AMM & FORMANEX – TREATISE (CD by Fibrr Records)
ABS(.)HUM (CDR Fibrr Records)
NEUTRAL – CALLER ID (CD by Hymen)
ERIC COOK – I WILL NOT BE ANGRY ANYMORE (CD by Simulated)
CASIOTONE FOR THE PAINFULLY ALONE – TWINKLE ECHO (CD by Tomlab)
HEIMIR BJORGULFSSON & JONAS OHLSSON – FUR YOUR BEARS ONLY (CD by Bottrop-Boy)
MERZBOW – ANIMAL MAGNETISM (CD by Alien8 Recordings)
JAZZKAMMER – PULSE (CD by Bottrop-Boy)
STEVE RODEN – LIGHT FORMS (MUSIC FOR LIGHT BULBS AND CHURCHES) (CD by
Semishigure)
FISK INDUSTRIES – THE ISLE OF WIGHT (CDEP by Highpoint Lowlife)
SI-CUT.DB – FIND SOME SHADE (CD by Highpoint Lowlife)
MEM – FREIBAND REMIXED IN III PARTS (CDREP by Mik Musik)
WOJT3K KUCHARCZYK – BIRDS WERE BEYOND MY CONTROL (CDR by Mik Musik)
IGNEOUS FLAME – TOLMON (CDR by Chillfactor 10 Records)
GREG DAVIS – MORT AUX VACHES (CD by Staalplaat)
TANAKH (CD by Alien8 Recordings)
SAM SHALABI – OSAMA (CD by Alien8 Recordings)
MARTIN TETREAULT & OTOMO YOSHIHIDE – STUDIO/ANALOGIQUE/NUMERIQUE (3
mini-CD by Ambiances Magnétiques)
WESTERN GRAY – GLACIAL ERRATIC (CD by Dr.Jim)
ODRZ – ODRZO5 (CDR by Tib Prod)
FICKLE – I CAN SEE THROUGH YOU YOUR DRUGS DON’T WORK (CDR by Consume)
RAPOON – EP ET VEE (3″CDR by Piehead Records)
TORE HONORE BOE & FRIENDS – SERUM RECYCLED (2CDR by Hacienda)
TORE HONORE BOE – BEAUTIFUL MOMENTS IN FOUR MINUTES (5″ by Like A/An
Everflowing Stream)
ACID MOTHERS TEMPLE & THE MELTING PARAISO U.F.O. – ELECTRIC HEAVYLAND
(CD by Alien8 Recordings)
DRONE DEVIL (CDR by Ecstatic Zombie Recordings)
CHRISTOF MIGONE – SOUTH WINDS (CD by Oral)
GREG KINGSTON & WILL GUTHRIE – HILLS HOIST (3″CDR by Antboy)
AMM & FORMANEX – TREATISE (CD by Fibrr Records)
ABS(.)HUM (CDR Fibrr Records)
In 2002 it was twenty years ago that UK composer and AMM member
Cornelius Cardew was killed in a hit and run accident in London and
for this occassion two groups and two more individuals joined hands
to perform one of Cardew’s more interesting graphic scores.
‘Treatise’. This score, over 130 pages long, depicts lines, symbols,
circles etc, but has no traditional musical notation. Those who
perform it are free to choose by which means and how to perform it.
The French band Formanex used to play pages from ‘Treatise’ in their
concerts (see also Vital Weekly 270 and 339), so it’s common
territory for them. On this CD they perform the score together with
AMM, Cardew’ original group plus two more guests John White and
Laurent Dailleau. As far as I can judge in this line up there are at
least three guitarists, two piano players and a percussion player.
It’s hard to imagine that such a big band line up delivers such a
delicate sound with so much silence interwoven. Everybody seems to be
waiting for the others, in order to place their own little sound.
Silence plays an important role in this improvisation. There are
sudden outbursts, but they last only for a short moment. Small
sounds, derived from piano, guitar or shortwave play the main role
here. It’s almost a sacred atmosphere (if that word wouldn’t be so
wrong in view of Cardew’s leftwing politics). This version of
‘Treatise’ is a sober one, almost like a holy mass, a sacred
celebration. Great improvised music.
Abs(.)hum is the strange new name for a new duo by Christophe Havard
(of Formanex) and Charle-henry Beneteau. Together they play one
guitar, by attaching the strings to ropes, placing objects on the
strings and using motors. Seeing is believing, I guess in this sort
of thing. All three pieces here are derived from improvisations and
all three are distinctly different from eachother. ‘#7’ opens with
strings being loosely strummed but with a sort of Pan Sonic pulsating
rhythm in the background. As the piece progresses the strummings get
less and sound effect pedals take over. ‘#4’ is a more atmospheric
piece of music. It’s short and uses occassional sounds of sine waves
(derived from the guitar, I’m sure). ‘#9’ is the longest piece here
and also atmospherical, but in a much darker way. Deep, drone like
sounds, working on the overtones make a spooky atmosphere. And as
said: seeing is believing, so there is a quicktime movie enclosed, so
you can see how it looks when two men play one guitar. (FdW)
Address: http://www.fibrr.records.free.fr
NEUTRAL – CALLER ID (CD by Hymen)
Having never had the opportunity to listen to any of Neutral’s
earlier releases, I started feeling that I had missed something
important. The reviews of the debut album “Font Translation Errors”,
as well as of second full-length album “Motion” are quite convincing
in the enthusiasm about the sound of Neutral. Behind the project is
the San Francisco based sound artist Nicole Elmer, who operates in
the electronic sound field but with a frequent use of traditional
acoustic instruments and a great talent of songwriting. Stylistically
Neutral could be described as a blend between indie-legend PJ Harvey
(the vocals of the two ladies quite often sounds similar!) and the
click-pop sound of Kid606 and Mira Calix. Being the fourth release of
Neutral, “Caller id” is more like a tribute album to Neutral. Four
out of the twelve proper tracks are new material from Nicole Elmer.
The other eight tracks are interpretations of earlier Neutral most of
them created by different artists of the Ant-Zen and Hymen label. In
addition to the twelve tracks there are three interventions of
answering machine-messages that probably gave the album its title.
The four new tracks of Neutral has been woven in-between the
remix-versions, resulting in a nice change between the melancholic
and beautiful song-writing style of Nicole Elmer and the often harsh
and heavily processed interpretations. Best moments are Nicole
Elmer’s own track “Carbon Paper” as well as Gridlock’s
trance-inducing and pretty spacey interpretation of “J. doesn’t do
acid anymore” and finally the rumbling pretty nasty remix of Desire
by P.A.L. This is a very nice album both giving a small insight to
the sound of Neutral and delivering a bunch of great experimental
electronic remixes filled with the beautiful atmosphere of Neutral.
(NMP)
Address: http://www.klangstabil.com/hymen/
ERIC COOK – I WILL NOT BE ANGRY ANYMORE (CD by Simulated)
You may ask Eric Cook? Whohe? Eric was once the drummer of Gravitar
and Bantam Rooster, but he left those bands in 1998. Then he played
solo music as Persona, of which I never heard music, but apperentely
it sounded like ‘rigidly structured electronic and sample beat
collage’. Quite a break from the heavy space jams he did with
Gravitar. But both left him unsatisfied and he started playing under
his own name. On this release he has ten fragments from concerts from
2002 in California and Michigan. It’s kinda hard to tell, based upon
just hearing the CD, what Eric does now, but I assume he uses live
drumming in combination with live sampling. The various pieces have a
rhythmical element to it but it’s always hidden in atmospherical
textures of sounds and colours. I was reminded to Jason Kahn’s work,
who is also a drummer and also works with live sampling, but Cook’s
pieces are less worked out, as he will immediately admit. These
pieces are fragments, snapshots of the work in progress. Trial and
error pieces. But they are pieces that look most promising to me.
Delicate, full of tension and care for detail. It seems Eric Cook has
chosen a good direction to explore futher. (FdW)
Address: http://www.simulated.net
CASIOTONE FOR THE PAINFULLY ALONE – TWINKLE ECHO (CD by Tomlab)
Already the third CD by this funny named band Casiotone For The
Painfully Alone (see also Vital Weekly 308 and 331) aka Owen
Ashworth. Fourteen tracks in thirty minutes: this is a man of great
haste. Owen didn’t make much changes in his approach: he plays short
popsongs, to which he sings (and at that: it’s good to see lyrics
enclosed on the cover) and plays a few simple keyboards – the casio’s
mentioned in his bandname. Songs about lonelyness, lost love and all
those other sad things that can happen in life. Depressed music for
the desolated in their teens. I liked his previous two CDs and this
new CD has some nice songs again, but the critical mind in me says
that this album is interchangeable with the previous two. Maybe this
guy can make another five, or who knows: twenty, albums, but it’s
about time with the next one that something changes. Maybe add a
guitar? Maybe some more production? (FdW)
Address: http://www.tomlab.com
HEIMIR BJORGULFSSON & JONAS OHLSSON – FUR YOUR BEARS ONLY (CD by Bottrop-Boy)
With hindsight one could think: why did Heimir Bjorgulfsson and Jonas
Ohlsson a CD together in the Brombron series? A series whose
intention it is to set a meeting between artists who are not likely
to meet and work together. But little over a year after the Brombron
CD, the two come up with a new album, this time recorded in
Amsterdam. Xiamen, Los Angeles and Reykjavik – have powerbook will
travel. Heimir is of course best known as a one time member of
Stillupsteypa and through his solo releases for his own (now stopped)
Fire inc label, aswell as Ritornell and Staalplaat. Ohlsson is mainly
a visual artist who lives in Amsterdam, but if the visual arts don’t
grab him that much, he will switch on his ancient synths, which has
from his early Swedish days. Their Brombron release ‘Unspoken World
Tour’ already showed an interest in working with techno rhythms,
ancient synths and funny laptop doodlings, but they scattered into
many short tracks. Here, on their second CD, they have only eight
tracks, but they work out their interest in techno music much more
than on the first. Some of the tracks, like the opening title track,
‘My Arse Glicthes’ or ‘Give Blues Some Us’ may have done nice on 12″
for some sleazy underground art techno party, but a track like
‘Hibernate’ is well beyond me: much of it is just silence (and I
don’t think we need another CD with several minutes of silence after
Oval’s pesterings). ‘Strawberry Bearclaw’ finally closes the
proceedings in a more Heimir like way of silence, sound and his
recent interest in scratching and breakdance. This CD limps too much
(again) on two feet. Nice techno doodlings, which could have fitted
on a 12″ and some tracks that are not entirely worked out and not
very convincing. (FdW)
Address: http://www.bottrop-boy.com
MERZBOW – ANIMAL MAGNETISM (CD by Alien8 Recordings)
Some years after my purchase of the Merzbox, I found finally time
this summer to play all 50 CDs, more or less oneby one. One could say
that I have heard enough Merzbow for the rest of my life, but then
you don’t know me. Maybe a short break but then it starts all over
again. ‘Animal Magnetism’ is the first one that I picked up after the
Merzbox. Since some time, Merzbow’s Masami Akira works with computer
treatments of his noise, although this CD credits him also for
guitar. That Masami was a lover of cats, I already knew, but he seems
to be also a lover of chickens – so this album sees off and on the
return of chicken sounds, which add a remarkably strange atmosphere
to the album. Five tracks, all quite long, of relentless noise with
counterpoints where things drop – mostly the break between tracks. I
had my doubts for some of the first Merzbow laptop works. It seemed
to me that for the early works Masami didn’t master the technique
quite right, but here on this CD, things sound exactely like a top
Merzbow CD should do: loud, dirty, noisy, all over the place in terms
of dynamics. A Merzbow that is willing to innovate himself, while
maintaining his style, should go on for a long time. (FdW)
Address: http://www.alien8recordings.com
JAZZKAMMER – PULSE (CD by Bottrop-Boy)
It took me some time to get into Jazzkammer, as I wasn’t blown away
by their debut ‘Hot Action Sexy Karaoke’, but by the time they
released ‘Pancakes’, they really grabbed me. Jazzkammer is Lasse
Marhaug, one of the main players of Norwegian underground music and
John Hegre, maybe less known but who has an interesting solo CD
himself on Dekorder (see Vital Weekly 374). With the release of this
new work, it has become harder and harder to pin Jazzkammer down to
some specific musical style. The album was recorded in Singapore in
April 2003, when Jazzkammer was there with a theatre group. The music
here is only loosely inspired by that theatre piece. ‘Pulse’ is just
one piece, thirty two minutes long. The core is an almost ambient
drone like piece, to which a couple of pulses are added. When after
some six minutes the sound starts again after a brief halt, and the
sounds are the same, one could feel a bit deceived. Don’t be. The
first six minutes act like an ouverture, then the piece unfolds. It’s
stays on the minimal side of things, but over the course of the next
twenty six minutes, colours change, small events are added. These
small events might vague field recordings of summer buzzing insects
(Singapore, remember), the skipping on a record or surface noise.
These are elegantly mixed in and the piece has an ambient,
melancholic touch. It’s profoundly different from their previous
works, but it somehow makes a coherent whole. Great CD! (FdW)
Address: http://www.bottrop-boy.com
STEVE RODEN – LIGHT FORMS (MUSIC FOR LIGHT BULBS AND CHURCHES) (CD by
Semishigure)
Semishigure is the smallest label in the Bottrop-Boy imperium (next
to En-Of) and deals with music and art, or art and music. The music
can be soundtracks to films (Liam Gillicks CD) or installation music
(Christina Kubisch CD). The third and most recent CD is by Steve
Roden and is music from an installation he did in Berlin and a
concert in Saarbrucken. For the Berlin installation he uses the
sounds of lightbulb as a soundtrack to a super 8 film. Similar sound
sources are used in the Saarbrucken concert, but here it’s a studio
version of that concert (which involved random, blindfold mixing).
Both of these pieces have the subtle rumbling of a couple of
lightbulbs in both hands. The recordings are put in some multi-track
programming and mixed. A small part is looped for a couple of times.
Some parts are reversed. But mainly: that’s it. But all of these
simple things lead to a beautiful work – ambient, musical, maybe even
a bit glitch like. Since Roden’s recent work on Sonoris (see Vital
Weekly 363), I found his work to become more and more musical and
this is continued on this new CD. His older works are now, in
hindsight, more static, more ambient, and now a musical element has
come in, and his work matured overal. Another fine work. (FdW)
Address: http://www.bottrop-boy.com
FISK INDUSTRIES – THE ISLE OF WIGHT (CDEP by Highpoint Lowlife)
SI-CUT.DB – FIND SOME SHADE (CD by Highpoint Lowlife)
Two releases on a label that started life in San Francisco but now
operates from both that city aswell as London. Fisk Industries is the
name chosen by Mat Ranson out of London and this is his first
release. It has nothing to do with Jimi’s famous performance at the
Isle Of Wight a couple of years ago, but a trip Mat did to that
island, which was full of sunshine. For his six tracks, Mat takes
inspiration from a lot of bands like Isan, Boards Of Canada or Bola,
but in general I found his music less melancholic and more happy than
of those mentioned. Fisk Industries has a rather analogue approach,
which makes the music less thin/more fat and that’s nice to hear.
These tracks aren’t top musical innovation, but it’s altogether quite
an enjoyable ride along the sea shore.
Douglas Benford’s Si-Cut.db might not be unknown, for he has been
around for a while, also in these pages. His monthly Sprawl club can
be found regularly in our announcement sections. Although Douglas has
other alter-ego’s, with Si-Cut.db, he displays his love for dub
oriented music. Heavily inspired by the Chain Reaction sound, Douglas
sure knows how to add a firm dose of his own stuff. I must say that
the more uptempo dub pieces are more to my liking than the slower
ones, tracks like ‘Fortune Meadow’, ‘Stations/Return’ or the
extremely happy sounding ‘Bluster’ and ‘Reverse Self Help’. Although
this music is quite digital sounding, there is an overall sunny
warmth coming out of the speakers, via the laidback bass lines, fuzzy
noise and crispy clear production. So far, the nicest Si-Cut.db. (FdW)
Address: http://www.highpointlowlife.com
MEM – FREIBAND REMIXED IN III PARTS (CDREP by Mik Musik)
WOJT3K KUCHARCZYK – BIRDS WERE BEYOND MY CONTROL (CDR by Mik Musik)
Hot on heels of number five in the ‘Even More Special Series’ comes
number six. In this series each new volume is a remix (demix as the
cover says) of the previous volume. With more than eager ears I was
very curious to hear what Polish Mem did with the previous one, the
Freiband release. I never heard of Mem before, nor his (her?) music.
It seems to me he has taken the sounds from the second part of the
Freiband release, the more ambientesque sound approach. Mem extends
this futher, eroding the original sounds further and adding a lovely
set of crackles. Some of the Freiband original sounds are still
recognizable present, but they are in decay. Nice rework! Wondering
what is left of it when number seven comes round…
The other new release on Mik Musik is by Mik Musik founder Wojtek
Kucharczyk, who was in Miami earlier this year for the Subtropics
festival. All sixteen tracks are untitled and seem to me dealing with
field recordings Wojtek made on the spot. It’s not easy to tell what
these field recordings are exactely, because the transformations made
to them are quite intense. All of these sounds are maltraited,
disformed and changed the nature of field recordings completely. With
every track only lasting a couple of minutes (the release is just
over thirty three minutes), some of the pieces remain sketch like and
not overall convincing. But as a sketchbook of a journey it’s
certainly nice. (FdW)
Address: http://www.mik.terra.pl
IGNEOUS FLAME – TOLMON (CDR by Chillfactor 10 Records)
Another new label on the front of ambient and electronics is
Chillfactor 10 Records. One of the first releases is by one Pete
Kelly from Leeds. Other then that he creates soundtracks for
installations and for ‘exhibiting in conjunction with visual
artworks’ I know nothing about him. He works as Igneous Flame here
for his release ‘Tolmon’. This work fits very much the label’s idea
of ambient music and electronics. Each of the thirteen tracks is a
majestic flow of waving, dark atmospheric synths. Music that is best
heard late night with a few candles lit and no other light. Music
that is inspired by the entire Hypnos catalogue, aswell as Steve
Roach and Vidna Obmana. In the end it becomes not easy to see the
difference between the individual pieces and they become somewhat
interchangeable. If that is good for you then this release will help
you through winter’s darker hours. (FdW)
Address: http://www.chillfactor10.co.uk
GREG DAVIS – MORT AUX VACHES (CD by Staalplaat)
There is a website of some label which explain their demo policy by
stating that the artist should work his butt off to get his music
known, and one of the best things is to live out a lot, even when
it’s for free in a bookstore. Maybe Greg Davis took this advice and
did it. In 2002 he and his pal Keith Fullerton Whitman, aka Hvratski,
toured extensively the USA and Europe in a few months time and that
certainly helped both to gain some attention (maybe Keith more than
Greg, I don’t know). So far Greg has had a few releases on Carpark
and on his own Autumn Records, all which i must admit never heard.
But his recording session at the Dutch radio station VPRO for their
programm (and the subsequent release in Staalplaat’s Mort Aux Vaches,
by now the equivalent of John Peel’s Radio sessions, but then for a
true underground) should change my mind. Greg plays guitar on this
release and feeds the signal through his laptop, where max/msp
software is happily waiting to chop up the receiving sounds. At the
same time, Davis adds a bunch of field recordings, especially in the
seven tracks that are called ‘field’ – internal plays of bird calls,
children talking or simple water sounds. These tracks operate as
cross fade tracks between the pieces in which the guitar plays the
main role. Of course it’s Fennesz inspired music (not just the
guitar, but also the choice of a Beach Boys cover ‘At My Window’ –
the only track that features vocals, and that is not the strongest
point of Dvais), but Davis certainly adds a good dose of his own
style to the music. Warm laptop music – in case you didn’t know it
existed, here is the proof it does. There is also a point of
executing this well – touring paid off here. Davis treats his
material quite well and controls both guitar and computer well, also
in a setting of improvisation. And the cover is of course in the
usual Mort Aux Vaches style: this time made of chocolade wrapping
paper. (FdW)
Address: http://www.staalplaat.com
TANAKH (CD by Alien8 Recordings)
Tanakh is one Jesse Poe, hailing from Richmond, Virginia. His Villa
Claustrophobia opens with an aesthetic use of drone music with Indian
vocals. The singing is no less then transcendental and tingles the
spine in such a delicate way that the mind levitates to a state of
higher being. Then the surrounding sky becomes an alcohol coloured
purple, only to be rained away by the bleak and weak singing of Poe
himself (Jesse that is), accompanied by an acoustic guitar. It’s a
contrast one may recognize from Pink Floyd’s Atom Heart Mother and
Meddle, where also impressive, thickly layered psychedelic meandering
is countered with three-minute pagan folksongs. Indeed Villa
Claustrophobia could be categorized as a recently discovered ditty
from the early seventies, never before released for whatever reason
(too dark, maybe). The music is hard to pinpoint in its origin, being
refreshingly new and ancient eternal at the same time. Only minor
point is that where on aforementioned albums the musical extremes are
split to an A-side and B-side, Poe alternates both per song. Takeoff
and landing follow-up on each other in such short notice that no
destination is reached. Luckily for Poe, they do look pretty good
from a distance as well. (RT)
Address: http://www.alien8recordings.com
SAM SHALABI – OSAMA (CD by Alien8 Recordings)
Like Adolf, Osama has become a name most parents do not bless a newly
born with anymore. Sam Shalabi, known from the Middle
Eastern-influenced psychedelic outfit Shalabi Effect, does carry this
moniker from birth. But in naming his album Osama he also carries out
that this is his “protest music about arabophobia in a post 9-11
world”. Finding out his exact viewpoint is difficult and I guess the
same can be said about the music that comes to accompany. Osama is
one of those rare albums that require its content to be reviewed per
minute. Nothing can be said about it in general. Opening track The
Wherewithalll takes us on a trip that starts with authentic metal
guitars and drumbeats that resemble the African Burundi. When these
drum rhythms slowly vaporize the guitars transform into a drone. From
that point on we go from screaming to nondescript noise to industrial
metal with bare-your-tonsils-to-the-world singing to manic laughter
to spoken word to whatever. Only the reoccurring parts of distorted
guitar assure the listener that yes: this is still The Wherewithalll
we’re listening to. A focus point like that is pretty vacant on the
other four tracks. All parts seem to be glued together in no
particular order. Surprisingly, this procedure does not get tiresome
or annoying. There are enough beautiful, haunting and/or terrifying
pieces coming along to keep ones attention. I found the sequence
04:00-09:00 from end track Guantanamo Bay of a touching beauty, where
a strongly driven, epic song is buried underneath static noise. The
album Osama is rich in its texture, where – some more deeply hidden
then others – trumpet, tablas, piano, violin and even tap dancing all
have their place. But the logic of these locations is beyond me. In
the end a question mark remains above the head. And it’s a large one.
Now maybe that is how Sam Shalabi has been feeling since 9-11 all the
time…. (RT) Address: http://www.alien8recordings.com
MARTIN TETREAULT & OTOMO YOSHIHIDE – STUDIO/ANALOGIQUE/NUMERIQUE (3
mini-CD by Ambiances Magnétiques)
More splintered and fragmented sounds from this duo that we already
know from earlier work. (“21 Situations”). We find their new work
physically not on one cd but distributed on three mini-cds.
Objectively there was no reason to do so. All the music would
perfectly fit on one cd.
At the center of this triptych is the ‘Studio’cd. It is recorded live
in the studio and has Tétreault and Yoshihide playing turntables and
electronics. No reprocessing afterwards took place. After this job
was done both gentlemen split. Tétreault took the analogue road and
Yoshihide the digital one. Both used recordings that were not used
for the ‘Studio’-cd.
On ‘Analogue’ Tetréault used obsolete tape recorders and created a
flowing analogue remix, resulting in 5 short pieces. Yoshihide choses
for another approach. With the newest facilities computers have to
offer he created a heavy reconstruction, called ‘Numérique’. It that
lasts some 20 minutes. So the left and right panel of this triptych
are both soloworks.
They knead their analogue and digital soundmaterial into objects that
are hard to judge and compare. What point of reference shall I and
can I take? Is this music? The answer makes no difference. But as a
listerner I want to conquer this strange soundobject one way or
another. In order to give it some meaning, etc. But concerning this
release, I’ll try again another time. For this moment the sounds
remains sounds, although manipulated by both gentlemen in a bruitiste
way (DM).
Address: http://www.actuellecd.com/
WESTERN GRAY – GLACIAL ERRATIC (CD by Dr.Jim)
Western Gray is a trio of Sean Baxter (drums), David Brown
(electroacustic guitar) and Philip Samartzis (electrical mechanical &
environmental sound). In track 4 they are assisted by Kaffe Matthews
for additional environmental manipulation. Well, a promising line up
I would think.
And let me say this immediately, indeed, we have a very interesting cd here.
On the one hand we hear drums played by Sean Baxter and the guitar
played by David Brown. Both are very capable and original improvisers
who really communicate with each other. Besides I want to make extra
mention of the sounds that David Brown succeeds to draw from his
guitar. Very beautiful.
On the other hand we have the low range electronic sounds provided by
Samartzis.
In there acoustic and improvisatory interactions and excursions
Baxter and Brown give much room to the other participant(s), but the
interesting thing is that Samartzis does not take that much room. As
said he provides sounds in a very low range. In a modest way. Also he
does not try to accustome his playing to the typical improvisation
manners of playing of his pals. Samartzis sticks to his conventions
as do Brown and Baxter. This difference is very obvious when you
listen to this cd. So when listening to this very open and exciting
music, you start to wonder where it is that they meet? Because it is
also obvious that they do. Listen and find out! Very well done (DM).
Address: http://www.drjimsrecords.com.au/
ODRZ – ODRZO5 (CDR by Tib Prod)
Massimo Mascheroni is the guy behind ODRZ and on February 28th, 2002
he recorded 6 Italian nationwide television networks for an hour and
a few days after he processed those sounds (the audio part of it)
thus rendering the original sounds beyond recognition. An hour long
distorted sounds, that could have also come from radio, various
processed bird sounds or fifty different fridges – but it’s TV and
the idea is probably the distortion of reality or to show how dum we
get from watching TV and that communication gets thinner and thinner,
the more we watch the tube. It’s a bit unclear why this has to be an
hour. It could have been 20 minutes and it would have made exactely
the same point. Now the noise acts as a background in very much the
similar way as TV does for a lot of people. When it comes to mixed
media music pieces, I think I still prefer Cage’s Variations 4. (FdW)
Address: http://www.tibprod.com/odrz/index.htm
FICKLE – I CAN SEE THROUGH YOU YOUR DRUGS DON’T WORK (CDR by Consume)
The Scottish Consume label specializes in weird projects. Music made
by people whose name you will probably never find out. Music that is
made with samplers, turntables, cd’s and radio’s: usually a curious
combination of post rock, plunderphonics and electronics. Fickle – I
mean whohe now – works with a turntable, CD player and radio, abusing
all sorts of popmusic. With each track he mentions the musical style
he operates in: techno, ambient, prog rock, ambient, dance, rock, new
acoustic, big beat and chillout – all corners invented by the music
press to easy classify new music. An abused copy of the NME comes
with the package. These styles are probably not ment in any serious
way. ‘Decon/recon (hip hop)’ does indeed have a hip hop rhythm, but
that’s mainly through the plundered hip hop beat. ‘Locking Horns
(prog rock)’ has nothing to do with long guitar solo’s and layers of
keyboards – it’s a sampled play of sounds on a relatively cheap
keyboard (or maybe turntable). Although this release certainly has
it’s moment, I am not entirely convinced by it. There is a strong
sense of naivety in these collages, plundered together from
pre-recorded sources, but it’s rather haphazardly put together by
means of improvisations. Hmmm. (FdW)
Address: http://www.consume.freeserve.co.uk
RAPOON – EP ET VEE (3″CDR by Piehead Records)
After a whole bunch of lesser known musicians, Piehead now embarks on
the more known ones for the remainder of their eleven mini CD set.
Rapoon, might be equally well-known as Mark Spybey (see Vital Weekly
386), we learn from the press release, went back to university in
2002 to study for Masters degree in music technology and in 2002-2003
he is already a teacher at the Newcastle University. The music on
this mini CD formed part of a compositional assignment for the
masters degree. More and more Rapoon went to using computers and
software on his more recent release, but now he’s obvious about, even
stating which software he is using (Audio Mulch, in case anyone wants
to know). It’s quite interesting to hear this new piece as Rapoon may
have updated his technology, but still remains within his usual
musical interests: loopy sounds swirling around drony textures. This
one-piece is a normal, good Rapoon piece, which, maybe sadly, doesn’t
add much news to his already vast catalogue – even when the
technology is updated. But nevertheless a nice piece. (FdW)
Address: http://www.pieheadrecords.com
TORE HONORE BOE & FRIENDS – SERUM RECYCLED (2CDR by Hacienda)
TORE HONORE BOE – BEAUTIFUL MOMENTS IN FOUR MINUTES (5″ by Like A/An
Everflowing Stream)
Back in Vital Weekly 265 we reviewed a strange 10″ release by Tore
Honore Boe, a record with no sleeve, not even an inner sleeve, and
with hardly any sound captured in the grooves. The whole idea was
that the postal system would scratch the copy before it would be
delivered and everybody has an unique copy. Of course, these things
call for a remix project. Now that is available, though not
officially released, as a double CDR on Boe’s own label. Here the
remixes are either people working with ‘just’ the sounds delivered on
the vinyl or people who use this record in their DJ set. Included are
people I never heard of like Jan Bang, Scientifically Speaking with
Irene Moon, The Noisettes, Snail, Courage, LCA but also people like
Ronnie Sundin, Lasse Marhaug, Francisco Lopez, Freek Kinkelaar and
Kapotte Muziek are included here. Overall it’s a release that is on
the noiser side of things, as one can imagine with the raw, static
crackles as their input. I must say I like those who (seem) to work
with just the given material and do not add their own thing. Those
who really go ‘inside’ as it is and discover the various
possibilities. As I understood this release is available, but it’s
also open for anyone to release it, so grab y’r chance.
In the meantime, Tore also releases a 5″ lathe cut record, with two
pieces for unprepared piano. On ‘2.02 (Opus For Naked Piano +
Traffic)’ one may recognize the sounds of strings being rubbed and on
the ‘2.02 (Opus For Warm Piano + Ebow)’ there are hints of an e-bow
playing the strings – but both tracks have some computer treatments,
which render the original beyond recognition. A strange little
record. (FdW)
Address: http://www.kunst.no/origami/lala
Address: <markus_on_pain@yahoo.de>
ACID MOTHERS TEMPLE & THE MELTING PARAISO U.F.O. – ELECTRIC HEAVYLAND
(CD by Alien8 Recordings)
Tokyo, Japan’s Acid Mothers Temple (AMT) has been taking the
underground by storm. This collective based around Kawabata Makoto
explores psychedelic rock, space rock, krautrock and the lesser to
unknown areas in between. With their cover art they flirt with famous
sixties psychedelic images, like Frank Zappa’s distorted colour
photography on the Freak Out album. That’s no coincidence as AMT has
the same open-mindedness about creating music, and, also very much
like Zappa in especially that period, let feel rule over technical
skill. Compared to other titles in the AMT catalogue, Electric
Heavyland sounds quite conventional. Three lengthy tracks that all
consist out of full-speed ahead groove driven guitar noise, with
which AMT touches stoner, doom metal, grind and industrial. Now he
who thinks being into these kinds of music should think again. AMT
stays a psychedelic band through and through by experimenting heavily
with sound effects. The album is mixed like it has been recorded in a
large chapel. The sounds seem to come from everywhere, echoing to all
sides. This causes the music to be an everlasting pandemonium of
drone at first, making it very hard to get into. Closer listens do
reveal structure and thought-over patterns, though. An intriguing way
to get yourself a throbbing headache, this one by AMT. Non-initiated
do well to check out the family compilation’ Do Whatever You Want,
Don’t Do Whatever You Don’t Want!! first (by Earworm Records, check
http://www.earwormrecords.com). A 3CDBoxset with recordings by the
band and solo material from its members that gives a comprehendible
impression of what it can be all about. Even oriental traditional
music finds a place in there. Recommended. (RT)
Address: http://www.alien8recordings.com
DRONE DEVIL (CDR by Ecstatic Zombie Recordings)
‘File under: gothic lowercase sound’ it is written on the inside of
the cover. Gothic lowercase: if it wasn’t invented, somebody should
do it. Like ‘reggea metal’ or ‘happy industrial’ – there is a niche
for it, I’m sure. Leaving all the sillyness behind, this is actually
quite nice. I didn’t hear the music of Jorge Mantas before (I
believe, I have to be careful here), but the deep ambient music of
the opening piece ‘Soundfaust’ which is made with computer
processings of what ever input is hardly much gothic to me. The death
metal of ‘Kiss Gently My Holocaust’ doesn’t count either as lowercase
nor as gothic and is an exception among these tracks. The gothicness
of the music would come in; the gothic-ness lies more in the use of
images and titles used (‘Sensual Zombification Of The Soul’ anyone?)
and not so much in the music. I’d say this is nicely made ambient
industrial along the lines of Troum in a less raw state than that.
All the genres… (FdW)
Address: <larvae667@yahoo.com>
CHRISTOF MIGONE – SOUTH WINDS (CD by Oral)
Christof Migone hails from Montreal and has released a great deal of
work on various labels, including his own label, Squint Fucker Press.
Many of his CDs have a strong conceptual edge to it. For his CD
‘Crackers’ he recorded the sound of cracking knuckles, knees, wrists
etc and made music out of this sound. On his new CD he works with the
sounds of farts, a work Migone undertook by using Le Petomane, a
creation by Joseph Pujol (1857-1945) – how they meet up is on of this
CD’s mysteries. The title of the CD refers to Marseille, birthplace
of both Pujol and Antonin Artaud, which is the path of the mistral,
the wind coming from the Alpes going to sea, and which is said to be
a terrible wind. Terrible wind? Catch my drift? The sound of farts
was regarded as something funny, and maybe still is, even when it’s
imitated by instruments. Let’s say that Migone recorded a whole bunch
of farts and created this CD out of it. Like usually with this sort
of things, if you don’t know this, you wouldn’t probably notice it.
Maybe it sounds like another bunch of synthesizers. Migone however
knows how to create an intelligent set of compositions with such
limited sound material. For the better part of this CD are
compositions that would appeal to a click and cut crowd (if anyone
remembers what clicks and cuts are), but this material takes the
whole idea just a few steps further. It works with clicks but Migone
is not interested in dance music at all. His rhythms move along lines
that are not really symmetrical. That makes this CD into a
captivating one, with or without the concept of farts. (FdW)
Address: http://www.oral.qc.ca
GREG KINGSTON & WILL GUTHRIE – HILLS HOIST (3″CDR by Antboy)
Two improvisers from Australia in duet. There is Greg Kingston on
guitar and toys. He suffers from Tourette’s Syndrome and once
learning to cope with that, he went on to use it to his advantage as
an improviser. He teams up with drummer/percussionist Will Guthrie,
who plays with his own band Antboy. Both players use beside their
instruments home made instruments, found and junk stuff, including
shortwave radio. Apperentely the place were this was recorded didn’t
have a great amplification, but nothing such can be heard here. It’s
a very vivid recording of scrapping sounds, distorted shortwaves and
hectic improvised playing. Even in its quiet moments, this music is
loaded with held-back aggression and waiting energy to explode. Great
stuff. (FdW)
Address: http://www.antboymusic.com