to
be enjoyed here from the saxplaying by Passarell. Also there are
some nice duets between by the sax players. Plus that the improvisations
are richer and musiccally spoken more interesting then on the
other albums. (DM)
Address: http://www.rosshammond.com/
VERTONEN - WE HAD A FEW SPRINKLES TODAY,
BUT NOT ENOUGH TO HELP OUT IN THE GARDEN (CD by C.I.P.)
The source material for this CD was recorded in 1978, so we read
on the cover of Vertonen's latest CD 'We Had A Few Sprinkles Today,
But Not Enough To Help out In The Garden'. I met Blake Edwards,
the man who is Vertonen, and I am not sure how old he is, but
me thinks he was quite young when he taped this source material.
That's the first observation. Then, when I was listening to these
six tracks, I had absolutely no idea what those source recording
are. Edwards spent two years of 'extracting and modifying' these
recordings. He writes that 'the concept behind this CD stemmed
from my interest in reassessing the idea of 'brainwashing' and
how misperceptions that are easier to accept can easily and dangerously
corrode - and, worse, override - the realities of the original
event', which made me altogether more curious about the original
event at the source of this music. The six pieces here are all
drone like pieces. Low humming sounds, as this CD seems to be
quite soft, but if you turn up the volume, you will notice all
sorts of small events happening in each piece. Its pretty solid
and closed, this music, and easily is one of his best works. Very
much like The Hafler Trio's drone phase, this is simply great
music. The only downside I imagine to some people might be that
its not a new direction and some could see this as more of the
same. However its better of the same, I'd say. (FdW)
Address: http://www.cipsite.net
FRANCISCO LOPEZ & RICHARD FRANCIS -
BROMBRON 14 : IN DE BLAAUWE HAND (CD by Korm Plastics)
On this fourteenth issue in the Brombron-series, one of contemporary
sound art scene's most prolific artists, Francisco Lopez join
forces with another interesting artist from the contemporary scene:
Richard Francis. For more than two decades Spanish sound artist
Francisco Lopez has exploited the connections between field recordings
and "acousmatic listening" - the latter term was originally
founded by the father of "Musique concrete", Pierre
Schaeffer, with inspirations back to the the Greek philosopher
Pythagoras and his "blind" teaching sessions. The idea
behind "acousmatic listening" is that the listener must
experience the sound independent from its source. The strength
of Lopez is the ability to utilize natural sounds that most people
barely notice and transform these sounds into sonic art. New Zealand-based
sound artist Richard Francis has a similar approach to his explorations
using field recordings of acoustic and electronic sounds combined
with tone generators to compose textural and tonal sound works.
"In de blaauwe hand" is one lengthy piece running 66
minutes. Conceptually the work reminds me of Francisco Lopez's
excellent "Untitled #89" released on the Or-label in
1999. With a barely perceptible crawl in from silence, softly
mechanical drones begin to appear, rippling with a radiant, ever-building
hum. As the piece progress the hum gets thicker and the drone
texture strengthens. Despite the growing intensity in expression
the piece never gets harsh. As we reach the 45 minute mark, clicking
pulses are overtaken by thick drones of buzzing noises that despite
its ongoing abrasiveness also seems hypnotic and comfortable.
The sound of a tone generator slowly mixes up with the buzzing
drones, giving a nice depth and complexity to the sound texture.
As is the usual case with releases in the Brombron-series, "In
de blaauwe hand" are neatly packed in a tasteful card-slip-sleeve.
Highly recommended! (NM)
Address: http://www.kormplastics.nl/
ANDREA BELFI & MACHINEFABRIEK - BROMBRON
15 : PULSES AND PLACES (CD by Korm Plastics)
The Brombron project itself is work a true work of art and a good
reason to the fact that the Netherlands is one of the world's
leading countries in field of sound art. The conceptual idea behind
Brombron was originally established as a co-production between
legendary Dutch label Staalplaat and the venue for experimental
music, Extrapool. Two or more musicians become artists in the
residence of Extrapool. Equipped with the recording studio of
Extrapool, the artists can work on a collaborative project that
will be released in the Brombron-series. Fourteen excellent releases
from year 2000 forward is the result of the Brombron project,
this present album being the fifteenth release. Behind the album
titled "Pulses and places", you find the two composers
Andreas Belfi and Rutger Zuydervelt alias Machinefabriek. Andrea
Belfi is an electro-acoustic musician from Italy who has been
involved in quite a number of sound art projects for the last
decade. Rutger Zuydervelt started his Machinefabriek project five
years ago, and has since then become a prolific artist of the
Dutch sound art scene. To accomplish this new chapter of the Brombron
series, the two artists utilize drums, small percussions, guitar
and organ. The result is a real beauty. Drifting somewhere between
gentle drone-based ambient and modern psychedelia/postrock, the
four pieces of "Pulses and places" consists of waving
organ sounds, chilling guitar drones with downbeat hand percussions.
The expression of the overall album sounds like a mixture between
early Pink Floyd as they sounded in their most trippy psychedelic
moments and 80's rock/pop-giants Talk Talk in their more experimental
postrock-based period around the "Spirit of Eden"-album
(1990). As is the usual case with releases in the Brombron-series,
"Pulses and places" are neatly packed in a tasteful
card-slip-sleeve. Highly recommended! (NM)
Address: http://www.kormplastics.nl/
FUCK BUTTONS - TAROT SPORT (CD by ATP Recordings)
It wouldn't be correct to categorize British duo Fuck Buttons,
consisting of Bejamin Power and Andrew Hung, as an easy accessible
musical project. Despite the fact, that the beats of their second
full length titled "Tarot Sport" contains some quite
listenable and even danceable rhythm structures, the music of
Fuck Buttons is a complex soup of organ sounds, noise drone developed
on guitars. But underneath this chaotic sound texture lies a quite
beautiful and melodic tune that due to repetitive nature of the
album adds to an alluringly great trance-like effect. There is
quite some similarity with Swedish project The Field and his debut
"From here we go sublime" (Kompakt, 2007), that also
used a repetitive style with long stretching loops of repetitism
to create a hypnotic effect. Excellent album from a duo whose
signature is devout repetition. Highly recommended. (NM)
Address: http://www.atpfestival.com/atp-recordings
LOIC BLAIRON - X/O (CD by W.M.o/r)
There is an extensive text on the cover of this CD, which I'd
like to quote in full, but its not online yet, and I am too lazy
to retype the whole thing, so I'll get you the drift of this:
One Loic Blairon writes that he listen and responds, but the way
I read his text, he's not interested in doing music: 'In doing
so, I say no to music, but this 'no' is the unilateral relation
which I attempt to stabilize in and through sound, but in accordance
with the real, as negative and foreclosed; what I attempt to superimpose
onto the latter acts as so many unknowns which would at once escape
the whole even as they constitute it, beneath but also above all
things'. Etc etc etc. Perhaps Blairon plays double bass as it
says on the cover, but perhaps not. His CD lasts thirty minutes
and consists mostly of silence. Real silence (whatever that is),
and some dry, high pitch click coming every now and then, at what
seems to be irregular intervals. I guess all this time we can
contemplate about the text and how that relates to this bare minimum
of music. Alternatively you could decide to play a nice CD. (FdW)
Address: www.mattin.org/recordings.html
MAJA S.K. RATKJE & LASSE MARHAUG - MUSIC
FOR GARDENING (CD by Pica Disk)
Micro found sounds looped - too much looping and always of the
same length -
speeded up voices, cat meows - dog barks again looped. Music for
gardening as a title sounds silly and silliness abounds on these
tracks. I presume the cats are a gardening problem, as is the
radio which is not correctly tuned in - maybe after smoking certain
home grown products this might appear amusing or somehow meaningful?
- the blurb gives "plunderphonic collage-work,. great stuff"
- well I don't think gardening or music for it can ever achieve
greatness unless its on the scale of Capability Brown which was
underpinned by Kantian enlightenment and a vision of sublime synthetic
perfections - with a theme and structure - even though there the
lakes and temples were all fake.. we are however sadly far from
arcadia - but now we know that even there is death - but I'm getting
far to serious? "Et in Arcadia ego" - but now such classical
truths are abused by the likes of not Capability (note the predicate)
but Dan- so maybe there is a serious social and political comment
to be un-earthed here? Or one that might be grafted on - "Thus,
the Real as foreclosed or as separate-without-separation from
Decision is cloned as that force-(of)-thought which is separate-withoutseparation
or foreclosed to the Decision that serves as its empirical support."
(jliat)
Address: http://www.picadisk.com
V/A WHAT PLEASING THE LORD LOOKS LIKE MARRIAGE:
EXTREME NOISE AND TERROR FROM JAPAN AND ISRAEL (CD by Heart &
Crossbone)
GRIM KIRBY/ THE SHOCK TECHNICIAN SPLIT (Cdr by Hirnmetastase Records)
Ryokuchi, Cadaver Eyes, Zenocide, LietterSchpichDiet, MONEYI$GOD,
Poochlatz
Remesh, Nerveless . I've given a list of all yet on playing the
similarities - maybe evolving towards noise of distorted voice,
lots of drumming and harsh guitars I had by accident rather than
design done a kind of Pepsi challenge on this CD, - maybe industrial
power electronics - I don't know - but strangely conservative
for all that. The Kirby / TST split was again cohesive - though
not proto orcish rock band stuff - micro electronics of sound
more in the vein of the Ratkje / Marhaug but lacking in the humor
which makes the latter a hidden critical object- very much a non-work
rather than the ghost of modernity. I see this - these two releases
above as ghostly not just because of the sound, but lack of object
- lack of Reality - the Addendum miss-spelling or spray paint,
rocks and nail. but we have lulu.com these days to create the
Real. (jliat)
Address: http://www.hcbrecords.com
Address: http://kulturterrorismus.de/hirnmetastase-records
ALPHATRONIC - SONIC LANDSCAPES (CD by Everest
Records)
This release doesn't quite offer a lot of information, nor does
the label's website. Alphatronic is one Daniel Wihler and he plays
here twelve pieces of electronic music. The cover offers a seventies
logo of the band name and something that looks like a transformed
synthesizer, in dots and figures. There is something utterly retro
about this release, and that's great. Inspired by techno, film
soundtracks, spiced up with a bit of experiment, but essentially
this is some damn fine armchair electronic music. Rhythmic yet
I don't see the masses dancing to this. But this is perfect sunday
afternoon music, waking up, drinking coffee, but not yet entirely
out of the clubbing from the night before. Your legs are tired,
but your feet may want to tap along the rhythm. Purely listening
to the music I'd say that twelve tracks is a bit long, and that
eight pieces, say the length of this of on a piece of vinyl, would
have made more sense. But pleasant it is for sure. (FdW)
Address: http://everestrecords.ch
CHRISTOPHER ROBERTS - LAST CICADA SINGING
(CD by Cold Blue Music)
CHRISTOPHER HOBBS - SUDOKU 82 (CD by Cold Blue Music)
Two new releases on Cold Blue Music, and both of them are relatively
short: Hobbs' lasts 19 minutes and Roberts' CD is about twenty-eight.
Cold Blue refers to these as CD singles. Christopher Roberts plays
the qin on his release, which is a zither like Chinese instrument.
Unlike many (if not all) releases on Cold Blue Music, this actually
doesn't composed (composer jotting notes on a piece and then get
it performed by somebody), but more improvised. Silent, slow and
sparse, envisage big vast empty desert space. Americana music,
slide like, blues like - all of which seem odd if you realize
its not played on a six string apparatus we call the guitar but
some Chinese instrument. Actually you could make this into a quiz
I guess: 'tell me what instrument we hear?", and I wouldn't
be surprised if many would answer 'guitar'. Not that it really
matters I guess. What counts is the true beauty of this music.
Peaceful music. Think Loren Connors playing Morton Feldman. And
the strange thing is, perhaps, that it doesn't sound at all improvised.
A very refined release.
A while ago there was a power cut in the block were in, at night.
Having no juice is a nightmare at night: you can't use internet,
no phone, no TV, no light to read a book, so I picked up my ipod
and looked for a bit of music to play. I picked 'La Nouvelle Serenite',
an older CD compilation on Sub Rosa with Jon Hassell and Harold
Budd, among others. It seemed appropriate for a dark house. I
was reminded of that evening when I was listening to the 'Sudoku
82' CD by Christopher Hobbs. Composed using Garageband, but played
by a real life pianist, Bryan Pezzone, on eight pianos. Although
you may Hobbs for his involvement with the Scratch Orchestra,
his record for Obscure Records, his work with early AMM, he also
performed Satie's 'Vexations' with Gavin Bryars. In that respect
you should hear this piece, number 82 from a series that he started
in 2005, and already mounts up to 125 pieces. Its Satie like music,
light, sparse, spacious and seemingly doesn't go anywhere, simply
because there is no need to go anywhere. A great work. One to
play on dark night, when the power is cut, and you can use your
computer's battery for a short time: I'd say play Hobbs, followed
by that old Sub Rosa CD or anything else by Harold Budd or Erik
Satie's piano music and that Roberts CD on Cold Blue Music. The
best night of silent music. (FdW)
Address: http://www.coldbluemusic.com
SMALL COLOR - IN LIGHT (CD by 12K)
OPTIFONICA (DVD by Line)
With Small Color 12K expand their horizon a little bit, stretching
up those boundaries which they stand for. Small Color are not
the usual field recordings, laptops, microsound, or clicks and
cuts. Well, perhaps they are there somewhere, but I think Small
Color is primarily a popmusic band. The duo of Rie Yoshihara (on
accordion, voice, vintage keyboard instruments) and Yusuke Onishi
(guitar, banjo, bass, programming and production) play songs,
rather than pieces. Very Japanese in a way, with Tujiko Noriko
as their prime example, but perhaps also Tenniscoats, but produced
better and with much more style. Computers do not play a role
in this music. This is acoustic music. Soft tinkling guitars,
accordion and the wordless singing of Yoshihara, that yet somehow
seems to fit wonderfully well into the world of 12K. Sparse popmusic
that would have fitted well on the Happy label, a sub division
of 12K that no longer seems to exist. Lovely popmusic that made
me think it would have sounded great on a label like Les Disques
Du Crepuscule, had it still existed. Quite a daring move for 12K,
but, like said, a release that fits really well on this great
label.
Just because I write a few words every week about music, hasty
sometimes, inaccurate at times, but always trying to say something
about the music and place it in a wider sense, doesn't mean I
am qualified to review things like 'Optifonica', a two-and half
hour DVD release, of forty-two artists who 'incite a unique multi-sensory
awareness of both physical and mental (imagined) space. Optifonica
is a platform by one TeZ, who asked all these people to work around
that theme. So we have on one hand Quayola + Mira Calix + Autobam
which shows us church windows and manipulations thereof, like
shattering of glass, immediately followed by Skif++ with a play
of lines that follow the dynamics of the music. The third variation
comes from Evelina Domnitch + Dmitry Gelfand + Richard Chartier,
who show 'acoustic elevation'. The variation put on by Skiff++
is however exemplary of the most pieces of this DVD. In a way
it reminds you of the live visuals of Pan Sonic (not included
here, oddly enough), and also in many cases the music of Pan Sonic.
Tracks are always between three and ten minutes, which tends to
be long I think. The fine exception is Pe Lang + Zimoun, who have
all there is too say in forty-seven seconds. That seems to me
short, but it avoids the feeling I had with some of these pieces,
which looked and sounded like a demonstration of possibilities
rather than fixed compositions of images and sound. Its however
quite a nice compilation with even for lazy viewers, just like
me, interesting pieces to hear. I didn't watch the entire with
great concentration I must admit: as a music man I should stick
to my core business: hearing music. And there is some nice one
in here. Included are also Frank Bretschneider, telcosystemns,
Bas van Koolwijk, Domenico Scianjno, Otolab, Kim Cascone, Scanner
and others. Great extended presentation here too. (FdW)
Address: http://www.12k.com
PURE NOISE / ART ZOYD STUDIO EXPÉRIENCES
DE VOL # 7 (CD by Art Zoyd /
In-possible Records)
The 69 prog rock band Art Zoyd has collaborated from 2000 with
Musiques Nouvelles in a long term project entitled Expériences
de Vol, which on this CD has 3 pieces by Ulrich Krieger, Kasper
T. Toeplitz and Dror Feiler. All three have very respectable CVs-
(check out the address) both academic and in collaborators/ions
so in the first instance despite the academic gravitas one might
make a trivial critique of the first two, especially Toeplitz's
gently evolving layers of abstract sounds, and the Krieger piece
still orbits albeit at a great distance the saxophone. Both fail
to engage with TTII (the thing in itself- i.e. noise)- an obvious
impossibility and prohibition for Kantian and Neo-Kantian "music"/music-theory
etc. of which the two cannot fully reduce. It's the final piece
of Feiler's (an ontic masterpiece) which opens up the space of
discourse for a truly non-musical performance / affect that in
the Laruellean sense could be translated as a 'non-philosophical'
or 'non-decisional' materialism - OON (object oriented noise)
and provides a non-musicological solution to the problematic in
music of its failure qua "concept" to produce - as here
instanced as a "phenomenon-without logos" and importantly
identified by
Brassier as a reversal of thoughts foreclosure to decision. "That
is to say, a transcendental theory of the phenomenon, licensing
limitless phenomenological plasticity, unconstrained by the apparatus
of eidetic intuition or any horizon of apophantic disclosure;-
but one which is simultaneously a transcendental theory of matter,
uncontaminated by the bounds of empirical perception and free
of all phenomenological circumscription." Well that is interesting
because Ousia (obviously) exists/exhibits an empirical hyle which
therefore demonstrates the distance between music / musicology
and the plasticity (political as well as
material) of non-music, non-decisional musicology - OON. We have
at last
(maybe I'm a latecomer) a "theoretical" - tool - a means
of axiomatics for
describing in performative terms noise which is non-music - without
recourse
to clichéd "sound art", "sonic art"
etc. A piece which even within itself
has an idealizing synthesis and Reality. (jliat)
Address http://www.artzoyd.com/
MARINA ROSENFELD - PLASTIC MATERIALS (CD
by Room40)
AUS - LIGHT IN AUGUST, LATER (CD by Someone Good)
Despite her decade long career, I must admit I missed out the
releases Marina Rosenfeld made. I don't know why. So Room40 informs
me that she produces music for 'large scale performances' as well
as she being a turntablist. She made her own dub plates, with
static, conversations, electronic noise. She uses these here,
along with piano, voice and 'deconstructed language'. Some pieces
used here are from her 'cover version' of Ligeti's 'Lontano' piece,
for teenage choir. Although it has nine tracks, some of the choir
like sounds seem to return in various pieces, with the other pieces
playing the electronic bits. It sounds like a very academic work
of serious composed (and perhaps it is, actually), but unlike
some of the other 'serious' electronic music reviewed in these
pages, I must say that this is some great music. Quite densely
layered, with small, surprising elements, strange singing which
add a more lyrical side to the music, poetic even. Delicate, intimate
and warm music. Great release.
On Room40's 'pop' (??) division Someone Good we find Yasuhiko
Fukuzono, better known as Aus, whose 'After All' album on Flau
was reviewed in Vital Weekly 662. His music didn't see much change
since then. Soft, not too outspoken with nice female voices, tinkling
guitars, some loose piano notes, clicky but warm sweet rhythms.
I am not sure if those lyrics are supposed to have any meaning,
my Japanese still not that good, but its great quality dream pop
again. This is where microsound meets popmusic. Like the previous
this has eight tracks, no remixes here, and makes one damn record.
Nothing new, just a damn fine record. That's all there is, and
that's the best thing.
Address: http://www.room40.org
Address: http://www.someonegood.org
FREIBAND / BASS COMMUNION - HEADWIND / TAILWIND
(3"CD by My Own Little Label)
"My Own Little Label" was established by Dutch sound
artist Frans De Waard with the aim of launching works of his many
aliases plus a number of other interesting sound artists. Last
year My Own Little Label released the piece "Haze shrapnel"
by Bass Communion on a 3"CDR that also included by Freiband.
Following a great reception of the "Haze shrapnel"-release,
it was agreed that there should also be released a work by Freiband
with a remix by Bass Communion. So here we are. "Headwind"
was recorded the summer of 2009 by Freiband. It is a spacious
ambient-piece based on the guitar playing of Martin Luiten; a
beautiful trance-inducing piece running 10 minutes, with many
layers of sound including distant field recordings sounding like
bubbling water drifting underneath some atmospheric guitar-drones.
Bass Communion has chosen the obvious name "Tailwind"
for his remix of the aforementioned "Headwind"-piece.
Bass Communion is the alias of Steven Wilson also known as member
of U.K.-band Porcupine Tree and as collaborator with composers
like Vidna Obmana, Muslimgauze and Robert Fripp. Bass Communion
takes the original into new sound worlds with the help of his
laptop. The remix is even more spacious and subtle in expression.
Whistling drones drifts along suppressed buzzing noise drones
to create another alluring sound experience. Otherwordly! (NM)
Address: http://www.kormplastics.nl/moll.html
NURSE WITH WOUND - FLAWED EXISTENCE (BOXSET
by Vinyl On Demand)
Christmas comes early this year; the velvet, the gold foil, the
pleasure and surprise of opening the supra-de-luxe 600 copies
only box and taking out album after album and surprise little
gadgets. Sometimes, reviewing records can be such fun! So what
do we have; nearly 5 hours of early to mid 80's Nurse With Wound
music taken from cassette releases on one 10 inch, one LP, one
double LP, one 5 inch single and a soundcard. All these are packed
in sturdy carton sleeves featuring red velvet with golden foil
covers. The whole thing looks great. Unfortunately this doesn't
feel great; somehow the material doesn't suit my fingertips, sending
shivers down my spine, but maybe that suits the music as well.
Add to the box a numbered insert, a poster and a T-shirt and you
have a bonanza of goodies. There can be no discussion about the
fact that this ranks high as the most luxurious release of this
year. With such abundance, it would be easy to forget about the
music, which is, in the end, what it's all about. Let's start
by saying that this sounds great; you wouldn't know this was taken
from ancient cassettes at all. This box contains the original
cassettes Scrag (a C30 from 1981), Mi-Mort (a tape with Current
93 from 1983), N.L. Centrum, Amsterdam, 8.12.1984 (a live recording,
withdrawn immediately after release when NWW was spelt Nurse With
Wount), Nylon Coverin' Body Smotherin' (another tape with Current
93 from 1984), a 10 inch album featuring (and sounding like) destroyed
piano music (unreleased material from 1984), and a 5 inch single
Big Muff And Hawtrey (also on the soundcard). As said, the music
dates from when NWW were in their collage-period (as opposed to
their later ambient period), so we get lots of squeeks, screetches,
noise, weird surrealistic bloops and bleep with gorgeous titles
such as Pleasant Banjo Intro With Irritating Squeak (exactly what
it says, a personal favorite of mine), Dream Of A Butterfly Inside
A Skull Of A Horse, Sinan Sings For Her Chums (another favorite
- incidentally much of the Scrag material incidentally was also
re-released as the A Sucked Orange LP), Fashioned To A Device
Behind A Tree and, perhaps my favorite of all, The Cockroach Of
Del Monte. Needless to say that if you enjoy NWW's music in the
mid 80's you need this in your collection. If you are curious
what the fuss about NWW in those days was all about; you need
this perhaps even more. I spent a most wonderful weekend with
this box, discovering so much new material and reliving the music
I already knew. To add a surrealistic footnote to the proceedings:
when I opened this box a centipede crawled out of the box onto
my hand! It is now living a happy centipede life in our back garden.
Stranger things have happened, but not a lot. (FK)
Address: http://www.vinyl-on-demand.com
PANICSVILLE/FRANKIE & THE S.E.M.M. -
STUNTS/BRAIN IN THE CAT (LP by Nihilist/TQR&R)
Quite a heavy bunch of stuff here. There is a split LP, a bonus
CDR with remixes/reworkings of eachother and a MP3 with the source
material for the side by Frankie & The S.E.M.M. That source
material was recorded at 'the luxurious hotel Auburn in San Francisco
Soma district', which apparently isn't the nicest neighborhood
in town. In 1999, in the middle of the night two guys start an
argument, which explodes in a lot of 'fuck you' and the word 'stunt'
can be picked up. Frankie & The S.E.M.M. add lofi synthesizer
or suppressed feedback to the material. I actually enjoyed hearing
it as I thought it was hilarous (though I am glad not have been
present that night), but I am not sure if its the kind of stuff
I would play a lot. I can imagine this to be a great side for
unaware guests. The Panicsville side has three pieces that were
originally released as a cassette, and an unreleased piece. Its
been a while that we associated Panicsville with pure noise and
that is also not the case here. Even when the cassettes from 2005,
this material already forecasts his interest in musique concrete
and analogue synths and these four pieces are quite nice experimental
music pieces. Roughly shaped musique concrete mixed with likewise
rough edges of cosmic music.
Panicsville rework Frankie into a silly 'dance' piece with those
obscured sounds from the sources, which is actually quite nice.
And silly. In return Frankie deconstructs Panicsville into 96
small pieces of sound, which sound actually like one piece, being
cut into 96 tracks, but I'm sure were are supposed to play this
in a random order. The material is even more low graded resolution
than the original. Nice, but a bit long - almost fifty minutes.
The source stuff is nice too, but perhaps to listen once or use
in your DJ mix. (FdW)
Address: http://www.topqualityrockandroll.com
KONATUS - BARUCH (CDR by Disorder)
If something involves saxophone player Dror Feiler you know you
are not in some easy listening, and I thought this would be another
one for Jliat, but, like always actually, I listened to it also.
For a while I kept thinking 'yes, definitely Jliat type of noise',
but then no, its not. Its noise band indeed, but all embedded
in the world of free jazz and improvisation. Konatus was at first
of duo of David Linnros (on saxophone and electronics) and Niklas
Korssell (drums), with sometimes Benjamin Quigley on bass, but
these days (well actually in June 2007 when this was recorded
at the lovely Fylkingen place) it had expanded into a quartet
including Ida Lunden on piano and electronics and Feiler on saxophones
and electronics. Two pieces here. 'Kon 1' is the heavy beast here,
a crash course collision of analogue and electronics, at the highest
volume and the fastest speed. Totally free, totally uncontrolled
- or so it seems. In 'Kon 2' things are forceful too, to say the
least, but here they keep things well under control. There is
room to breath, for the players no doubt and for the listener.
Even when not exactly 'spacious' - noise is an important feature
here too - this is a controlled space. If you like Borbetomagus,
then I'm sure you like Konatus too. Its that angle of free jazz/noise,
if you are looking for a reference. (FdW)
Address: http://www.disorder.se
BARRY CHABALA - AN UNRHYMED CHORD (FOR 25
GUITARS) (CDR by Confront)
The 'An Unrhymed Chord' is a composition by Micheal Pisaro, which
has a few instructions and time constraints. "The performer
can makes any sound they like, sustained for between one and fifteen
minutes in each thirty minute half of the piece, placed anywhere
they choose and the longer the duration, the lower the amplitude."
There have been various versions, but Barry Chabala, of whom I
never heard, thought of doing it on a guitar. He uses an acoustic
archtop guitar, a microphone and various techniques to play the
strings. That's what I read on the website of the label, and thus
I have no idea where that addition (for 25 guitars) comes from.
Maybe its twenty five short pieces? It doesn't sound like that.
Its a sixty-five minute, single, piece of music, divided in various
parts, but not twenty-five. He places ebows on strings, uses motorized
objects on strings and towards the end there is some plucking
of strings. One of the things I don't understand is why this CD
is so soft. Is there are point to that? Since I have to transform
any CD for the podcast to the computer, I 'normalized' it (the
loudest spot becoming 0db) and it sounds much better like that.
What, if anything at all, is Chabala hiding, save perhaps for
some hiss that is apparent now? Its a nice work for sure, but
also not something of a real surprise. Its a fine work of drone
like guitar sounds, that is perhaps a bit long (with a serious
gap of 'nothing' in the middle) and could have been half the length.
Still alright I guess. (FdW)
Address: http://www.sound323.com
SEASONS (PRE-DIN) (CDR by Mystery Sea)
That's an odd name I thought Seasons (pre-din), which is a project
by someone from the UK, who had a couple of releases on his own
Thy Rec, all highly limited and handmade, which caught the attention
of Boomkat and Type Records. Mystery Sea tells me, and since I
didn't hear Seasons (pre-din) before, that he uses "forest-tinted
field recordings with dissolved instrumental passages (dulcimer,
singing bowl)' but 'recent developments saw his sound getting
sparser and more vivid as it is now centered on piano and guitar
infused orchestral loops with environmental sounds still percolating,
but more subsidiary'. It starts out with some sounds, which could
be piano, guitar or orchestral loops, highly filtered cutting
all the bass and mid end, but those return later on in the piece.
I must say that this release sounded a bit 'muffled', everything
seems to be 'pushed' together, with not much room to breath, or
add space to the individual sounds. What I don't understand is
why Seasons (pre-din) wants to this to be one piece, since its
clearly a bunch of pieces stuck together? Why not the 'song' approach?
Now it suggests a composition of one thing, but if you hear the
piece than you know its built from several smaller ones crossfading
into eachother. The music is alright, not very 'sea' like (if
you know the nature of this label), but not outstanding good or
surprisingly new. Not good, not bad, dark and pleasant. The drone
field world. (FdW)
Address: http://www.mysterysea.net
AKOS GARAI - PILIS (CDR by 3Leaves)
I do remember the name Akos Garai, but not exactly the kind of
music he did in the past - must be the problem of hearing too
much music, no doubt some of you will say. The fifty minute work
here was derived from a walk at Pilis, a nature reservation north
of Budapest, with the highest peak being at 756 meters, and then
Akai's journey starts there, walking down along the small rivers.
He does recorded the stream at various points, and back home he
also created some computerized processed bits of these field recordings.
From these two elements - the pure field recordings and the processed
transformations comes this work. It's not bad, I must say, but
I also have my doubts about it. The early part sees some rapid
changing in the field recording, before settling in on longer
parts. The work is clearly divided into various sections of 'pure'
field recordings and sections of processed material, which didn't
entirely convince me - the latter bit that is. A bit too easy
in terms of sonic overload and also doesn't seem to make sense
in relation to the other bits. The best part I'd say is the second
half of the work, which seems to be more coherent. I think this
work could have been trimmed to half its length and be much stronger
than the total which is what it is now. (FdW)
Address: http://www.akosgarai.com/label.html
EMERGE - EMANCIPATION (CDR by Verato Project)
One of the recurring problems with CDR (and sometimes CD) releases
is that those releases tend to be long, and while perhaps the
composer has a good reason for it, the release itself might not
always benefit from it. Emerge recorded these 'sounds' in 2005,
but for whatever unknown reason its now released. Two tracks,
both well into thirty minutes. The first one seems to be using
a lot of acoustic sounds, some with lots of reverb, and some without
that much reverb. Atmospheric music that is that tries to evoke
some creepy environment, but it lacks also variety to be fully
interesting. As background music it works well. The second, also
untitled, piece has that same dark ambient feeling of rumbling
with a variety of objects, and sound a little more coherent, less
discarded elements, with a bit of feedback lingering in the background,
which makes for me the second piece the better of the two. That
piece by itself would have made a fine release I guess. (FdW)
Address: http://www.verato-project.de
OLEKRANON - IDENTI (CDR by Inam Records)
SUJO - MORTE E DESCIDA (3"CDR by Inam Records)
Back in Vital Weekly 687 I reviewed 'Recycle Human Lung' by Ryan
Huber, also known as Olekranon and said it was his third and final
release for 2009. That is not true, as it turns out, although
it is said that 'Identi' was to come out in 2010. Huber plays
guitar, drum machine and sound effects and creates a heavy type
of music. Even more heavy it seems that on his previous three
releases. At least when things get heavy, they are more nastier
than before. But Olekranon knows how to pull back gear and create
some introspective moments too, and that's where his power lies.
The sheer variety in his music here makes this for me his best
release yet. There is some fierce noise, some nice 'soft' bits,
all which create a fine album that is pleasant to hear throughout.
It comes with a design for a cover (velum sheet and sturdy stock
in full color), so it me wonder why it wasn't released as a proper
CD. If there is one who would fit that, it would be this one.
I still didn't find out who is behind Sujo, but I suspect this
is another name for Ryan Huber. The music is somehow related to
Olekranon, but altogether of a more heavy type. One piece, nineteen
minutes, of very slow rhythms, bounced off, drenched in actually,
in sound effects, with guitar(s) grinding away. Slow grindcore
perhaps (I am not too familiar with these sort of things), which
sinks away into a large pool of noise, fuzz and distortion. Top
heavy music at work here. No fun, but essential. (FdW)
Address: <inamrecs@yahoo.com>