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VITAL WEEKLY
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number 753
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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.
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the last ones. Please do not send anymore. Also: releases that do not
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The real thing is necessary for a real judgment. If you wish to send us
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<vital@vitalweekly.net>
MIKO - CHANDELIER (CD by Someone God) *
NILS OSTENDORF & PHILIPPE LAUZIER & PHILIP ZOUBEK - SUBSURFACE (CD by Schraum) *
LORENZO SENNI - DUNNO (CD by Presto!?) *
ANBB - MIMIKRY (CD by Raster-Noton) *
OKAMOTONORIAKI - TELESCOPE (CD by M¸-Nest)
TOMAS PHILLIPS & MARIHIKO HARA - PROSA (CD by Tench) *
AIDONS LA NORVEGE - OSTAGGI (CD by Oltre Lanebbiall Mare)
TASADAY - IMPLOSIONE TRA LE PIEGHE DELL'ANIMA (CD by Silentes) *
EKHNATON (CD compilation by Silentes)
KINETIX - FINAL ARCHIVES (CD compilation by Silentes) *
FILTERWOLF - MUSIC FROM TOMORROW (CD by Process Recordings)
DEEP-PRESSION - VOID OF A MORNING (CD by Valse Sinistre) *
OWL CAVE - BEHIND THE RED DRAPE (CDR by Valse Sinistre) *
KOLDVOID - GHOST STARING AT THE WORLD (CDR by Valse Sinistre) *
PESTALOZZI'S FAVORITE CHAIR (CD compilation by Metatonic)
WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE: 10 YEARS OF PISSING IN THE WIND (CDR compilation by Gold Soundz)
RV PAINTINGS - SAMOA PAINTINGS (LP by The Helen Scarsdale Agency)
STELZER & TALBOT - RECENT WORK (CDR by Songs From Under The Floorboards) *
VIC RAWLINGS & HOWARD STELZER - BY MY SIDE, I'M YOURS (CDR by Songs From Under The Floorboards) *
KUWAYAMA KIYOHARU & MASAYOSHU URABE - FROM ABOLITION PORT (CDR by Songs From Under The Floorboards) *
OPHIBRE - PHASE PLANE CAKE DECORATOR (CDR by Songs From Under The Floorboards) *
BRUME - DRAFT OF CONFUSION (CDR by Songs From Under The Floorboards) *
EXPENSIVE SHIT - ATX GHOSTS AND FLOWERS (CDR by For Noise's Sake)
DOHINCE - CRITICAL BEATS ON THE HEAD (CDR by For Noise's Sake)
SCISSORS SHOCK - PSYCHIC EXISTENTIALIST (CDR by For Noise's Sake)
THORSTEN SOLTAU/WEISS - REZYKLA (3"CDR by Electron)
ASHER - FOUR COMPOSITIONS (cassette, private)
TOTAL BLACKOUT (cassette compilation by Afe Records)
DEVIS DEVILS - D (cassette by Collezione Del Silenzio)
AB'SHE - G (cassette by Collezione Del Silenzio)
MAUTHAUSEN ORCHESTRA - M (cassette by Collezione Del Silenzio)
UNDER THE SNOW - W (cassette by Collezione Del Silenzio)
MAURIZIO BIANCHI - Y (cassette by Collezione Del Silenzio)
ANDREA MARUTTI - Z (cassette by Collezione Del Silenzio)
MIKO - CHANDELIER (CD by Someone God)
Sometimes I wonder where Lawrence English finds these girls in Japan
for his Room40 label. Here he comes up with one Miko, who sings in
Japanese and of which we know she has released her debut through Plop.
She plays 'harmonic piano', sings, and uses to a smaller extent guitar,
percussion and field recordings. Eight pieces of introvert singing,
backed by introspective instruments, playing mellow, light music.
Highly atmospheric, fitting an early sun set, when the light is at its
beautiful (or romantic, whatever you prefer). Quite pleasant music, but
also a bit unsurprising. Whatever started by Tujiko Noriko, and
previous releases by Someone Good, Room 40, 12K/Happy, trickles down
into the veins of Miko. She doesn't seem to add something new
necessarily to that particular musical genre, but she does keep things
within pop reach (also length wise) and it sounds pretty much alright.
So what I'm complaining? (FdW)
Address: http://www.someonegood.org
NILS OSTENDORF & PHILIPPE LAUZIER & PHILIP ZOUBEK - SUBSURFACE (CD by Schraum)
Germany's Schraum label has established itself as a small but fine
catalogue of improvised music. Somehow they manage to find all those
people I never heard of, like on this eleventh release Nils Ostendorf
(trumpet), Philippe Lauzier (bass clarinet, saxophones) and Philip
Zoubek (prepared piano). All of them were born in 1977 and 1978 and
have extensive lists with whom they all played. Last year they recorded
this work in Cologne and it was edited down to seven pieces, spanning
forty minutes of improvised music. Its not easy to say which sounds is
generated by whom here. Which is something I actually thought was
great. The sounds bubble up from below, and none of them sound like the
sound of the instrument they are holding in their hands. Lots of
scraping like sounds, with quite some sustain to them, almost like
drone music in 'Dreaming On A Cargo'. But they also work more common
ground, with a great sense of interaction, leaving silence when
necessary and adding sounds when needed. In 'Hyperlinking' even a small
melody pops up in a great Cage like manner. This trio plays some great
lush improvised music with beautiful ringing overtones. Excellent. (FdW)
Address: http://www.schraum.de
LORENZO SENNI - DUNNO (CD by Presto!?)
The man behind Presto!? is Lorenzo Senni, who started the label a few
years ago, but dislocated his first release on Keshhhhh. That was
'Early Works', a collection of 'old' pieces (see Vital Weekly 654), in
Mego styled tradition. He's still quite young, but he has explored
computer music quite well, so 'Dunno' is his first real, up-to-date
record, entirely crafted in the world of computers. While it still has
the power of the older Mego releases, Senni doesn't rely entirely on
the world of noise for this one. In a curious way he connects the
computer noise of Now, with the more serious academic electronic from a
few decades ago. I am reminded of the work released by Marcus
Schmickler (who mastered the Senni disc) 'Alters Of Science' on Mego
(see Vital Weekly 596), which had a similar approach to computer music.
Also the work of Evol might come close to this. Quite radical music but
totally listenable. Refined brutality at work here. Very abstract and
definitely not easy listening. A major leap forward for him, as well as
the world of noise. (FdW)
Address: http://www.prestorecords.com
ANBB - MIMIKRY (CD by Raster-Noton)
Behind ANBB we find a collaboration of Blixa Bargeld (best known as
singer of Einsturzende Neubauten and guitarist for Nick Cave & The
Bad Seeds) and Alva Noto. I already heard about this, and raised an
eye-brow, or two. Why on earth would mister digital clean work with
mister dirty? What would it bring? Or, and perhaps I'm just an (old)
cynic, is to boost a career here and there, even a bigger boost than
either of them probably don't need, seeing their high profiles. I must
admit I was never a big fan of the Neubauten, although I still like to
play 'Kollaps' every now and then, and started with some suspicion to
play this. I must I am actually quite pleased with it. It bridges the
gap between the clean cut beats of Noto and the 'pop' of Neubauten,
both are there, but crossing over. Bargeld's singing is more like
reading poetry, while Noto's music is less clear cut, more gritty and
dirty. And some of these pieces show that Noto is capable of playing
popmusic, such as in the short ballad like 'One' (a cover from Harry
Nilsson), which is a prize winner, in the furious 'Once Again' or in
the mild 'I Wish I Was A Mole In The Ground'. Voices are layered at
times, making it more dense and more sinister, full of pain, just as
one would probably expect from Bargeld. This all seems to me a genuine
collaboration, and not one for the cash or the fame, so whatever I was
thinking was wrong. This is actually a great record. Great dark matter
of intelligent pop music. The best of both worlds. (FdW)
Address: http://www.raster-noton.net
OKAMOTONORIAKI - TELESCOPE (CD by M¸-Nest)
Earlier this year I had the pleasure of reviewing a release from
Malaysian-based label M¸-Nest. It was the sweet "electropop meets
postrock"-album "The Fabric" from U.S.-composer [Post-foetus]. Now it
is time for another one from the label that focus on as the describes
itself "melodious & sweet-sounding electro-acoustic tunes." - a
description that fits perfectly to the sound this new release
"Telescope" from japanese artist Okamotonoriaki. The artist is an
Osaka-born audio-visual artist based in Tokyo, who has won several
prizes for his works. Listening to the "Telescope"-album, you
understand why the composer has been awarded. The composer operates in
beautiful sound spheres of cinematic, imaginative electronica combined
with inter-weaving piano lines and warm synth-lines. An important
element is the gentle drumbeats added to the textures. The gentle
electronica-expression on "Telescope" reminds me a lot of the style
often connected to Japanese label Symbolic Interaction and the result
is equally as impressive. Highly recommended! (NM)
Address: http://www.mu-nest.com
TOMAS PHILLIPS & MARIHIKO HARA - PROSA (CD by Tench)
A few days ago I learned that Tomas Phillips is writing a novel and
then this CD arrived. An unlikely collaboration between mister laptop
and mister… erm… well mister something else. There is a piano dominant
in the first two pieces (part one and two of 'Prosa I', the others are
six parts of 'Prosa II'), so at first I assumed Hara was the piano
player here, but as the CD evolved it all seemed to r-evolve around
computer based processing of piano playing. As before with the work of
Pillips (I must admit this is my first acquaintance with Marihiko
Hara), it finds itself in the field of microsound. This could have
easily been on 12K or, more likely, Line. Quiet music, ambient in
approach, with small crackles, hiss, a bit of static, deep bass rumble
and sometimes the piano in there somewhere. Sometimes sounding as a
piano, and sometimes, very deceivingly sounding like a piano, but upon
closer inspection, you will find its not a piano, but a treated sound
thereof. Perhaps an album that holds hardly a surprise, at least that's
what I think, but having said that, I think its a wonderful album, one
of great beauty. A fine merging of acoustic sounds and some great
electronic processing thereof. Captivating beauty. (FdW)
Address: http://www.tenchrec.com
AIDONS LA NORVEGE - OSTAGGI (CD by Oltre Lanebbiall Mare)
TASADAY - IMPLOSIONE TRA LE PIEGHE DELL'ANIMA (CD by Silentes)
EKHNATON (CD compilation by Silentes)
KINETIX - FINAL ARCHIVES (CD compilation by Silentes)
I have no idea why I get this CD. Its clearly mailed by some one who
never reads Vital Weekly. Aidons La Norvege (help the norwegians?) is
an Italian doom rock band. Now as much I liked Joy Division when I was
sixteen, I don't need to repeat that now that I am 45. Oh, the booklet
tells me this was recorded in 1984-1985. I didn't know this band back
then and I am not sure if a re-issue was absolutely necessary, but who
knows: there might be fans out there for this? How would I know. I have
the re-issues (well, most of them) that I wanted, and am not on the
look out for some copy of Joy Division, twenty-five years after the
fact.
But perhaps I said that too quickly. I know Tasaday from those days as
well, but back then I couldn't quite figure out what they were about.
Maybe it was they moved out of my sight, only seeing and hearing them
when their name popped up on a compilation, so I may have missed out
this particular tape release from 1984. Quite a big band line up,
although no instruments are specified for the players. They have a rock
like line up, drums, bass, guitar(s), vocals, but also wind
instruments. The music they play is however not particularly standard
rock music. A bit dark funk like, along those lines of say A Certain
Ratio, 23 Skidoo and such bands a like from those days. Very much the
early work of those bands, in case one expects to dance to this. The
vocals are more like tribalistic chanting. Crisis-funk I think was the
word used back then. Like their UK counterparts, Tasaday has a nice
experimental edge to their music, and unlike the Aidons La Norvege
doesn't sound too dated, although perhaps the re-mastering could have
been a bit better. It sounds a bit too much like the cassette it was
ripped from. Didn't hear it too well back then, so I must say I am
quite pleased with it today. Guess I don't have all the re-issues I
wanted.
And I would want 'Ekhnaton' on CD? I don't know. I am pretty sure the
original vinyl from 1984 is somewhere on the shelves around me, but
when did I last play it? I can't remember. One of the nicer things
about this compilation was that it had more than one track by each
artists, so this time you'd be getting a better picture of a group than
was usual on compilations from those days. It follows the experimental
music scene from Italy from those (leaving out Maurizio Bianchi and
Mauthausen Orchestra) and includes four bands: Maze 1066, Tasaday,
Evitaxal and TAC, the latter already acquired some fame. Each band
brings two tracks to the table. Maze 1066 open up but are the least
convincing ones with their improvised, Recommended Records styled
music. Tasaday continue where their cassette took off (unless that came
first - I am not sure about the sequence of events), and seem to use a
bit more metal percussion on these two tracks. Not really crisis-funk
however, but nice enough. Evitaxal (whose members include Roberto
Marinelli, who some might remember working solo as Laxative Souls) have
two 'cosmic' synth pieces of bubbling sounds and TAC have the most
matured sound. An odd combination of bass playing, wind instruments,
and percussive rumble. Nice. I should have played that record more, I
realize, but then there are so many others too.
We land in more 'current' times with the release of 'Final Archives' by
Kinetix. The first time I reviewed Kinetix it was a release called
'First Emissions' (see Vital Weekly 339). Gianluca Becuzzi was behind
Kinetix, before starting to work under his own name. These pieces on
'Final Archives' (his final release as Kinetix I assume) is a
collection of rare tracks recorded from 1999 to 2006, and were
previously available on CDR and MP3. The music by Kinetix has nothing
to do with the previous three releases, as this is all computer based
microsounding music. Over the years I heard various of his releases
with 'White Rooms' as a definitely landmark in his career (see Vital
Weekly 503). These pieces presented here, the early days, Becuzzi was
on the look out for his own take on that microsound principle, but
didn't entirely made up his mind yet. Pan Sonic seems to be an all
important influence on the middle work 'Rw Materials', with heavy
beats, white static noise and field recordings, but in the two
surrounding pieces, 'Absolute Grey' and 'Resounding Sculptures', he is
already drawn towards say someone like Richard Chartier or Marc
Behrens, although the latter piece is influenced by Xenakis, and its
not difficult to draw a parallel to 'Persepolis': large chunks of sound
and sheets of metal. 'Absolute Grey' is the most Chartier like, with
soft static sounds and processed voice. This is not the final
masterwork of Becuzzi, but it marks the nice end of someone who did
some nice music under the name of Kinetix. (FdW)
Address: http://www.silentes.net
FILTERWOLF - MUSIC FROM TOMORROW (Cd by Process Recordings)
Behind the project Filterwolf, you find Bosnian composer Adnan Duric.
Before this debut full-length, the now Munich-based artist has released
a few EPs and 12"s, first of all on the same label being responsible
for this latest release, Process Recordings. Based in the UK, Process
Recordings aims to release cutting edge music of the electronic scene,
and present album titled "Music from tomorrow" is no exception on that
purpose. Before this album, Filterwolf has composed soundtracks for
films and animations. "Music from tomorrow" blends eastern sound
cultures with first of all upbeat electronics often club-like in
expression. There is a futurist atmosphere first of all thanks to the
electro-like sound expressions sometimes reminiscent of late Kraftwerk.
An interesting album, which will unquestionably appeal to any listeners
of tech-house and similar. (NM)
Address: http://www.process-recordings.com/
DEEP-PRESSION - VOID OF A MORNING (CD by Valse Sinistre)
OWL CAVE - BEHIND THE RED DRAPE (CDR by Valse Sinistre)
KOLDVOID - GHOST STARING AT THE WORLD (CDR by Valse Sinistre)
Three new releases by Rumania's finest in dark ambient music, and three
names I never heard of. Deep-Pression have a huge amount of releases
available (I'm quoting the press text obviously) and 'Void Of A
Morning' is their fourth full length release. A whole bunch of people
are mentioned on the cover, but they all seem to be playing on one or
two tracks only. The voice, by various 'singers' is one of those
graveyard voices, low, doom and depressed. The band has a background in
'post black metal/depressive doom scene', but moved to 'dark ambient
textures, dronish guitars, electronica, discrete noise, industrial,
shoegaze, experimental', and that is indeed true. The vocal part of
this is not really well spend on me, I must admit, but the music is
pretty alright, decent doom's day soundtrack sort of thing. Not very
pleasant music indeed, but one that is a void: in human existence
perhaps, life on earth or whatever. Eerie, heavy weight 'Life is bad,
death is good' kind of music. Not for the weak of hearth.
So I wasn't a big fan of 'Twin Peaks', so I didn't know Owl Cave is
related to the series. This CD is 'technically […] one long, 48 minute
song (the approx. duration of Twin Peaks episode). So I was never
a fan of Twin Peaks, but I did watch a couple of episodes and know what
it is like, and yes, the music, ah the music was nice too. A point of
reference for all things moody in music, ambient, drone like, spacious,
all that. Have a bunch of keyboards for some long form sounds, add a
piano like keyboards and chip in some nocturnal field recordings. In
the mixing process you add some reverb. It may sound like I am
downplaying the music, but its not really. I actually quite liked what
I hear. Not in a way that I'm rushing out to borrow Twin Peaks complete
on DVD, but as an imaginary soundtrack to anything moody and
melancholic this will do as perfectly. Owl Cave takes the listener for
a nice trip, a night ride into an area with lots of trees and
beautifully fading sunlight.
Also a new name is Koldvoid. I have no idea where they/he/she is from.
There are only three tracks here, spanning just over twenty-two
minutes. There is a bit of voice stuff in here, but I couldn't quite
figure out if this was sampled from the movies or spoken. There are
piano bits set against dark, monolithic walls of synthesizers, and
balances between the soft and something that is not entirely noisy, but
at least more upfront anyway. More Cold Meat Industry like darkness and
more cinematic stuff. These three tracks are actually quite nice, but
somehow they are also a bit unsatisfactory. What do they want, which
direction? More loud, more quiet, or could they balance that? This
extended mini CD doesn't show us yet, but we are keen to find out. (FdW)
Address: http://www.valsesinistre.com
PESTALOZZI'S FAVORITE CHAIR (CD compilation by Metatonic)
WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE: 10 YEARS OF PISSING IN THE WIND (CDR compilation by Gold Soundz)
So I said before I don't like reviewing compilations, especially those
which are a mere collection of music, without an underpinning thematic
approach or overview of something (a label, a festival). Such a thing
seems to be the case with Pestalozzi's Favorite Chair, a compilation by
Metonic Records, dedicated to Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi, a Swiss
educational reformer from the 18th century. A mixed bag of throughout…
well, nice music. Lots of names I never heard of such as Mikko, Manuel
Engel, El Papo Vecino, Hans Koch, Puts Marie, ERiko_Benfay_Galega,
Manupulation, Bryan Noll, Jakob Bro, Rune Borup, Meta Marie Louise,
Mouri Rifqui, Rifa'a El Tahtawi (from Egypt), and Everest. Whoops
that's just Nux Vomica I heard of before. Partly rock based music, but
modern sounding, mostly electronic, and throughout some form of vocals.
Two horrible slices of jazz are included as well. Its like listening to
the radio: sometimes you hear something really nice passing by, and
sometimes something that is not. Most of the tracks on this one were
alright, but I was wondering: who is this for?
I can tell which audience is ready to rush out the other compilation.
Stylistically not connected at all, but it a theme, albeit a loose one:
Sindre Bjerga's label exists for 10 years and he invited a whole bunch
of musicians to send him a short track, so that he could fit 99 on a
single CDR. Various noise bits by Cock ESP are five seconds, the
longest is Jazkamer with two minutes and three seconds, and the
majority well under a minute. Lots of noise pass by, feedback,
distorted and loud, but also some finer moments of introspective
sounding electronic music as well as improvised bits and bobs. The list
reads like a who's who in the world of those work in that field, with
lots of Norwegian friends of Bjerga, but also Staplerfahrer, Hal McGee,
Cock ESP and The Tobacconists. Not an easy task to say wether you like,
say track 34, 14 or 84, because before you know it things are over and
you are somewhere else again. That might be however the big charm of
releases like this. Both compilations were nice enough, each with its
own character and definitely for different times of the day. (FdW)
Address: http://www.metonicrecords.com
Address: http://www.bek.no/~tibprod/goldsoundz.htm
RV PAINTINGS - SAMOA PAINTINGS (LP by The Helen Scarsdale Agency)
Two brothers, Brian and Jon Pyle are behind RV Paintings and hail from
Hunbold County, California, home of redwood trees and marijuana. Bryan
Pyle is also a member of Starving Weirdos and solo known as Ensemble
Economique. The brothers jam about about to start with and then edit
these out into fixed compositions. They use guitars and effects, I
believe, and if I am to believe the press text, also flutes and
strings. The recording quality doesn't seem to be something that they
care about that much, or perhaps its just the pressing that is not that
great? It moves into slight distortion which doesn't justify the music.
Unlike many of the previous releases by The Helen Scarsdale Agency,
this is drone music of a somewhat different branding. More improvised,
more loosely played also, these drone based textures are a bit
crude and bending the idea of static drone music, with its metallic
scraping and reverb effects in the background. A bit like a toned down
'In Extremis' by Organum, with the addition of field recordings,
buzzing effects and other obscured sonic debris. A bit more raw than is
usual, and that surely marks a fine difference. Because its not top
perfect, all the more nice. (FdW)
Address: http://www.helenscarsdale.com
STELZER & TALBOT - RECENT WORK (CDR by Songs From Under The Floorboards)
VIC RAWLINGS & HOWARD STELZER - BY MY SIDE, I'M YOURS (CDR by Songs From Under The Floorboards)
KUWAYAMA KIYOHARU & MASAYOSHU URABE - FROM ABOLITION PORT (CDR by Songs From Under The Floorboards)
OPHIBRE - PHASE PLANE CAKE DECORATOR (CDR by Songs From Under The Floorboards)
BRUME - DRAFT OF CONFUSION (CDR by Songs From Under The Floorboards)
Songs From Under The Floorboards is a new sub division of Intransitive
Recordings, specializing in small run CDR releases, all in jewel cases
with nice full color artwork. Some of these works are older, returning
from under the floor boards perhaps, and some are new. Let's start with
something old, which is oddly called 'Recent Work'. Its a re-issue of a
release on RRRecords by Jason Talbot and Howard Stelzer (the latter the
one who crawls under the floorboards to dig up such releases) from a
2002 recording and back in Vital Weekly 367 I wrote: "It's good to see
the return of a highly respectable label that brought us so many noise
and related records, tapes and CD's. RRRecords are back! And they
stepped into doing CDRRR's. One of the first is a lovely lovely
recording of Jason Talbot and Howard Stelzer, taped during their April
2001 tour in the USA. Jason Talbot plays a turntable, sometimes
conventionally spinning a record, scratching it, but he also uses the
pick up to amplify a balloon or screwdrivers. Howard is also on the
analogue music side playing
cassettes through a whole bunch of old walkmans, upon sheets of metal
and through a distortion pedal. Maybe you except a whole bunch of
noise, but not so. Occasionally there are bursts of noise, oh yes, but
these two guys play very well the dynamic card. Soft parts, loud parts,
noise bursts and occasional sounds are presented here in this excellent
live recording. I happen to see a couple of their shows, and everything
they do is planned, these are real songs (despite the silly titles). I
heard someone calling this analog glitch, might be so. I think it's
musique concrete in a very pure form. And europeans around: they play
on january 31st at Extrapool in Nijmegen, The Netherlands." That was a
great concert and somewhere shortly after that review the two parted
way, but they are together again, playing concerts again, and this is a
friendly reminder of that great duo.
Another duo, also with Howard Stelzer on cassettes is with Vic
Rawlings, who is a well-known figure from the Boston improvisation
scene playing cello and circuit bend electronics. The recordings on
this album were already done six years ago, but for whatever reason
never released. Rawlings and Stelzer had already played a lot of
concerts back then, but this album is a not a registration of these
concerts. In stead the two did a two day session and later on edit them
into the pieces on this release. But then a release never happened, and
now its here. Of course the all important question might be: does it
sound dated? The good news is: it doesn't. One could argue then that
probably not much news happens in the world of improvisation (which I
leave for others to discuss), but the album sounds pretty good. Lots of
silence (now that might be a bit outdated come to think of it), which
are then spliced out with pieces of rapid movements, together or alone.
Both Stelzer and Rawling take turns in letting their material breathe,
take shape and gentle move away. Or pull out together, a stroke of
noise, like painting flying around, smeared on the canvas. A wild
affair, but perhaps a bit on the long side too, with fifty minutes of
intense listening.
Kuwayama Kiyoharu has had releases on the main label, Intransitive,
before, usually as Lethe, but here comes up with a duo recording with
alto saxophone player Masayoshi Urabe, known from his work with
Kosoukuya, Junko, Hiroshi Hasegawa (Astro, CCCC), Kan Mikami and Chie
Mukai. Kuwayama plays cello, saxophone and metal chains. The music was
recorded in the old warehouse space in Nagoya which Kuwayama has at his
disposal and which has great reverb to it. They recorded this work in
October 2003, no doubt in 'one go'. The sound is cavernous and, unlike
many of the Lethe recordings, quite full of sound. The saxophone is
dominating feature here, and blows about in a forcefully way. Its not
the kind of saxophone playing I like very much I must admit. Whatever
Kuwayama adds is a bit unclear, as the moments on cello and chains seem
rather 'reduced' here. A totally free (jazz) work, that is nice, but
not entirely convincing.
No date is mentioned on the Ophibre release. Ophibre has had works
before, that were mostly puzzling, to say the least. Ophibre, we now
learn is Benjamin Rossignol, who, years "was participating in medical
studies to get by" and as such got to learn the MRI machine and he
"started hearing other sounds above the magnet… sounds that
complimented the terrifically terrible drone of the big magnet",
something which he tries to capture on these recordings. The title
piece is a heavy drone piece of sounds played through the element of a
guitar, or perhaps using the whole body of the guitar, shaking and
rumbling it. Nice but perhaps not necessary for the entire fourteen
some minutes. The other three pieces explore a similar territory, but
in a much more quieter manner, which I think is much better, and which
reminds me of some of the other music I heard from him. Monolithic
rumble music might be best description. On the surface it seems not a
lot is happening, but deep down, behind the cracks, things move
solemnly ahead, with some variations. Like insects crawling all over
the space.
I am not sure why C. Renou returned to his moniker Brume, after a few
years of releases under his own name. Maybe he's reversing the trend of
stop using band names? The piece he presents here was recorded for an
installation for erstwhile Vital Weekly reviewer TJ Norris from 2008.
All this changing of names made it hard for me to follow his musical
development. As Brume he was known for using cut-up techniques and the
no-sampler approach of musique concrete/electro-acoustic music. As C.
Renou he, perhaps, worked with more sustaining sounds, drone like
figures and, again perhaps, with samplers. Yet this particular new
Brume work sounds exactly like the 'old' (read: recent) Renou works.
Lots of 'long' form sound, of sources unknown (well, in some ways I
think it uses voice material, extremely slowed down and/or in real
time) and perhaps computer editing. Maybe that confuses me a bit, but
then I realize none of that really matters of course, its the end
result that counts and that is pretty good, if perhaps a bit long. If
you like the releases by say Helen Scardale, this is entirely up your
alley too. (FdW)
Address: http://www.intransitiverecordings.com
EXPENSIVE SHIT - ATX GHOSTS AND FLOWERS (CDR by For Noise's Sake)
DOHINCE - CRITICAL BEATS ON THE HEAD (CDR by For Noise's Sake)
SCISSORS SHOCK - PSYCHIC EXISTENTIALIST (CDR by For Noise's Sake)
For Noise's Sake is a label which is based in Madrid-Spain and releases
music with a wide diversity in a limited edition. Expensive Shit is a
band from Austin, Texas and consists of five members and a guest
musician. They do not practice and play anywhere they want. A previous
jam-session was already released by Not for Fun. The session exists of
lots of feedback sounds which are created by guitars and far away in
the background you can hear some drums. After a while there is more
variety in sounds and the beats became stronger. On this record a lot
of guitar noise and if you like it - just go for it in this 19 minutes
long session.
And for now something completely different? Donhince is also located at
Madrid and combines noise with techno and big beats. Five compositions
will fill the experimental dance floor and you can flow on the mighty
beats, strong noises and well-structure wall of dancenoise. Really a
good album.
Scissor Shock is a project of Adam Cooley from Columbus, Indiana and
releases music since 2003. The music on the album "Psychic
Existentialist" can be described as Frank Zappa full speed forward.
Thirteen songs, varying from extremely short (twenty-three seconds) to
about nine minutes fill the album. The musician experiments a lot with
guitar, voice, synthesizer, drummachine and more. It is a kind of
free-jazz, rock with weirdo combinations and structures, humor and an
excellent feeling of timing. For me this album is a great surprise!
(JKH)
Address: http://fornoisesssake.blogspot.com/
THORSTEN SOLTAU/WEISS - REZYKLA (3"CDR by Electron)
Back in Vital Weekly 604 we introduced the Electroton label by way of
'Rephelx', an album from Weiss from Nuremberg, which looked like the
old Raster Noton label, and with similar music. Design wise Electron
hasn't changed and it somehow escapes me why they want to release now a
3"CDR with four five minute remixes by Weiss and Thorsten Soltau, each
providing two remixes. The two Weiss remixes are in fact remixes of the
Soltau remixes contained herein - to make life a bit more difficult?
His music relies on heavy beats from the world of digital glitch. Think
Pan Sonic, Alva Noto or Ryoji Ikeda, still, as was the matter with
'Rephlex'. Its hard to believe this heavy weight rhythm material was
extracted from the strange pieces of Soltau. Hardly 4/ rhythm material
at work there. These are strange pieces of electronic music, with
granulation as the working/guiding principle of the music. A bit long
for what it is, this sounds like going away from that strict template
provided by Raster so many years ago. (FdW)
Address: http://www.electroton.net
ASHER - FOUR COMPOSITIONS (cassette, private)
Probably the cassette is the right medium for Asher, whose drone based
music always seems to about low grade sound material. Material that
seems to be recorded on cassette, then erased and then the erased tape
is polished up to see if there is any residue left: that residue
becomes the music. Of course it doesn't happen like that, I know, but
that's the way these things sound. As such he has done quite an amount
of work since 2005 of these lo-fi electronic music, but somewhere these
'Four Compositions' are a bit different. It seems that these work
around guitar sounds (well, perhaps, that is) and lots of sound
effects, which produce an endless sustaining field of sound. More
regular shaped drones I thought and in a different way less delicate
than his previous, more microsound based, work. I am not sure… it all
sounded alright, but in a way also a bit too ordinary, too much in a
common place of drone music. There are so many others in that crowded
field and then perhaps a cassette is not the right medium for such
technical more complex music (i.e. more depth). Maybe Asher is testing
the waters for a different approach? We'll see. Not bad, and sort of
alright, I guess. (FdW)
Address: http://www.sourdine.net/asher.html
TOTAL BLACKOUT (cassette compilation by Afe Records)
The approach of this compilation is quite nice: ask musicians to create
music without 'using any electrically-powered source/instrument, just
like they were experiencing a real black out situation', and we are
left in the dark too. There is no tracklist and each tape (limited to
47 copies) is copied in a random/shuffle mode. So if I wanted to write
that say Rinus van Alebeek's piece is great, I couldn't. Or if Andrea
Marutti's track sucks, I couldn't either. Even more: if I would write
that the first ten minutes on the b-side is great, you couldn't verify
that: your copy might be different. A true black out indeed. The
'unplugged' approach relates to field recordings here, which I think is
cheating the idea. Field recordings are always unplugged, me thinks.
The best pieces are those that use any kind of sound that is acoustic,
the voice/poetry bits, or the use/abuse of acoustic objects.
Interesting stuff, difficult to review. It may have tracks by Aal,
Andrea Marutti, Carlo Giordani, Crashcars For The Ravers, Fhievel &
luca Sigurta, Madama P, Rinus van Alebeek and Vale. Perhaps in an order
of some kind. Maybe not. (FdW)
Address: http://www.aferecords.com
DEVIS DEVILS - D (cassette by Collezione Del Silenzio)
AB'SHE - G (cassette by Collezione Del Silenzio)
MAUTHAUSEN ORCHESTRA - M (cassette by Collezione Del Silenzio)
UNDER THE SNOW - W (cassette by Collezione Del Silenzio)
MAURIZIO BIANCHI - Y (cassette by Collezione Del Silenzio)
ANDREA MARUTTI - Z (cassette by Collezione Del Silenzio)
Italy's answer to the Zelphabet series (which is a series of
compilation CDs with musicians from the world of noise - in its
extended meaning - grouped together with the beginning letter of their
name), is a series of 26 cassettes, each with one band or person. I am
not sure why one band or person is connected to a particular letter,
but its not Maurizio Bianchi at the 'M' or the 'B'. So I received six
of the twenty-six, and let's start with the 'D', ah, which is by Devis
Devils, of whom I never heard. The series is subtitled 'Free
Interpretations Of Silent Sounds' and along with 'silentes tapestry' -
'white series' and the website of this subdivision from Silentes, there
is no other information. Maybe I expected some sort of extended remix
series of silent music, but Devis Devils is no such thing. They use
rhythm machines and samplers to create rhythmic music, but a dancing
crowd is not their goal. The music is not always worked out well, and
it seems to me that this is, altogether, a sketch like affair. Start of
songs, rather than songs. Maybe its because a tracklist is missing that
there is something to guess. Not entirely my cup, but the b-side, which
seemed a bit more ambient, was quite alright.
'G' is made by Ab'she, another unknown entity, and they/he/she also
start out with rhythm. Rather slow, with some synthesizers humming
darkly underneath. Again no track titles, but I assume that both sides
should be seen as one track - lasting around fifteen or so minutes,
building slowly up from small chunks of rhythm, adding more along the
road and also gathering more ornaments, i.e. more synthesizers and such
like. Here too, on both pieces (?), the tempo is slow, and not really
dance-like. Maybe like a moody Pan Sonic piece in a way, but then
extended to that fifteen minutes (if it is, you never really know if
its on cassette, do you). Nicer than Devis Devils, I thought, with a
better worked out idea for compositions.
Recently we noted the return of Mauthausen Orchestra, also on Silentes
(with a CD actually). Now there is also this cassette, and I am not
sure if this cassette is an old or a new work. I think, judging by its
contents, a new one, as it has, I think, similarities with
'Digression', the CD of late (Vital Weekly 750). This tape seems to be
a bit shorter (c20 or c25) and has that similar cut-up synth music as
the CD. Some keys are pressed down, a setting changed, a few sound
effects pushed through the floor. Not really the power noise of
yesteryear, but it has that crudeness that one associates with noise,
without being that noisy, even when the b-side attempts at doing so.
Does that sound vague? It's throughout actually a nice tape, with the
b-side again the most coherent effort of the reformed Orchestra so far.
Under The Snow, also a new name for me. So we had two bits of rhythm,
one chunk of noise and with Under The Snow the ambient/drone music
leaps in. A cheap organ like sound sets the ball rolling on side A. It
sounds a bit cheap at the beginning but when it rolls, the whole thing
gets more and more depth. More sounds are added, computerized
processings of kind or another, and on the second side even a bit of
looped sounds (to avoid the word 'rhythm') of bell like sounds. Here
too, again, the b-side is the best. In fact this is a great piece of
music.
Old master Maurizio Bianchi is on 'Y'. With him you never know if its
an old work or a new work (certainly when there is no additional
information), or, when its a new one, if he worked on it himself (or
Siegmar Fricke, his favorite collaborator in his new phase). But having
heard quite a bit of Maurizio's music over the last twenty-five years I
assume this is either an old work, or something based on 'old' sounds.
A crudely cut reel-to-reel tape of static radio sounds, with a skip of
the cello tape that holds it together, is fed through a bunch of sound
effects, or maybe even a synth. Maybe not, actually. Maybe its just a
bunch of tape-loops. An effective set of industrial music, harking back
to his early days as Sacher Pelz. At thirty minutes also carrying the
right length for such music, I think. Nice noise.
Andrea Marutti is also something of a legend from the
experimental/electronic music from Italy, whose work is mainly to be
found in 'ambient' and 'drone', but he dabbles in various aspects of
that. So it can be either softly humming or be more upfront. For 'Z' he
chooses both. On the first side we find something, also based, it
seems, around a loop of some kind that swirls around, captured in a
system of sustaining feedback sampling machines. A sort of powerful
drone music and the b-side is filled with a low end rumble of sonic
debris, gently yet dark flowing about. Both sides are total opposites
of eachother, but both are equally good. (FdW)
Address: http://www.silentes.it/tapestry
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