вторник, 4 ноября 2008 г.

Connexion Bizarre News

 

Connexion Bizarre

Greetings,

Connexion Bizarre was updated on November 3rd, 2008 with quite a bit of new content. A new compilation release, an interview with Thomas P. of Le Diktat, several new reviews, webcasts, the final instalment of "Business Traveller" and recommended links. A quick overview of this week's updates:

Webcast: "Russian Force 3" with music selection by DJ Jana Dark and "20081103-1109" with music selection by M.
Releases: Various - You Are Here: a Compilation of Massachusetts Electronics (vol.2)
Reviews: Le Diktat
Reviews: Mind Necrosis Factor "Morphogenesis", "Fabriksampler v2", Baxter Lilly "Unsichtbare Flecken", [:SITD:] "Bestie:Mensch", Accomplice Affair "Jezioro Wspomnien"
Media: the final installments of Business Traveller
Store: be the envy of your peers by getting a set of exclusive Connexion Bizarre badges!

All the best,
Connexion Bizarre
(www.connexionbizarre.net)




Webcast & Radio Show


Part 1 - Click here to stream or right-click to download
("Russian Force 3" with music selection by DJ Jana Dark)
Flint Glass - Connexion Bizarre Webcast identifier
[exclusive]
Fizzarum - Phut of Plex (4:00)
[Monochrome Plural - Domino]
First Human Ferro - Hollow Shells Of Light (05:26)
[Guernica Macrocosmica - Eibon Records]
Industrialnyi Peisage - Holodno (02:25)
[Osvobojdenija net - Self -Release]
Error - Novosibirsk (05:44)
[Unreleased]
Protuberanzed - Stealth Tech (03:58)
[Doomsday Machine - Absetzer]
Virt - Funeral Procession (03:36)
[Clamour (heat station variation's) - Selfrelease]
T_error 404 - Hellth (Damage) (06:14)
[False Level - Absetzer]
Liquid Date - Strange Final (04:33)
[Unreleased]
Sy9 - Spirits (09:07)
[Senses - NBKLine]
Vertical Axis - Sto Let Odinochestva (04:20)
[Dirty Sound - Unreleased]

Part 2 - Click here to stream or right-click to download
("20081103-1109" with music selection by M.)
Flint Glass - Connexion Bizarre Webcast identifier
[exclusive]
Von Magnet - Mann Hinter Der Vorhang
[Ni Prédateur Ni Proie - Ant-Zen]
Contagious Orgasm + Kotodama - a Girl in Chaos
[Blackout - SSSM]
Orphx - Noontide
[Teletai - Hands Productions]
Autoclav1.1 - All For You
[Love No Longer Lives Here - Tympanik Audio]
Ah Cama-Sotz - Isfahan
[Declaration Of Innocence - Bats & Cats]
Totakeke - Strangle(_D)
[Forgotten On The Other Side Of The Tracks - Tympanik Audio]
GenCAB - Let It Be
[II transMuter - Hive Records]
Manufactura - The Failure Of The Heart
[Psychogenic Fugue - Crunch Pod]
Perfection Plastic - Hard Times
[Triomphe de la Matière - Force Of Nature]
Überbyte - 135335
[[SIC] - Crunch Pod]

Listen to the Webcast

Subscribe the Webcast - http://feeds.feedburner.com/connexionbizarre

Connexion Bizarre radio show @ Radio Zero
The Connexion Bizarre radio show can be streamed every Friday at 23:00 GMT and Wednesdays at 10:00 GMT from Radio Zero.


Releases

Various - You Are Here: a Compilation of Massachusetts Electronics (vol.2)
Free online release showcasing a variety of musical talent from the underground electronic music scene of the US state of Massachusetts. Compiled by Massachusetts-based artist David Dodson alias Deftly-D. Volume 2 of 2.
Read more


Interviews

Thomas P. - Le Diktat
Nourished with references from the spheres of music (industrial, hip-hop, ambient, noise), politics and visual arts, the politically-charged music of French duo Le Diktat is once again in the spotlight with the release of a second album, inspired by the neo-Luddite movement and the life of American terrorist Theodore Kaczinski.
Read more


Reviews

Mind Necrosis Factor - Morphogenesis
"Morphogenesis" is a technical term used by biologists to describe the set up of a lifeform's structure, the beginning of its arrangement. Through this record, Pierrick Coupé wanted to recreate a similar process to combine lots of various elements into a coherent whole - and did so very succesfully.
Read more

V/A - Fabriksampler v2
It is rare to find a compilation like this, one that flows so seamlessly and sounds so organic and coherent, gently but effortlessly grabbing the listener's attention from the beginning without any degree of intrusiveness - effectively going beyond the basic premise of a label sampler.
Read more

Baxter Lilly - Unsichtbare Flecken
Despite initial misgivings, Baxter Lilly tends to ingratiate itself with repeated listening, eventually becoming a welcome change of pace. Sadly, in today's disposal society, even in the underground fringes thereof, your average consumer may not be willing to devote the required time and effort to the album to discover its finer points.
Read more

[:SITD:] - Bestie:Mensch
Overall, Bestie:Mensch is a very strong Electro record that not only shows purpose and progress for an already fantastic band, but should also lure in many new listeners as word gets out about this album.
Read more

Accomplice Affair - Jezioro Wspomnien
In summation, Accomplice Affair is the Michael Bolton of dark ambient, the sonic equivalent of British food, like lukewarm softcore porn. Indistinctive grub is better than starving, however, and softcore will do the job on cold winter nights.
Read more


Media

Carlos Ferrão - Business Traveller
Final chapter of the suspense/bizarro fiction series "Business Traveller".
Read more


Store

Connexion Bizarre Pins
State your indivuality and rhythmical reverberation with this set of five one-inch Connexion Bizarre buttons! One featuring the main C.B. logo, three featuring the alternative mascots/logos and one featuring the Connexion Bizarre "reverberate rhythmically" motto.
Price: 6.00 Euro (worldwide shipping included)
Read more


Links

Recently added
Prometheus Burning
Sonic Squirrel, netlabel resource

Recommended
Winter Hands 2008, Canadian-based Hands Productions mini-festival
Rock, Paper, Scissors - How We Used To Vote (New Yorker)
Why White Supremacists Support Barack Obama (Esquire)

Vital Weekly 651

Vital Weekly, the webcast: we offer a free-to-download weekly webcast as the
audio-supplement to Vital Weekly. Presented as a radio programme with
excerpts from some of the CDs reviewed here (no vinyl or MP3s). It is
available on the site for a limited period of 5 weeks. Download the file to
your MP3 player and enjoy!
Complete track listing here: http://www.vitalweekly.net/podcast.html

Before submitting material please read this carefully:
http://www.vitalweekly.net/fga.html
Submitting material means you agree with these terms.


* noted are in this week's pod-cast


KASPER VAN HOEK - A LIGHT YEAR OF SUNDAYS (CD by Heilskabaal Records) *
RAFAEL TORAL - SPACE ELEMENTS VOL. 1 (CD by Staubgold) *
ART OF ORYX - FIRST BOOK OF SOUND - (CD by Berlin Moves)
BERNARD GAL - RELIVE (CD by Gromoga Records) *
DJ OLIVE - TRIAGE (CD by Room40) *
ROBBIE AVENAIM - RHYTHMIC MOVEMENT DISORDER (CD by Room40) *
DAMN - FRESTILL SAMPLERIN #1 (2CD compilation by Chmafu Nocords) *
MZK #001 (CD by Moozak)
SOCCER COMMITTE & MACHINEFABRIEK - DRAWN (CD by Digitalis Industries) *
MACHINEFABRIEK - RUSLAND (3"CDR by Machinefabriek)
MACHINEFABRIEK - HUISWERK (7" by Ketchup Cavern)
OCEANA COMPANY - FOR THE BOATMAN (CD by Spacejam Records)
ANNELIES MONSERE - SOMEWHERE SOMEONE (7" by Morc Records) *
THE RETAIL SECTORS - MARCH OF INCURABLE WORKAHOLIC/SONG ABOUT A GIRL WHO
KILLED HERSELF YESTERDAY (8" lathe cut by Distraction Records) *
A SPIRALE - GARIGA (CDR by Setola Di Matale) * *
FROM THE WHITE CHIMNEYS - NAUTILUS WITH WINGS (CDR by Mystery Sea)
1000SCHOEN - AMISH GLAMOUR (MUSIC FOR THE SIXTH SENSE) (CDR by Luciol
Editions) *
HORCHATA VS SIL MUIR (3"CDR by Taalem)
CORDELL KLIER - PHONO 4 (3"CDR by Taalem)
VOX POPULI! - SOFT ENTRANCE TO NATURE'S CAMINO DE LUZ (3"CDR by Taalem)
THE DEAR LISTENERS - APPROACH (3"CDR by Dear Listeners) *
NORMAL - STORM (MP3 by Just Not Normal)
DANADAX -DAXSCAPES II (MP3 by Just Not Normal)
DUST - SIX (MP3 by Just Not Normal)


KASPER VAN HOEK - A LIGHT YEAR OF SUNDAYS (CD by Heilskabaal Records)
Recently I saw a performance by Kasper van Hoek in collaboration with some
video guy, whose name right now eludes me. Van Hoek 'played' an old stencil
machine and some direct processing. Nice, but a bit sketchy if he'd asked
me, which he didn't. Not enough 'composition' and too much 'improvisation'.
Whereas from his releases so far we know he can do a real good thing. His
'Minerva' LP and 'Den Haag/Groningen/Froombosch' CDR were highlights so far.
'Minerva' can be regarded as a best of LP from the period he spend in
art-school (2004-2006) and this new release, his first real full length CD
'A Light Year Of Sundays' is a best of from the period 2006-2008, and it may
not be a surprise that it includes two pieces from the aforementioned CDR. I
like that. Release CDRs as a more raw edged work and then a real CD with the
best material. A bit like Machinefabriek did. Ok, so the music, what is it?
The eight pieces here are a far cry from his LP, which was based on crude
electronics, worn
out
tape-loops and other broken machinery. The computer has taken over the role
of the analogue equipment and this results in music that is much 'softer'
and more delicately constructed than his early work. Perhaps micro-sound is
an appropriate term for his music. Van Hoek uses drones as the ground
pattern of his compositions to which he adds highly processed field
recordings, or sounds in action. The latter is a bit hard to trace back into
this music. This all culminates in a rather beautiful final piece, which is
a radical deconstruction of the rock band Sexton Creeps. Here too the drone
persists, but various 'band' elements are cleverly mixed in. Van Hoek knows
how to create a composition that is not the culmination of loose sound
events, but builds a strong, intense collage of sound, which is very nice to
hear. Points of reference are Machinefabriek (but without the extensive use
of guitar sounds) and even more to Roel Meelkop. This is a great CD, very
well be a best of, from what I
can judge. The only thing to complain about is the total absence of track
titles and information about the pieces. Great print-work though! (FdW)
Address: http://www.heilskabaal.net

RAFAEL TORAL - SPACE ELEMENTS VOL. 1 (CD by Staubgold)
Jazz, according to Rafael Toral, is 'a system of individual decision-making
from the standpoint of free-spectrum live electronics', and since releasing
'Space' (see Vital Weekly 542), Total plays his own, and I must add, his own
radical version of electronic jazz. On custom built electronic devices that
is. So not a merge of electronics and jazz, but jazz on electronic devices.
As announced back then, it was part of 'space elements', in which he would
play with others, but 'Space' was a solo record. Here however we get the
first volume of 'Space Elements', which also sees players as Rute Praca
(cello), Margarita Garcia (electric double bass), David Toop (flute) and Sei
Miguel (pocket trumpet). They don't all appear together, but in various
combinations, always along Toral's 'glove controlled computer sinewaves,
ribbon-controlled sinewave bursts, modified MT-10 amplifier, analog modular
synthesizer, delayed and filtered feedback empty circuit and amplified coil
spring' - quite a
mouthful. I am still not a lover of jazz, and prefer to make individual
decisions on perhaps a totally different level, but the musical ground that
is covered here is quite nice. The electronics sound utterly 'dry', i.e.
without sound effects, computer plug ins or such like, while the other
instruments restrict themselves to play also dry, clean and short sounds.
This is indeed 'free' music, where each player makes his own decision, and
as such its perhaps 'jazz', and again perhaps Toral's own term 'post-free
jazz electronic music' covers the entire ground. Its music that goes without
much precedent of the past, and surely marks something new. That by itself
is a great effort, but the results are nice also! (FdW)
Address: http://www.staubgold.com

ART OF ORYX - FIRST BOOK OF SOUND - (CD by Berlin Moves)
Art of Oryx is a Berlin-based quintet of Christoph Titz (trumpet,
flugelhorn), Frank Sackenheim (saxophones), Thomas Büchel (guitar,
electronics), Willem van Dijk (vocals, acoustic bass, electronics) and Jonas
Burgwinkel (drums). It is mainly a project of Büchel and Van Dijk, who both
also founded Berlin Moves, a new recordlabel and distribution channel.
The group was founded in 2000 by Dutch musician Willem van Dijk who met in
Germany the musicians with whom he could realize his musical ideas. A first
and second CD were released in 2001 and 2003. They played jazz music in
these days. Their newest CD needed more time in finding its definite shape.
Again it is jazzmusic but also a lot more. First recordings for this cd were
done in 2006. These recordings were however treated in the studio by Büchel
and van Dijk. New recordings, environmental sounds, etc. were added and
shaped endlessly until a fluid whole came into being, an intriguing mix of
jazz and popmusic. They surely did a tasteful and delicate job, resulting in
a mature and full-grown piece of work.
Van Dijk wrote all the music and also the texts. Most of them are sung by
him. For the lyrics he was inspired by the dutch riverlandscape intermingled
with childhood memories. Guest vocalist Iris Romen does a great job in some
of the songs on this album, like in 'Harbour'. A song that refused to leave
my ears and is still echoing in my mind. A conventional song in fact and
very catchy, but dressed in lots of unusual and uncomfortable sounds. In the
way they treat their material it moves at times towards a radioplay with a
strong evocating power. In this respect their work has some resemblance with
the work of Heiner Goebbels and Alfred Harth. Also their music is sometimes
close to Robert Wyatt (listen to 'The Village and the Sea') and the musical
universe we know from Chris Cutlers' Recommended Records family. Themselves
they describe their music as alternative, electro-acoustic jazz.
Although they experiment a lot on this cd, and a lot is happening, like in
'Jannowitzbrücke' where groupplaying is followed by passages of pure sound,
the overall feeling is that of a warm, harmonic and melodic music of
international allure. (DM)
Address: http://www.berlin-moves.com

BERNARD GAL - RELIVE (CD by Gromoga Records)
For whatever reason I am not sure of, the work of Bernard Gal was never much
reviewed in these pages, despite his past seven releases, a book and a DVD.
Its perhaps a name you see more in the announcement section. Since 2002, he
has played over 150 concerts on four continents, armed with his laptop and
devices, and through a mixture of on the spot improvisation and through the
use of pre-recorded sounds from his previous work (audio, installations), he
plays almost every night something new, it seems. So its perhaps a more than
wise decision to release an album of various piece, as recorded in concert.
The press texts gives a detailed description of each of the eight pieces,
and its a pity that this is not on the cover, as it is a pretty interest
read. The sounds he uses, the spaces he played in, and, in some cases, the
people has played with (pianist Xenia Hu, Guzhengplayer Yeh Jiuan-Reng and
the voices of Many, Marianthi and Vivian). Gal's selection of his concert
recordings is a
great one - at least as far as I can judge, as I never saw him play live.
Its almost possible to say that these are hardly 'live' pieces at all. They
make a coherent whole. Gal shows himself an excellent player on the
microsound scene, taking bits of his work and presenting new contexts for
them. The spaces play a role in his work in as far that when the audience is
super quiet, he is super quiet too, such as in the near silent
'Schulterblatt'. Things buzz, hum, crack in a highly intelligent way and
never leaps into boredom, despite the ominous length of this release. A very
fine release altogether. (FdW)
Address: http://www.gromoga.com

DJ OLIVE - TRIAGE (CD by Room40)
ROBBIE AVENAIM - RHYTHMIC MOVEMENT DISORDER (CD by Room40)
'Triage' is the third CD by DJ Olive for Room40, and its also the third
'sleeping pill', which are 'designed to create a deeply enveloping
environment in which the listener becomes engulfed in an audio tint'. I
missed out on the first one, 'Buoy' from 2004, but 'Sleep' was reviewed in
Vital Weekly 527. Again we are presented with an hour of high quality
ambient music, and much what I wrote last week about Steinbruchel's 'Home'
applies here too: I think music in general should be listened to when fully
awake, or perhaps even in a state of being under the influence, but when
it's nightie night, its silent. I for one would have a hard time falling
asleep. So for me, I can only judge this music of DJ Olive in terms of being
awake. It seems that throughout this new one is a bit darker than the
previous record, but when you play it 'soft', as recommended by DJ Olive
himself, you wouldn't notice these darker undercurrents as such very much.
Built from field recordings, instruments and lots
of computer editing which make things occasional quite dense, this is quite
a nice release.
Something entirely different is the release by Robbie Avenaim. He's been
active in improvised music as a percussion player since the late 80s, and
has played with Otomo Yoshihide, Keith Rowe and Oren Ambarchi, but oddly
enough, this 'Rhythmic Movement Disorder' is his first solo release. Other
than with his 'usual' work, which all finds its roots in improvised music,
this new release is highly composed. Maybe at its origins lie the improvised
playing, but its then edited on the computer to create something that is no
doubt more linked to electro-acoustic composition than to improvisation.
'Headbanging', the opening piece, sounds occasionally like gamelan, like
early computer music, and like Ikeda's sinewaves, but has a great vibrancy
to it. Things bounce, shift and phase to all four corners of the world. In
'Headrolling' the rhythmic playing has become very dense and its almost like
a piece of ambient music - but in a very direct manner. 'Bodyrocking' is a
more introspective piece of
music and perhaps a bit more traditional percussion music. The longest piece
is the final 'Bodyrolling', which is the culmination of all of these things.
At just under twenty-nine minutes this is quite a short CD, and I have the
feeling there would have been easily room for another piece, or even two.
This is an excellent release! (FdW)
Address: http://www.room40.org

DARKROOM - SOME OF THESE NUMBERS MEAN SOMETHING (CD by Burning Shed)
Micheal Bearpark (electric guitars, pedals, loops, feedback, acoustic
guitar, bass) just returned from touring with No-man (a side project of Bass
Communion and Porcupine Tree) is together with Andrew Ostler (synthesizers,
programming) and Andrew Booker on drum Darkroom, a project in which the
guitar plays the all dominant role. Burning Shed calls this 'ambient stadium
rock', which I though was very funny, but once I played the album, I thought
it was also an appropriate term. Crazy as it may sound. Darkroom seem to
combine all things guitar from all decades of popular music. Shoegazing,
cosmic music, The Shadows, and post rock. Just to name a few. The guitar
swells and swells, held together by crazy electronics and pounding drums. I
can picture them in a stadium and 'The Valley Of Ten Thousand Smokes', the
start of the CD, could be a great opening tune for the show. A 4/4 rhythm
and lots of sustaining guitar sounds. Lengthy krauty exercusions in music,
that sound by all means
'retro'. Music to be played loud, which seems also a bit odd for an ambient
production, but this can have it. Its all a bit much this one, no matter how
much I like it, its simply a bit too much. Perhaps in that stadium I would
think otherwise, but here at home I thought half of this would have been
great. Think F/i or Vocokesh on a more ambient trip. (FdW)
Address: http://www.burningshed.com

DAMN - FRESTILL SAMPLERIN #1 (2CD compilation by Chmafu Nocords)
In the early, very early years of Vital, when it was written on paper, we
wanted to have a survey on why women were not involved in experimental music
to the same extent as men. Without much luck. These days the situation is
improved - see Olivia Block, Andrea Neuman, Annette Krebs, to mention a
few - but it is still not a 50-50 situation (and then we could start a
discussion about racial backgrounds of composers, of course). One Hannes
Schweiger, percussion player and journalist, started searching for female
composers and asked them for a composition. Eleven of these are collected on
this double CD, and, hurrah, they are all new names to be added to the small
list. I have no idea how he did his research, but he found them. Angelica
Castello, Cordula Bosze, Manon Liu Winter, Katharina Klement, Petra Stump,
Elisabeth Flunger, Maria Frodl, Carla Kihlstedt, Susanna Gartmayer, Judith
Unterpertinger and Ilse Riedler. From what I gather, purely based on
listening to this double CD, is that
they all studied at the conservatorium and they all present pieces of
'serious' avant-garde music, and some ties to the world of jazz. Ilse
Riedler's piece is to be found there, but its traditional jazz for me and
Gartmayer and Stump too freaky. However most of the other pieces are quite
nice, such as the broken plates piece by Manon Liu Winter, the solo violin
cello piece by Frodl, Klement's modern classical piano piece, or the flute
and electronic piece by Cordula Bosze. Best pieces were an entirely
electronic piece by Castello and the voices of Kihlstedt, which could easily
be edited into a horror movie about monks going mad. A great release this
one, exciting and great music, a true adventure to explore new names. (FdW)
Address: http://nocords.net

MZK #001 (CD by Moozak)
New from Vienna, where things always remain busy it seems, comes a new label
Moozak, which is an extension from the Klub Moozak, held each month at Fluc
since september 2007. All of the twelve participants played there, and no
less then eleven are new, which once again proofs the electronic and
experimental is so much bigger than one can possibly imagine. The majority
of the artists featured here operate at the more noise based ends of music.
Not necessarily the over the top end of noise, but things here are pretty
loud and present. it moves between tape manipulations of Rinus van Alebeek
(the only name I recognized) and Gedi, to the more digital surroundings of
fAbia and Griefer and the darker side of ambient of Taos Hum. Griefer also
brings rhythm to the outburst, just like Lamanidayz. At the beginning and
the end there are two more quieter counterpoints, and me thinks the best
tracks: Strangelets microsound ambient glitch and the harmonic textured,
almost orchestral ambient of
Dirac. Not every moment is great, such as the luckily short CD skippings by
Analogset, and some are quite long (basically all four pieces that last nine
minutes), but this compilation offers a nice view of live experimental
music - if you run a stage and if your looking for new acts to book, then
this is surely a good guide. (FdW)
Address: http://www.moozak.org

SOCCER COMMITTE & MACHINEFABRIEK - DRAWN (CD by Digitalis Industries)
MACHINEFABRIEK - RUSLAND (3"CDR by Machinefabriek)
MACHINEFABRIEK - HUISWERK (7" by Ketchup Cavern)
It seems to be a bit more quiet on the Machinefabriek front, but once you
think so, three releases appear. The first one I thought was disappointing
when it turned out to be so short (twenty-four minutes), but then I learned
it is also released on LP (by Morc Records from Belgium), which then makes
more sense I guess. 'Drawn' is a collaboration between Rutger Zuydervelt and
Mariska Baars, who is better known as Soccer Committee. I saw Mariska
playing once (although she's going to be around this week here locally!) and
it blew me away. Imagine Oren Ambarchi, the same sparseness but then with,
likewise sparse vocals. This is what the two do here too: Mariska's songs
are the fundament of the music. Slow, very slow guitar notes, a few words,
lots of silence. Zuydervelt adds his own fine blend of delicate sound
processing to the dinner table, adding some sparse extra sounds on
'instruments' and computer, all in his trademark style of cracks, pops and
subtle drones. Very quiet music, but
quite intense at the same time. Lullabies for the new dark ages - had that
not be already used by someone else.
Recently Machinefabriek played in Russia four concerts as part of the Dutch
Punch festival. Everything was duly recorded, but not released as such. The
3"CDR 'Rusland' is an extensive re-edit of all the concerts plus some
additional home recording. The guitar plays the all important role here,
like in more of Machinefabriek's recent work Soft tinkling, with slowly
enveloping pedal work. On top there is a bit of cracks and pops and with
sparsely orchestrated field recordings. A thoroughly relaxing piece of
music, but one in which there is more sound than in 'Drawn'. Nice release
and on the website there is another twenty-five minute piece waiting for
you.
The final new release is a 7" on Ketchup Cavern, which is also limited
available as a 3"CDR by Machinefabriek himself. Two, four minute pieces of
music. Its nice to see Rutger doing something that is limited through time
and making things a bit more songlike. It adds a nice freshness to his known
sound palette, a bit more open than the more closed 'Rusland' (for example)
and has a playful character. Guitars tinkle, a drone comes in, the guitar
tinkles further. Maybe he should work on an album with more of these shorter
pieces. Knowing Zuydervelt a bit, I'm sure its already made. (FdW)
Address: http://www.digitalisindustries.com
Address: http://www.machinefabriek.nu
Address: http://www.ketchupcavern.com

OCEANA COMPANY - FOR THE BOATMAN (CD by Spacejam Records)
"You know, it might be a wise thing to send a copy of your CD to a guy close
by, in Nijmegen. He does something that is called Vital Weekly. I have no
clue what it is, other than he reviews music and I believe of some
alternative sort, so why not send a copy of 'For The Boatman' by your band
Oceana Company to him. You know, sounding like Motorpsycho, Porcupine Tree,
Q.O.T.S.A. and Anathema, is surely alternative enough to be part of such a
publication? If you write him that psychedelic, stoner rock, prog rock and
indie music have never been before connected so well, in The Netherlands of
course, then you are bound to get a review. Just do."
"Thanks mate, CD on its way."
Address: http://www.spacejamrecords.com

ANNELIES MONSERE - SOMEWHERE SOMEONE (7" by Morc Records)
In Vital Weekly 622 I reviewed a CD-EP by Jessica Bailif and Annelies
Monsere, of high quality minimal songwriting. Monsere returns here with no
less than six songs which she recently recorded, using a hammond organ, a
bit of percussion and her own voice. Short songs - the title track, just
under three minutes being the longest. Its perhaps very easy to think of
poor old Nico when you hear these songs. Not with the same intense voice,
but of equal minimalist beauty. Monsere plays folk like songs, short and
sweet. Intense but in a different way. Not a note too many, just the right
amount, in every aspect. Great stuff. (FdW)
Address: http://www.morctapes.com

THE RETAIL SECTORS - MARCH OF INCURABLE WORKAHOLIC/SONG ABOUT A GIRL WHO
KILLED HERSELF YESTERDAY (8" lathe cut by Distraction Records)
Kentaro Togawa is a busy man: responsible for the nice Symbolic Interaction
label and a musician himself under the banner of The Retail Sectors. The
guitar is his main instruments, along with some pedals and sampled drums. He
has had a couple of releases on his own label, and here comes with two
pieces on plastic, erm, lathe cut. The a-side starts with heavy guitars and
heavy drums, whereas the b-side has a slightly longer quiet intro, before
drums burst in. Togawa calls his music post post post rock and that is
clearly shown in these two pieces. An interest in minimal music - the
repeated quick guitar loops - and in rock music - the heavy pounding drums.
It may seem a curious marriage of two outer limits of music, but it works
well. In the past I have not been always too enthusiastic about The Retail
Sectors, but when it comes served in such a small dose, its more than
welcome. (FdW)
Address: http://www.distractionrecords.com

A SPIRALE - GARIGA (CDR by Setola Di Matale)
Sometimes a press text presents an endless stream of names of which one has
never heard, which hardly makes much sense. Therefore I can hardly reproduce
what I read about A Spirale, but it seems to be a trio from Italy with
Maurizio Argenziano on 'corde ed elettricita', Mario Gabola on 'sax alto'
and Massimo Spezzaferro on 'batteria' - drums, guitar and saxophone.
Sometimes they play with other people, hence the big list. Here however its
just a trio. Six pieces of improvised music, carefully played, lots of
silence, lots of instrument treatments, other than regular playing. Quite
nice, but also quite regular in their approach to the 'new silent
improvisation'. Electro-acoustic improvisation, with an occasional
traditional approach in playing their instruments. Index points, or rather
separate track titles seem only to be there for the comfort of the listener,
but it might very well be one session. Nice, but not great, but well
executed altogether. (FdW)
Address: http://www.a-spirale.blogspot.com

FROM THE WHITE CHIMNEYS - NAUTILUS WITH WINGS (CDR by Mystery Sea)
The name From The White Chimneys appear to be a new one, but the names
behind are well-known, as its the collaboration between Danny Kretutzfeldt
and Ben Fleury-Steiner, both of whom are active as hell, releasing lots and
lots of material on CDRs around the world. I believe this is their first
work together and the three pieces are all what they are about in their
(recent) solo work, as well what the label stands for. The mighty deeper and
darker atmospherics in life. I have no idea what they use here (field
recordings? electronics? software synthesizers? pure effects? or perhaps a
combination of all of this?), but the three heavy weight pieces are quite
nice. Trademark stuff of this kind of music. Nothing new or spectacular, but
executed with great care and style. Shimmering melodies, the sinking of a
ship, the sea waves rolling. Great late night music. Unnerving and relaxing
at the same time. (FdW)
Address: http://www.mysterysea.net

1000SCHOEN - AMISH GLAMOUR (MUSIC FOR THE SIXTH SENSE) (CDR by Luciol
Editions)
HORCHATA VS SIL MUIR (3"CDR by Taalem)
CORDELL KLIER - PHONO 4 (3"CDR by Taalem)
VOX POPULI! - SOFT ENTRANCE TO NATURE'S CAMINO DE LUZ (3"CDR by Taalem)
Another new division from the house of Taalem, next to Kokeshidisk and
Taalem, is Luciol Editions, and I am not sure why this is. 1000schoen is the
project of Helge Siehl, who went solo after the split of Maeror Tri, when
the other members became Troum. He has released already a couple of works,
and hearing 'Amish Glamour (Music For The Sixth Sense)', one could have some
interesting thoughts about the split of Maeror Tri, and the music of Troum
and 1000schoen. After all these years, its still strongly connected,
soundwise. The differences between the three are to be spotted with a
magnifying glass. Lengthy dark ambient pieces, built from lots and lots
sound effects applied to a few instruments, to an extent in which we no
longer recognize what instrument it is. Loops are used to great length also
and 1000schoen walks the path of ambient, industrial with a touch of
magical. Nothing new under the burning dark ambient sun, but executed with
great. Perhaps his best release so far.
Taalem is the imprint for 3"CDR releases of a more droney nature. Like Drone
Records 7" series, this is a long running enterprise, now up to number 54.
They are usually released in series of three. The first is a collaboration
between Michael Palace, also known as Horchata and Sil Muir being Andrea
Ferraris (all guitars) and Andrea Marutti (all treatments). It seems that
Horchata delivered the raw material, Ferraris added some more guitar and
that Marutti did the overall sound design. Two great pieces of dark
atmospheric drone music. Nothing new, but very very dark and elegant.
Cordell Klier has already had a bunch of releases on labels as Ad Noiseam,
Mystery Sea, Afe Records, Gears Of Sand and his own Doctsect label. Its not
easy to hear what is going on 'Phono 4'. This hoovers very much on the edge
of near silence. Soft crackles, even more soft drone like sounds, some field
recording. And all of this in the middle of the storm of silence. Turn up
the volume really high or use the best headphones. Its great minimalist
beauty, in the best microsound tradition.
Its quite a surprise to see Vox Populi! to be part of Taalem. Axel Kyrou has
been active since the early 80s in the field of experimental music, but
sometimes with a more pop like direction (in the early stages), ethnical
(later on). I wasn't always a big fan of his work, but what he does here is
very nice. There is a long list of instruments used and places that were
recorded, which are finely woven into a three piece suite of all these
various sound sources, making a very nice sound scape of animal sounds,
chimes, bells and other field recordings. If this is his recent direction,
then I am all ears. (FdW)
Address: http://www.taaleem.com

THE DEAR LISTENERS - APPROACH (3"CDR by Dear Listeners)
The second release for The Dear Listeners, the new and ongoing project of
former Vance Orchestra member Robert Deters and Martin Luiten (Uw
Hypotheekadvies and Pick-up member) and again on a 3"CDR. 'Approach' has two
pieces of Luiten's guitar work and Deters' electronics. In 'Part 1' they
operate on a more drone related base, as 'Vallen' did before this. There is
a distinctive live feel to it again, of sounds popping in and out the mix.
Sustained frequencies from the electronics, the guitar fed through a ring
modulator, while being played with an e-bow. The second piece starts out and
has throughout the sound of humming voices. A more angular sound is used
here and even at some point there is a bit of rhythm coming through the
louder, densities of the piece. Two quite different pieces working from a
similar ground. A very nice follow-up to 'Vallen'. (FdW)
Address: http://www.myspace.com/thedearlisteners

NORMAL - STORM (MP3 by Just Not Normal)
DANADAX -DAXSCAPES II (MP3 by Just Not Normal)
DUST - SIX (MP3 by Just Not Normal)
A new MP3 label from The Netherlands, using the advantages of blog pages. A
great and even more simple way of starting a label, and great to by pass
Myspace and such commercial nonsense. Just Not Normal is connected to a
radio program called Not The Normal Shit Radio. I received a data CDR with
three current releases. Mark, label boss (ho-hum), says he knows the artist
Normal for about five years, but that the artist doesn't want to say much
about himself. He's from the USA, and not, as I expected, Mark himself.
Three pieces dealing with the issue of 'storm', all exactly twenty minutes
in length. Perhaps its built from field recordings of a storm, I don't know.
But they are fed through a bunch of computer plug ins which seem to work at
random, but in a slow manner. Things never really unfold but move rather
linear. It moves between certain parameters and then bounces back. Its quite
nice music to work by. Not too demanding, but also not too ambient. Owing a
bit to the work of Roland
Kayn I thought. A fine break from the world of pure field recording, moving
into a more musical area.
Also from Daxscapes nothing is known, not even where he's from. 'Daxscapes
II' is the follow up to a release on the Amduscias label. Here too its not
easy to tell what is going on. Again it might be field recordings, but then
from all sorts of electrical sources, being fed through the computer to make
things more noisy than their origins. Corroded circuits, ambient hum,
electric discharges: this is a rather unpleasant piece of ambient industrial
music - the post nuclear landscape, or the sci-fi soundtrack to a film that
has no peaceful end.
The last one is by an artist from the UK, called Dust and 'Six' is, you
might have guessed, his sixth album. I am least enthusiastic about this one.
The pieces use an amount of rhythm, which sometimes is borrowed from the
world of techno, but also from glitch. The first three pieces fade easy into
eachother, and so do the final three. The final three are a bit more 'drone'
based with rhythms, and the first three just rhythm based. Nothing much
happens that made things really worthwhile, though as a piece of background
music things aren't totally bad either. One assumes there is more into than
just this, I guess. (FdW)
Address: http://justnotnormal.wordpress.com

HELP NEEDED!
The Vital Weekly archive is looking for missing copies of their own
podcasts. We seem to have misplaced the podcasts for issues 570, 571 and
582. Please contact us if you have them! <vital@vitalweekly.net>

понедельник, 27 октября 2008 г.

New Susanna album out now at rune grammofon

 
Susanna: Flower Of Evil

"Flower of Evil" is twelve sublime cover versions of mostly well known songs as well as two Susanna originals, all beautifully sung by one of the most exceptional new voices of recent years, lovely accompanied by her trusted band members Helge Sten (Deathprod, Supersilent) and Pål Hausken (In The Country) and with Bonnie "Prince" Billy guesting on two songs. Whether it´s Thin Lizzy or Sandy Denny, Black Sabbath or Nico, Lou Reed or Abba, all are given the very personal Susanna treatment. Susanna is known as an extraordinary interpreter of songs, "Love Will Tear Us Apart" and "Hallelujah" from Susanna and the Magical Orchestra´s "Melody Mountain" have been widely hailed as excellent versions of "difficult" songs. Highly recommended!

Susanna Karolina Wallumrød: grand piano, hammond organ and vocals
Pål Hausken: drums, percussion, vibraphone and vocals
Helge Sten: guitars

Bonnie "Prince" Billy: vocals on "Jailbreak" and "Without You"

Limited deluxe double vinyl edition with free mp3 downloads available in November.

www.runegrammofon.com

Connexion Bizarre News

 


Connexion Bizarre
Greetings,

Connexion Bizarre was updated on October 27th, 2008 with a huge amount of content! A new compilation release, an interview with Displacer, several new reviews, webcasts, another instalment of "Business Traveller" and recommended links. A quick overview of this week's updates:

Webcast: "Invisible War @ Connexion Bizarre" with music selection by Invisible War and "The Door to Cykranosh" with music selection by M.
Reviews: Displacer "The Witching Hour", Fin de Siécle "Nine Barns", Bramble "Emergence", Nwodtlem "Video ?R8", Xentrifuge "Light Extinguished", Mathieu Ruhlmann "The Earth Grows In Each Of Us", Vladislav Buben "Prayers Of Steel - Prologue", V/A "A Weevil In A Biscuit"
Media: a new installments of Business Traveller
Store: be the envy of your peers by getting a set of exclusive Connexion Bizarre badges!

All the best,
Connexion Bizarre
(www.connexionbizarre.net)





Webcast & Radio Show

Part 1 - Click here to stream or right-click to download
("Invisible War @ Connexion Bizarre" with music selection by Invisible War)
Flint Glass - Connexion Bizarre Webcast identifier
[exclusive]
Gnaw Their Tongues - Teeth That Leer Like Open Graves
[An Epiphanic Vomiting Of Blood - Crucial Blast]
Pig Destroyer - Towering Flesh
[Terrifyer - Relapse Records]
The Rita/Wilt - Dead Wife Stalks The Grounds Part 1
[Werewolf In The Black Space - Cipher Productions]
Koerperwelten - Kidney Stone of Wisdom
[Avatars of Rape and Rage - Malignant Records]
Battle of Mice - The Bishop
[Jesu/Battle Of Mice Split - Robotic Empire]
Dälek - Paragraphs Relentless
[Abandoned Language - Ipecac]
SPK - Germanik
[Auto Da Fé - The Grey Area]
Whitehouse - Dictator
[Halogen - Susan Lawly]
Brighter Death Now - No Pain
[Necrose Evangelicum - Cold Meat Industry]
Caul & Kirchenkampf - Darkness and Water
[Sleep - Night - Death - Malignant Records]

Part 2 - Click here to stream or right-click to download
("The Door to Cykranosh" with music selection by M.)
Flint Glass - Connexion Bizarre Webcast identifier
[exclusive]
Vromb - Urgence
[Le Pecheur de Noyés - Spectre]
The [Law-Rah] Collective - Amelisweerd
[Inspiration - Ant-Zen]
15 Degrees Below Zero - Westward
[New Travel - Edgetone Records]
Concrete Cookie & the Maggot Farmer - Richard III
[Mondegreen - Force Of Nature]
The Triple Tree - Oh, Whistle, and I'll Come to You
[Ghosts - Cold Spring]
Contagious Orgasm & C-drik - Cross
[A Journey Into Space And Time - Syrphe]
Hermann Kopp - Locus Solus
[Under A Demon's Mask - Galakthörro]
Kryptogen Rundfunk - Always Let Me Be High (Never Let Me Down)
[V/A - Rush For Black Celebration - KultFront]
Voice_Electronic Duo - Wszedcie Obnece Ucho
[VED - Monotype Records]
Nerthus - I am Audiophobic Pt.1
[V/A - Hyperakusis - Audiophob]
Tapage - Head Cage
[The Institute Of Random Events - Tympanik Audio]
Refuse To Die - Auf Wiederzein
[Collection Of Agnostic Flies - The Eastern Front]

Listen to the Webcast

Subscribe the Webcast - http://feeds.feedburner.com/connexionbizarre

Connexion Bizarre radio show @ Radio Zero
The Connexion Bizarre radio show can be streamed every Friday at 23:00 GMT and Wednesdays at 10:00 GMT from Radio Zero.


Reviews
Displacer - The Witching Hour
Brace yourself for a hair-raising, ultra-chill experience. Oxymoronic, without doubt, but apt all the same when describing Morton's latest tour de force, "The Witching Hour." Listen to "The Witching Hour" past midnight, if you dare, but keep careful watch on the shadows, and be sure to glance behind once in a while...
Read more

Fin de Siécle - Nine Barns
This is an engaging release no less of European sounding cinematic music, that is as strange as it gets. Organic instrumentation takes form with the prominent use of violins alongside guitars, female vocals, piano and analogue delay, and adds to the overall raw feel to the release and it's a welcome one at that.
Read more

Bramble - Emergence
"Emergence", if we are to believe the press surrounding this disc is the result of vocal sound manipulations and nothing more. If this truly is the case then this has been done extremely well as the drones and sub-dark ambient sounds could easily have come from more conventional synthesizer sources.
Read more

Nwodtlem - Video πR8
"πR8" is a pretty interesting selection and it is good to see something relatively artistic being made with breakcore, as the genre does tend to be a bit silly and not massively creative - but this has proven to me that breakcore can be artsy and silly all at the same time.
Read more

Xentrifuge - Light Extinguished
"Light Extinguished" has girth, drive, and pure adrenaline that successfully injects a much-needed classic Industrial sound back into the harsh EBM genre. This should appeal to fans of Tactical Sekt and notable fellow newcomers such as Wynardtage and Acylum.
Read more

Mathieu Ruhlmann - The Earth Grows In Each Of Us
The theme of regeneration of the life cycle was the main inspiration for this new album, contrasted against the ever present threat of death as his sister narrowly survived a serious road accident. A very pleasant listen at bedtime then, but slightly frustrating to the listener demanding more happenings and variation.
Read more

Vladislav Buben - Prayers Of Steel - Prologue
A lot of the time when passed a purely experimental CD I grit my teeth. There is a hell of a lot of experimental 'music' out there that I appreciate and a hell of a lot I simply deem as 'artistic masturbation', being very polite. Buben come dangerously close to the latter.
Read more

V/A - A Weevil In A Biscuit
Overall though "Weevil in a Biscuit" just leaves you feeling a little disappointed and unsatisfied, regardless of the really great tracks. Here's hoping Bearsuit Records focus on the really great material and get some more releases out by those artists, rather than album length releases that are mostly stuffed with fillers.
Read more


Media
Carlos Ferrão - Business Traveller
Chapter 29 of the ongoing suspense/bizarro fiction series Business Traveller".
Read more


Store
Connexion Bizarre Pins
State your indivuality and rhythmical reverberation with this set of five one-inch Connexion Bizarre buttons! One featuring the main C.B. logo, three featuring the alternative mascots/logos and one featuring the Connexion Bizarre "reverberate rhythmically" motto.
Price: 6.00 Euro (worldwide shipping included)
Read more


Links
Recently added
RaubBau, record label
Les Transnumériques, festival

Netlabel releases spotlight
Life Toward Twilight "Edison's Frankenstein" (Bottle Imp)
Photophob "Skaphander Skanks" (Laridae)
Various "Hills'n Trees" (Laridae)

Recommended
"Digital Maoism:"Digital Maoism: The Hazards of the New Online Collectivism" by Jaron Lanier (Edge)
Online Ghost Stories
Andreij Tarkovky's "Stalker" (Google Video)
"Confessions of Robert Crumb" (Google Video)
ECHELON to cast a wider net (via Xerode)





понедельник, 20 октября 2008 г.

Vital Weekly 649

   ============
   VITAL WEEKLY
   ============
   number   649
   ------------
   week      43
   ------------


Vital Weekly, the webcast: we offer a free-to-download weekly webcast as the audio-supplement to Vital Weekly. Presented as a radio programme with excerpts from some of the CDs reviewed here (no vinyl or MP3s). It is available on the site for a limited period of 5 weeks. Download the file to your MP3 player and enjoy!
Complete track listing here:
http://www.vitalweekly.net/podcast.html

Before submitting material please read this carefully: http://www.vitalweekly.net/fga.html
Submitting material means you agree with these terms.


* noted are in this week's pod-cast

LAURENT PERRIER - AS FAR AS (CD by Sound On Probation) *
PYLONE - GROUNDED HOUSE (CD by Sound On Probation)
ZEITKRATZER - VOLKSMUSIK (CD by Zeitkratzer Records)
REINHOLD FRIEDL - SCHÖNBERG PIERROT LUNAIRE - CHEAP IMITATION (CD by Zeitkratzer Records)
NOAH CRESHEVSKY & IF, BWANA - FAVORITE ENCORES (CD by Pogus)
UNIVERS ZERO - UNIVERS ZERO (CD by Cuneiform)
BLINDEAD - AUTOSCOPIA: MURDER IN PHAZES (CD by Foreshadow)
MENACE RUINE - THE DIE IS CAST (CD by Alien8 Recordings)
SYN- - MANOLO ON JULIET (CD by Prasca)
ZÈBRA - THE BLACK AND WHITE ALBUM (CD from Symbolic Interaction) *
OTOMO YOSHIHIDE & XAVIER CHARLES - DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO CLOCKS (CD by Textile Records) *
LEMUR - IIIIIII (CD by +3DB) *
REHAB - MAN UNDER TRAIN SITUATION (CD by +3DB)
OFFICE-R(6) - RECORDING THE GRAIN (CD by +3DB)
ARG - ANIMALI (CD by Creative Sources Recordings) *
E (CD by Zelphabet)
WENDT - UNRELEASED MUSIC FOR VISUALIZERS (CD by Miatera) *
DOUGLAS BENFORD - IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF THE PRINCESS (CDR by 12x50 Recordings)
THU20 - TILBURG (LP by Korm plastics) *
BLINDHAED - WHETHER THAT WILL MAKE PEOPLE WANT TO BECOME ARCHAELOGISTS, WE'LL HAVE TO SEE (LP by Ini Itu)
WRANGLER/SCANNER - 1968 MOOG MODULAR/1978 FORMANT MODULAR (7" by Static Caravan)
COMBO RECIFE DE IMPROVISO - UNTITLED #3 (CDR by Dead Sea Liner)
ELECTRIC MONO RIVER - NO SUNLIGHT DOWN HERE (CDR by Dead Sea Liner) *
KIKLOP - GALLOPARDO (CDR by Kiklop)
BAS VAN HUIZEN - NYLONRYP (CDR by Etherkreet) *
NILS ROSTAD - GUITAR (GREY) (CDR, private)
NILS ROSTAD - GUITAR (CDR, private) *
ALESSANDRO COLBUCCI & MATTEO UGGERI - THE DISTANCE (CDR by Why Not Ltd) *
TIM BLECHMANN - REPLUGGED (CDR by Why Not Ltd)
MARC SPRUIT - #2 (3"CDR, private)
STEINBRÜCHEL - SUSTAIN (3"CDR by Koyuki Sound) *
SILENT SPRING (3"CDR by CLaudia) *
BEARSES - THE PRETTIEST GIRL I EVER SAW (3"CDR by Hymns)
IRONING - THE END OF THE JACKSON PARTY (3"CDR by Hymns)
RAN SLAVIN - NOCTURNALRAINBOW RISING (MP3 by Cronica Electronica)
TU M' - IS THAT YOU? (MP3 by Cronica Electronica)
MOSAIQUE - FILARE (MP3 by Cronica Electronica)

LAURENT PERRIER - AS FAR AS (CD by Sound On Probation)
PYLONE - GROUNDED HOUSE (CD by Sound On Probation)
The man behind Laurent Perrier is of course Laurent Perrier, but he is also behind Pylône, as well as Zonk't. Here he releases two albums on his own Sound On Probation label, with some differences. The album under his own name, 'As Far As', is a work composed for a choreography by Alban Richard and uses solely samples of classical music. Starting off with an organ like sound but throughout moving through various stages of orchestra, with a strong emphasizes on violin sounds. Sometimes these samples are bit grainy and not pure clean copies of the orchestra. Perrier doesn't have the intention to re-create the real orchestra, but rather to play music that uses the sounds of the orchestra to create his own sound world. No percussive strikes (think early Laibach), but rather introspective with occasional outbursts and some swift changes. Not a work that I thought was really good or outstanding, but throughout quite enjoyable. That was nice enough.
'Grounded House' is Pylone second album and is not made for anything, other than the music itself. As Zonk't Perrier plays techno inspired music, and Pylône is his work in microsound. Five lengthy pieces here and I must admit I thought it was a bit much, these sixty-seven minutes of beeps, high end sine waves, crackles, a bit of hiss and all such like. Just half of it, say the first three tracks (thirty seven minutes) would be long enough - and the other two tracks for the next Cd next year. Music like this requires lots of attention and concentration and over the course of such a long CD this gets lots, well, at least on me. What Perrier does as Pylône neatly fits the tradition of microsound, but it doesn't however change the views on this genre. Good, sturdy computer work. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.soundonprobation.com

ZEITKRATZER - VOLKSMUSIK (CD by Zeitkratzer Records)
REINHOLD FRIEDL - SCHÖNBERG PIERROT LUNAIRE - CHEAP IMITATION (CD by Zeitkratzer Records)
Perhaps you recognize this: at first hearing you are totally flabbergasted. What is this! At second hearing the opposite is the case. What was impressive first, sounds disappointing now. And after repeated listening you end up somewhere in between, slowly moving towards the shock of the first listening experience, knowing that you will never have this experience again. This is how I went with these two often hilarious releases of Zeitkratzer. The Zeitkratzer ensemble of nine european musicians was founded by Reinhold Friedl in 1999. They did projects on music of Stockhausen, Lou Reed, John Cage, Keiji Haino, etc. Not very predictable if you ask me. With the new 'Pierrot Lunaire' - CD Arnold Schönberg is the victim. It is an excellent parody and because of this also a statement. 'Pierrot Lunaire' was a famous work by Arnold Schönberg. The idea for this parody - 'cheap imitation' - arose from the following anecdote: "during rehearsals for the piece's premiere in Berlin in 1912, the
clarinettist, as a joke, played this part on a B-flat clarinet instead of the A clarinet prescribed in the score. Schönberg, who was conducting the piece, was reported not to have noticed the difference." This story inspired Friedl reducing and simplifying the piece, leaving the main characteristics in tact. But put the other way around, simplifying and reducing a composition is not by definition the same thing as making a parody. So there is more to it. This has certainly to do with his infectious sense of humor that invoked his 'cheap imitation', especially in the over the top performance of the singer. It is hilarious also for those who don't know this original work of 'sprechgesang'. Parodying here is a way for stating that 'Pierrot Lunaire' is an over estimated composition, justified by the anecdote.
Parody is also the keyword for the 'Volksmusik' - CD. But Friedls intentions may be different here. For this recording Friedl reworked a diversity of folkmusic from countries in the Danube area in collaboration with drummer Maurice de Martin. Reworking means several things here. In most cases it implies an apparent simplifying of the rhythmical complexity of the original. His reworking give the music a certain plumpness. Combined with the loud performance and a prominent role for the drum-work by Maurice de Martin this music is irresistible charming.
Melodies and harmonies however are often misleadingly complex. The over all feeling is that you are listening to very deranged adaptations of folk music. It is played with the freshness and energy of a punkgroup resulting in tumultuous and noisy renditions of folkmusic. The originals are broken up in many fragments and reassembled along unconventional musical decisions, resulting in very pleasantly distorted music. With respect to the originals Friedl opens them up in a very different direction, one that could not come from the world of folkmusic itself. Parody or not, reducing complexity and vice versa, Friedl is successful in creating some very unusual and entertaining music (DM)
Address:
http://www.zeitkratzer.de/

NOAH CRESHEVSKY & IF, BWANA - FAVORITE ENCORES (CD by Pogus)
After Mutable ('Hyperrealism') and Tzadik ('To know and not to know') it is now the turn for Pogus releasing work by Noah Creshevsky. On the split-cd Favorite Encores' four compositions of Creshevsky are alternated by three works by If, Bwana. According to Pogus the pieces "comment on and highlight each other".
Creshevsky is trained in composition by Nadia Boulanger and Luciano Berio. Currently he is Professor Emeritus at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York. Creshevsy choose the term 'hyperrealis' for the typical electro-acoustical music he developed. In three compositions on this cd ('Mari Kimura Redux', 'Intrada' and 'Favorite Encores') Creshevsky "uses the sounds of traditional instruments that are pushed beyond the limitations of individual performance capabilities". Creshevsky is a master in the field of audio-collage and plunderphonic-like procedures and leaves us with many questions. For example we often hear violins in his work, playing in a style that we are used from normal classical music. But I'm not sure whether he takes samples from already existing (violin)works by others, or whether he composes pieces for violin first to be used consequently by him in his collage work. Comparable to how Biota works.
His compositions make the impression of staying close to classical musical structures, but transcended to unknown heights through his virtuoso manipulation work. The music has an enormous speed and drive, combined with an enormous flexibility and maneuverability. In each piece we are constantly exposed to an intensity and complexity that we don't often find in music. His works open dazzling dimensions and perspectives.
On the other hand the music remains fluent and accessible, very lively and of an appealing dramatic. Great work! 'Intrada' is of special interest because of the use of (samples of) the fantastic voicework by Chris Mann.
If, Bwana is the pseudonym Al Margolis uses already since 1984 for his musical output. As a guest he was present on Creshevsky's 'To know and not to know'. Between the highly informed and complex music of Creshvesky, the works of If Bwana offers us some rest. His pieces develop in a slower pace and are built from a smaller set of soundmaterial. In 'Xyloxings' and 'Cicada # 4; Version Barnard', the voice of Lisa Bernard plays a prominent role. For 'Scraping Scrafide' If, Bwana makes uses of the piano playing of Tony Scafide, taking from an earlier composition by If, Bwana. In comparison to maximalistic efforts of Creshesky, the works If Bwana are more of a minimalistic approach. (DM)
Address:
http://www.pogus.com

UNIVERS ZERO - UNIVERS ZERO (CD by Cuneiform)
Let us return to 1977 for a while. What was happening then? Punk and new wave started to emerge at this time, ready to wash away the prefab popmusic, boring progressive bands, etc. that dominated the radio. But departing from the boring 70s music with its jazz rock, etc. young musicians were also inspired for taking a completely different route. For example, it is also the year of a very remarkable debut that remained almost unnoticed then, namely the first album by the belgian group Univers Zero. After its first private release, this record was soon discovered by the very small french Atem-label who took care for a second release. Over the years this record received several rereleases on Cryonic Inc and Cuneiform Records. Now Cuneiform makes once more available this remarkable work from some 30 years ago. Recording and mixing was originally done by Eric Faes. For this rerelease Didier de Roos did a good job in remixing this work. It has a more transparent sound now, making each
instrument more pronounced and distinct from the others. De Roos did mixing and producing work for Univers Zero regularly since the 'Uzed'-album in 1984. To make this rerelease attractive a bonustrack is added. Namely 'La Faulx' from the second album 'Heresie' is added in a good live recording from 1979. Very worthwhile is also the included article by Renato Moraes and Aymeric Leroy with a very detailed story of the early days of Univers Zero. Great work. But what is most important this music is still very relevant and up to date. If you didn't know, you wouldn't guess that this music was born in 1977. Originally they were a Soft Machine-inspired band, but they successfully created their very own music of which their their first album is an impressive proof. Call it chamber rock with a strong european flavor that remains far from anglo-american experiments. A very own personal and distinct soul is incarnated in this music. Among others, we hear Michel Berckmans (bassoon) and Daniel
Denis (drums) who are still both playing in Univers Zero. Also Roger Trigaux (guitar) who started later his own band Présent was part of the band in these days. Not only interesting for historical of nostalgic reasons. This music still talks to us. (DM)
Address:
http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/

BLINDEAD - AUTOSCOPIA: MURDER IN PHAZES (CD by Foreshadow)
The first that will occur to you when listening to latest opus from Polish metal project is what such expressive style of music is doing in an e-zine that focus on electronic based experimental music as is the case with Vital Weekly. The answer is simply the subtle electronic ambient spheres that discreetly add its very own atmosphere to this brutal beast. And yes, this is certainly brutal. Not the traditional over-the-top thing like the sounds of uncompromising black metal, death metal or goregrind. What makes the album special is its mixture of raw brutalism of grinding combined with the emotional, sometimes dreamlike expression created by the weeping guitar riffs and the almost crying sound of the desperate vocalist that in his deep felt vocal style reminds me of the glory days of progressive industrial/thrash-band Meshuggah with the mini-masterpiece "None". As was the case with Meshuggah, the Blindead has an industrial edge to their music, though the metal part of the show is
less
thrash metal-based and more directed towards the doom metal and Industrial-based avantgarde metal of projects like Neurosis and Cult of Luna. Never the less "Autoscopia: Murder in phazes" is a strong effort that might first of all appeal to metalheads, though openminded listeners of progressive music should give this album a chance. Highly recommended! (NM)
Address:
http://www.foreshadow.pl

MENACE RUINE - THE DIE IS CAST (CD by Alien8 Recordings)
From the realms of extreme expressions, Canadian
Menace Ruine makes a movement towards more listen-friendly sound layers on this second full-length released in 2008. While the debut album "Cult of ruins", took its starting point in a brutal cocktail of fast Black Metal and ear-shattering Harsh Noise the follow-up titled "The die is cast" stays true to the metal scene though it doesn't aim for the sonic extremities. The tempo has been slowed down to heavy down-tempo rhythms of doom metal. The music consists of great female vocals and grandiose gothic atmosphere reminiscent of goth metal bands like The Gathering and Moonspell. Though despite the gentle almost folkish feelings on the album there is still something sinister and harsh in the guitar sounds reminiscent of early Industrial metal i.e. Godflesh at period of "Street cleaner" (Earache, 1988). The domination of Harsh Noise from the debut has been suppressed and the weight is put on the metal-style. Where "Cult ruins" dealt with extreme aggression, "The die is cast" more focus
on
musically gentle atmospheres. Thus a new and quite directions from the probably most metal-based project released on the as always interesting Alien8 label. (NM)
Address:
http://www.alien8recordings.com

SYN- - MANOLO ON JULIET (CD by Prasca)
Syn- is the name of a French project that had its debut release "Une histoire comme une autre" back in 2004, followed by the critically acclaimed and prize nominated album at the Qwartz Electronic Music Awards in 2005, "Matieres premieres". An excellent ambient album consisting of two length pieces of drone-based ambient. Fourth and latest album titled "Manolo on Juliet" from Syn- show the project in a more harsh and post-industrial approach to electronic music. Being a collaboration between Syn- and compatriot writer E. 5131, present album separates from earlier works of Syn- with the vocal-based sound pieces. The French spoken voice of E. 5131 has been weaved into an expression from Syn- that more focuses on acoustic instrumental sounds than was the case with earlier works. The music is dark and creepy with gloomy atmospheres and with the dramatic spoken words, that combined with the screeching sounds and threatening noise drones sometimes associates with Blixa Bargeld and his
post-industrial project Einstürzende Neubauten. Another interesting effort by Syn-.
Address:
http://www.prasca.org

ZÈBRA - THE BLACK AND WHITE ALBUM (CD from Symbolic Interaction)
As I started listening to present CD from the project calling itself Zebra, I was immediately caught by the sonic expression that I won't hesitate to categorize as some of the most interesting crossover-based music heard this year. Behind Zebra, you find Roel Meelkop and Frans De Waard that some of us might recognize as the brains behind sound art projects Goem and Kapotte Muziek. Zebra continues the explorations into abstract electronics with seven riveting pieces of sound art that floats from one scale to the other throughout 51 minutes of adventurous playtime. Apart from registration the quite hypnotic feeling thanks to its repetitive nature it is not an easy task to pigeonhole this album. Thanks to the repetitive manner there are associations towards Zoviet France, meanwhile the spontaneous hyperjump from avantgarde to mainstream electropop reminds me of British electronic legends 808 State. Other times the works moves into moments of extreme minimalist low frequency techno not
far away from Pan(a)Sonic, spiced by a psychedelic touch of early krautrockers in Faust. Another great moment comes as the Dutch collaborators transforms Indeep's cool club-classic "Last night a DJ saved my life" into electronic avantgarde. Final track beautifully balances between sampled guitar funk-rock and minimalist techno with looped female vocals. An album that in its awesome extrovert quality, proves that sound art not only necessarily appeals to the brain but might as well speak to your physical body. A great piece of electronic avantgarde music from two of Hollands most prolific sound artists. (NM)
Address:
http://www.symbolicinteraction.net

OTOMO YOSHIHIDE & XAVIER CHARLES - DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO CLOCKS (CD by Textile Records)
Two improvisation giants teamed up in Japan when Xavier Charles made his first tour in Japan and when he played a concert at the Kid Ailack Art Hall, together with Otomo Yoshihide plus a meeting in a studio. Guitar and clarinet are the sources at hand. Its a beautiful release, but perhaps everything you would expect from such a meeting: silent blocks of sound, feedback, sustaining sounds, more silence and occasionally a bit of louder noise based sounds. I must say there is nothing on this record that I haven't heard before, or nothing that is better, but sometimes such things are beside the point. Sometimes the quality of the music is all that matters. The players here have mastered their instruments well, they make them sound both acoustic and electronic, with some intense playing going and some beautifully textured music. Mostly sustaining and drone like, this is a great CD. But nothing new under this improvised sun. Not that it matters one bit. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.textilerecords.com

LEMUR - IIIIIII (CD by +3DB)
REHAB - MAN UNDER TRAIN SITUATION (CD by +3DB)
OFFICE-R(6) - RECORDING THE GRAIN (CD by +3DB)
A new label, whose website is still under construction, so I have not much idea what they want, but judging by these three first releases, they operate on the cross road where improvisation meets electronics, not entirely focussing on the Norway scene, but they have a strong say in these initial releases. The first release is by Lemur, a quartet of Bjørnar Habbestad (flutes), Hild Sofie Tafjord (french horn), Lene Grenager (cello), Micheal Duch (double bass). No electronics around here, although one could too easily think there are. They exist since 2006 and have toured Europe a lot and their work was released by Rune Grammofon, Sofa, Asphodel and X-OR. They play seven pieces here and what they do is of great beauty. Their music is unmistakably improvised, in a traditional sense of the word - the instruments they play sound as the instruments they play - and occasionally it seems that they sound like a small chamber orchestra and that they are all playing a bunch of notes scribbled
on
a paper. A great curious mix of orchestral passages, hectic improvised playing and four members drifting apart, but always returning home.
For the second release we meet Bjørnar Habbestad (flutes and electronics) again, here as Rehab, his collaboration with John Hegre (guitar and electronics). Hegre of course is best known as one half of Jazzkammer and collaborator with many other, whilst Habbestad is a member of Pho, Lemur an N-Collective. Here they play their instruments while all along they trap the recordings in real time into a web of electronics. If you know Pho or Jazzkammer then it might hardly be surprise that things can get rough around here, but in the skilled hands of these two there is not just the over the top noise approach, but in stead a fine balance, a thin thread between 'loud' and 'soft', between 'noise' and 'onkyo'. When things explode - and they certainly do here - then they do it well, but if they hold back they really hold back. Sometimes there is no flute sound to be recognized, sometimes there is just a flute sound - and then the same thing gets repeated for the guitar.
Office-R(6) is a sort of big band, in which North meets South and West meets East. Morten Olsen on percussion, Koen Nutters on bass and structure, Robert van Heumen on laptop (running LiSa), Jeff Carey on laptop (with Super Collider), Sakir Oguz on Buyukberber and bass clarinet and Dirk Bruinsma on soprano and baritone sax. These people work together in various combinations under the big banner of N-Collective. From what I gather from the information they operate in strict improvisation mood. It seems without any post editing. Acoustic and electronic meet up in a great way. A great way that needs a lot of concentration to fully grasp what they are doing, as this is certainly not easy listening music. Hectic, nervous, intense. Sometimes its hard to tell what is what around and that is something that is a great quality of this. Highly demanding and highly rewarding music. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.plus3db.net/

ARG - ANIMALI (CD by Creative Sources Recordings)
Its entirely my fault that we haven't seen any Creative Sources reviews. The over production of the label led to sending sometimes ten CDs at a time which is a true nightmare to review. To do that I would be spending at least two full days for one label - now, if it was a paid job, but alas. So since maybe two years the review copies are send by the musicians and that is much better. Having said that I don't know if the label is still focussed on improvised music or that they expanded into other kinds of music. Listening to Arg's 'Animali' I would think it is so. This is an "acousmatic work from the musical theatre opera Animali. Gestures and voices from Julio Cortozar's 'Rayuela'" it says on the cover, which holds no other information. I don't even know what language it is in - Italian? Spanish? So likewise I have no clue what is about. That is a pity, but in stead I can focus on the music itself. This is indeed a true acousmatic work - acoustic sources (doors, field recordings,
street sounds) are mixed with electronic processed versions thereof which in return are mixed instruments (wind, strings etc.). This makes a highly cinematic piece of music, divided in nine parts. Its hard to tell what this cinema is about, but is surely is a fine work of hallucination. Not knowing what it is about leaves much room to guess. Which I think good music should be about. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.creativesourcesrec.com

E (CD by Zelphabet)
We have landed with the letter 'E' from Zelphabet, which is a twenty-seven CD set, compiled by G.X. Jupitter-Larsen. Like before we have arrived names and one new, which is Ed Osborn, who opens the proceedings. A strange percussive piece of music made with contact microphones to provide that direct in your face approach and maybe some electronics. A strangely simple but captivating piece of music. Elliot Sharp's career spans various decades by now, but unfortunately I must admit I didn't follow his entire career, occasionally picking up on things. I must admit again that is a great shame on my behalf, since 'Return Ground' is a great piece for solo guitar. Minimalist but played in hectic, nerving manner. Slow on changes to get the full minimalist effect. Emil Beaulieau, still not the next president of the USA (what a shame), also has a long career, in noise. Sometimes his music is a total miss, always great on the live performance however, and here he has a piece that is great.
Machine like sounds - think Vivenza - are played along with a long line of piano sounds. Maybe Emil discovered the computer, and through endless layering of sounds he achieves easily one of the best pieces I ever heard from him. Sounds pop in and out of the mix. Almost Xenakis like. Evil Moisture close 'E' (all pieces last around fifteen to twenty minutes) with a true noise piece of sustained distortion over which they play some crude loose sounds.
A blast to end 'E', can't wait 'F'! (FdW)
Address:
http://www.zelphabet.com

WENDT - UNRELEASED MUSIC FOR VISUALIZERS (CD by Miatera)
DOUGLAS BENFORD - IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF THE PRINCESS (CDR by 12x50 Recordings)
Since a lot of music passes the desk of Vital Weekly, and almost all is subjected to a critical ear, the notion of 'copy' has been dealt with before. There is the original, a rarity, but not a necessity. When a specific 'sound idiom' is discovered, others will follow and sometimes with a result that is simply better. More worked out, more extended, more of the original. This happens with all music. But there are also instances where its simply too hard to see or hear what is 'different' about the work on offer. That is the case with the music of Alexander Wendt. Three pieces, divided in various pieces, connect ambient music with 'todays communicational default devices', but it sounds, unfortunately, too much like a previously unreleased recording of Alva Noto meeting Ryoji Ikeda, produced by Mika Vainio. Rhtythmic pulses, generated by processed sine waves and sine waves processed into longer blocks of sounds. Yes, its ambient (glitch) in the traditional Eno sense, and yes, it sounds
like 'modern technology'. But throughout this hour or so, I didn't hear a single bit that sounded, or tried to sound at least different than what the three mentioned also do (let alone all those in their foot steps). The design looked like 12K, so nothing new in that department either. I thought it was not a bad CD actually, and played it with some pleasure, but a bit more of his own would be nice.
Miatera is part of 12x50 Recordings, or vice versa, and there is a series on this sub-division called 'Carbon Series'. Volume Six is the latest addition to this series and its by Douglas Benford, whom we mostly know as Si-Cut.db and his activities with Sprawl. Since this music here is a bit different than his work as Si-Cut.db, less rhythmic and more dealing with ambient glitch, processed field recordings and empty spacious sounds. This is rhythmic in as far as it works repeated blocks of sound, which collide over and under each other, moving in irregular patterns. That gives the music a strangely fascinating sound. The clicks and hums, generated from sea waves and street ends (all rendered unrecognizable of course), traffic lights and cash registers (I am merely guessing here), aren't the newest around: its not that Benford does something utterly new or strange. Its music that fits the big ambient tradition, and the smaller alley called ambient glitch. Other than Wendt he knows how
to spin this tradition to his own end and not be just a plain carbon copy. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.12X50.com

THU20 - TILBURG (LP by Korm plastics)
Practicing priests . for once information is to hand - (A rare live work from THU20-  Jos Smolders and Roel Meelkop (computer) Peter Duimelinks and Frans de Waard, acoustic objects and the analogue electronics of Jacques van Bussel.) and if not then this multilayered work might suggest some studio piece - which would account for its un-noise structuring of abstract "shapes" of sound, more sound collage, sectioned to short to evolve into something which once called  itself industrial, with almost nostalgic references to the Abstract of the previous century, charming rather than American brashness or lost in translation Japanese renderings, I'm reminded of that strange and interesting Abstract Expressionist movement in Northern Europe of Wols et al. - an intellectualism which was overwhelmed by first the size and then the brash confrontationality of US Nimitz sized and culture art. Which was a pity, no longer the intellectuals smoke in street cafes Gauloises, but if at all Malbro lites
,
indicative of the refusal to live and denial of the truth, SMOKING KILLS, and here in Tilburg some smoking clearly takes place, a careful and thought out improvisation that is just like the eddy of Gauloises  smoke and thickened with the taste of real, not instant coffee and real not instant improvisations of sound - not noise then- something that might speak from the past and say here is something to talk about. (jliat)
Address:
http://www.kormplastics.nl

BLINDHAED - WHETHER THAT WILL MAKE PEOPLE WANT TO BECOME ARCHAELOGISTS, WE'LL HAVE TO SEE (LP by Ini Itu)
My keyboard is limited, so the presstext allows me to write Blindhaed, but in Vital Weekly 621, when I reviewed a MP3 release on Ruidemos, I wrote Blindheao. Its Icelandic, for what its worth, and it means something like Blind Spot. Their second release is an one-sided LP, why not two I immediately think, with again a lovely long title. "The piece is based on an accumulation of layers of sounds which were reworked during quite long periods of time", it says, and makes references to Tietchens, Xenakis and Steve Roden. I'd like to add Werkbund to these references. The slight metallic rumble, the same subaquatic sound processing, the debris of contactmicrophone rumble. It seems to be dealing less with field recordings, and more with the electronic layering of various concrete actions and sounds, which shift along eachother in quite an intelligent way. One can sense that there is quite some time and effort in this piece, since it flows subtle and moves into various different textures. A
pity there is just one side. I could have easily digested another side of this. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.iniitu.net

WRANGLER/SCANNER - 1968 MOOG MODULAR/1978 FORMANT MODULAR (7" by Static Caravan)
From the place where old synthesizers look like
old the telephone central comes a lovely heavy picture disc 7" by Wrangler and Scanner. They use a Moog Modular System 3C and a Formant Modular Synthesizer to create two lovely tunes that appeals to me as a lover of all things electronic. They more or less update the Forbidden Planet soundtrack to bouncy rhythms and arpeggio's. Its hard to tell which side is by which artist, and the differences between the tracks aren't that big. If you love that old sound, the real fat sound, then this is one true gem. Lovely. I'm glad they still do things like this: the right equipment, the right format. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.staticcaravan.org

COMBO RECIFE DE IMPROVISO - UNTITLED #3 (CDR by Dead Sea Liner)
ELECTRIC MONO RIVER - NO SUNLIGHT DOWN HERE (CDR by Dead Sea Liner)
Although these two releases by Dead Sea Liner share one strong similarity - music played through methods of improvisation - it's only the one by Electric Mono River that I can be happy about. Combo Recife De Improviso is Thelmo Christovam on acoustic guitar, objects, E-Melody sax, Tulio Falcao on synthesizer, CD player and violin and Arthur Lacerda on guitar, objects and devices. No doubt this is their third release, and they decided to offer value for money here. The six tracks fill the entire length of the CDR, but the questions are: is it good and is it necessary? Both questions I can't answer with a full and loud 'yes'. The idea here seems to be: press the 'record' button and record whatever we are doing and afterwards everything finds its way to a release. Without editing, just the straight forward recorded session. Times six. Maybe it's because this is four years old and maybe its their earliest beginnings, but these pieces were way too long and stretched out for my taste. Very
free improvisation, even going towards free jazz at times, but nothing formal.
Also a trio is Electric Mono River of Martin Powell on theremin, Per Gisle Galaen on guitar and Sindre Bjerga on tape recorder and contact mics. They recorded their piece in improvisation at Stavanger's Tou Center earlier this year and its much more a solid work. I have no idea wether this one is edited or not, or that they are more skilled players, but what is pressed here in twenty-one minutes makes more sense. Low rumbling sounds playing repeating patterns, while all sorts of electronic components fly over this. It slowly builds up until it reaches its peak half way through and then slowly things start to disintegrate and distorted low humming guitar from the non-drone shelf remains. Very nice, solid improvisation that holds the attention of the listener throughout the length of this piece. Sturdy Norwegian improvisation. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.deadsealiner.co.uk

KIKLOP - GALLOPARDO (CDR by Kiklop)
I should do a credit list to the crazed workout of this what can only be another bizarre rendering of the past, though this time the un-cerebral (to me and what do I know) crazy far out drumming, vocals sax, trumpet, bass ..etc of maniac stuff - stuff that was once called jazz. 11 terrific (in every sense)  live sets,  a raging ravenous series of full on playing. and a monstrous treat, and so a tip of the hat then to..(from myspace) ***Cho-mi "GiantMidget" = drums + additional treatments ***DeBrilleaux "MidgetGiant" = bass/constructor-deconstructor, electro devices/perpetuum sonore device 1 >>>>>>>>>SECRET APPEARANCES: Danny "VibroHead" O'Really = guitar*** Kafka = alto sax*** Sjunko "RealMidget" Pumilus = vocal cords 'out of space'*** VOBanda = trumpet +perpetuum sonore device 2***.. Whew! As Austin Powers would say - groovy baby!!!!!!!!!  (jliat)
Address:
http://www.myspace.com/kiklopgrozni

BAS VAN HUIZEN - NYLONRYP (CDR by Etherkreet)
All music reviewed here arrives through the mailbox, in an envelope, delivered by Mister Postman. Very seldom something is dropped off with no stamps, by someone living perhaps around the corner. Bas van Huizen is such a person. He is from Nijmegen, where he is active in the Lomechanik scene but his music is a bit different from what is common in that scene (all sorts of rhythmic inspired music) and 'Nylonrijp' is released by Etherkreet, who seem to be dealing with some more 'difficult' music. Here he uses an acoustic guitar (spanish), electric guitar, chinese flute and various objects. He has an interest in dissonance and consonance, but the seven tracks here are short and to the point and have nothing to techno music. The pieces here deal with carefully processed sound and fit the idea of ambient glitch and microsound perfectly. Sometimes even classical in approach with sounds that carefully bounce on and off - the dissonance part I gather. The real instruments aren't processed to
that extent that we no longer recognize them, but they seem to play an equal role in whatever electronic is going on. Great fine short release - even with the extra bonus tracks that aren't on the real 'Nylonryp' release. Nice one again. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.etherkreet.com

NILS ROSTAD - GUITAR (GREY) (CDR, private)
NILS ROSTAD - GUITAR (CDR, private)
Apparently these releases by Norway's guitarist Nils Rostad are all 'recent' releases, and they are all limited to twenty or thirty copies. 'Guitar (Grey)' has a hand written cover and Nils plays acoustic and electric guitar. He improvises in these five pieces in various ways. Hectic playing, on the street, calm, detuned. Quite direct and in your face.
On 'Guitar' he plays a 12 string EKO from the early 70s, while adding small metal pieces to some of the strings. Here he has sixteen tracks which are all quite sort - the release lasts just under forty minutes. This is much nicer than the 'Guitar (Grey)' release, which wasn't bad either. The short pieces are nicer, Nils seems to be more on top of things and the whole thing sounds like John Cage's prepared piano, but then played on a 12 string guitar. Minimalist in approach, Nils plays mostly chords and strums away. Nice one.
Address:
http://www.looop.no/

ALESSANDRO COLBUCCI & MATTEO UGGERI - THE DISTANCE (CDR by Why Not Ltd)
TIM BLECHMANN - REPLUGGED (CDR by Why Not Ltd)
I heard of Matteo Uggeri (field recordings, objects, mixing) but Alessandro Colbucci (guitar, loops, mixing) seems to be a new name for me. They recommend headphone listening, but I'm afraid that's something I hardly do. The have four pieces here of drone related music. A swirling mass of electronics, processed guitar sounds, the scratching of the surface with contact microphones and street and rain sounds make up a very decent ambient drone releases. Atmospheric, dark, doomy and perhaps as such not a real innovative musical thing, but also as such quite some nice music. Which is of course good enough.
Tim Blechmann we heard before through some highly experimental and conceptual releases dealing with electronics and turntables. That is what he does here as well. Lots of hiss from the turntable are fed through the computer where it receives a minimal treatment. There is something happening for sure, but it takes Blechmann a lot of time. Too much time if you'd ask me. The release that lasts over an hour could have been easily be twenty minutes and been a nice 3" CDR release. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.geocities.com/whynotltd/

MARC SPRUIT - #2 (3"CDR, private)
The second release by Marc Spruit is even shorter than his previous release. Again he culls his sources from anything he can get: voice, bass, found percussion, various sounds from the internet, guitar, field recordings and such like. Thanks to the use of the computer it is possible to slice these sounds up into really split second small particles. Knowing that Spruit has a degree from the art academy its hardly a surprise that he treats the music like a collage of sound. A dadaistic approach. His eleven tracks in as many minutes can be seen as eleven tracks, but I see this rather as one work. Spruit moves around in great hectic, with rapid changes but sometimes, curious enough, knows how to build peace and tranquility in a piece. Just as before: why not release a 7" of this? It would offer the listener possibilities to switch the speed of the turntable and add some mayhem of their own. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.myspace.com/spruit

STEINBRÜCHEL - SUSTAIN (3"CDR by Koyuki Sound)
A very appt title, this 'Sustain' by Swiss microsound hero Steinbrüchel. If I understood well, this is a sort of remix of his recent CDs 'Basis' and 'Stage' (sustain there as well), and the twenty-one minute piece of music is a slowly, but endlessly humming weightless space piece. Ambient with the big A (and there for nothing new under the sun) but oh so delicate and nice. Its very difficult to write a lot about this piece, other than I think its a great piece. Nothing beyond the ordinary for Steinbrüchel, whose body of work doesn't show many new elements (which in itself is a pity I think), but what he does, he does with great style and care. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.koyuki-sound.org

SILENT SPRING (3"CDR by CLaudia)
No instruments are mentioned on the cover of the Silent Spring release. The untitled piece lasts almost thirteen minutes and is played by Joshua Rutter, Shannon O'Brien and Tim Coster. It seems to me that this is a work created through improvisation, a meditative improvised piece. Much like Stockhausen's 'Stimmung' (which I never liked actually), there is a multitude of low humming voices around, but other than the Stockie piece, there is also electronics (feedback perhaps) and something that could be called 'percussion'. Its a relaxing piece with some deep bass end that perhaps was more relaxing to play and a bit less to hear. Some more EQ-ing could have been in place I think to reach that relaxing point, but perhaps in its more rough state its more experimental. Very nice improvised atmospherics. (FdW)
Address:
http://wwwhalftheory.com/claudia

BEARSES - THE PRETTIEST GIRL I EVER SAW (3"CDR by Hymns)
IRONING - THE END OF THE JACKSON PARTY (3"CDR by Hymns)
"Live collaboration between Ironing and Pairs recorded June 17, 2005 in Tampa, FL. to digital and split into five seamless thematic tracks. Andrew Chadwick , Troy Turriate-  ++ Blistery harshness with woven pop culture sounds. A live performance from June 11, 2005 in Orlando, FL using microcassettes, records, cassettes and keyboard straight to digital and split into six seamless thematic tracks." = Andrew Chadwick.- of electro noise-?, after theory, the non-debate, briefly the internet brought communication of theory - how? = In the form of use groups, the " use" of latter Wittgenstein (don't ask for meaning ask for use) or the Derridian ever open difference. Once knowledge was power and now its free , the Use groups are dead, post-modernity is over only the baudrillian echoes ring true are of the virtual and hyper real  facebook communicates, the signals of equality, not of psycho linguistics. Here we have elements of a pan-handle collective or anagrammatising of lost souls it seems
from a board, which in turn becomes binary chatter? Genre, style, content, prospective manifestos and suggestions collapse, we have style, and what was once harsh. Rumble & hiss ~ rattle & hum. The inconsequentiality of noise is present, and reverberated - only its everywhere else, the Janet Jackson clip is not out of place- nothing is. The seeming financial war is scripted like everything.  Rhythmic elements like the syntax of words are only noted, No difference. (jliat)
Address:
http://www.myspace.com/hymnslabel

RAN SLAVIN - NOCTURNALRAINBOW RISING (MP3 by Cronica Electronica)
TU M' - IS THAT YOU? (MP3 by Cronica Electronica)
MOSAIQUE - FILARE (MP3 by Cronica Electronica)
From these three recent releases by Cronica
Electronica's digital imprint, only Ran Slavin released before on this label. His first release was sort of alright but nothing spectacular, whereas 'The Wayward Regional Transmissions' (see Vital Weekly 577) was a great work combining middle eastern music and microsound. In that respect 'Nocturnal Rainbow Rising' is a step back. No middle eastern influences here, but ten pieces of solid ambient glitch. Moving slowly about, sounds drifting in and out the mix, occasionally a bit louder and then a bit softer again, but nothing more than ordinary. Maybe a filler, an in between release? Maybe that's why it was released as a MP3.
Its been a while since I last heard music by Tu M', the duo of Rossano Polidoro and Emiliano Romanelli. In fact: I can't remember. But its good to see them around still after all these years and the work presented here consists of three tracks, which all seem to be made with the recordings of orchestra and brass sections, but then taken apart from their original intentions and stretched out into lengthy and moody pieces of music. The brass and orchestras shimmer through the laptop processing that have taken on the task to hide the origins. Also not the prize winning 'originals in microsound' award, but throughout quite nice indeed.
Jan Ferreira is Mosaique, of whom I may not have heard before. He has, in MP3 terms, a pretty long release, almost seventy-five minutes. It's music that is highly ambient and fits either the moment of getting up and listening to the thing right away at breakfast, or chill out right before you go bed. But its hardly something I would put on during the day. The icy fields of sounds, slowly and minimal moving about, in the best Eno tradition but then entirely created in the digital domain, is very nice, but also very dated. Think Paul Bradley in a more lighter mood. Very nice indeed, but hardly a big surprise. (FdW)
Address:
http://www.cronicaelectronica.org

1. From: "Lee Kwang Goh" <goh.leekwang@gmail.com>

- concert - October - a mini Eastern European tour plus

10/22/2008 - Tuzrakter, Budapest, Hungary
solo, duo with Peter Szabó, stereo DJ mixer!

10/23/2008 - Grand Café, Szeged, Hungary
solo

10/24/2008 - Simultan Festival, Timisoara, Romania
solo

10/25/2008 - C17, Wien, Austria
duo with Tim Blachmann & more, stereo dj mixer!

11/1/2008 - Blinzelbar, Hamburg, Germany
solo, duo with Birgit Ulher, trio with Birgit Ulher & Heiner Metzger,
Stereo DJ mixer.


2. From: Timo van Luijk <
tivalu@telenet.be>



AMM
Legendary and highly influential experimental free improvisation group active since mid 60's.
Present line-up as duo Eddie Prevost (percussion) and John Tilbury (piano)

MORPHOGENESIS
Adventurous electro-acoustic improvisation collective from UK with
a.o. Adam Bohman, Clive Graham, Michael Prime


Sunday 26 October 2008
Mercelis Theater/Théatre Mercelis
Mercelisstraat 13 Rue Mercelis
1050 Brussels
20.00h, entree: 9 euro


3. From: "origami republika" <
origamirepublika@gmail.com>

True to tradition our new free mp3 compilation is out in time for our 18 year anniversary, thus aptly called the Free 18 Year Album. It contains material from 16 different subunits, many never heard before, from Argentina, Chile, Spain, Bulgaria, Uk, Usa, Norway even...


Download .zip with cover here:
http://kunst.no/origami/18YEAR.ZIP

Origami Boe on tour


OCT 21 - Hamburg - Audiounit
Schulterblatt 78 -
http://www.audiounit.fragmentedmedia.org

OCT 23 - Dresden - e.xtrem t.on
A/Z Conni

OCT 24 - Berlin - Salonbruit
ACUD, Veteranenstraße 21, Mitte -
http://acud.de

OCT 25 - Berlin - das kleine fieldrecordingsfestival (+ origami republika)
Sowieso, Weisestrasse 24, U8 Leinestrasse, Neuköln -
http://sowieso-neukoelln.de


OCT 28 - Berlin - DIENSTBAR
Ballast Der Republik, Brunnenstr. 183, Mitte




--






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