вторник, 25 марта 2008 г.

Vital Weekly 620

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VITAL WEEKLY
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number 620
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week 13
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Vital Weekly, the webcast: we offering a weekly webcast, freely to download.
This can be regarded as the audio-supplement to Vital Weekly. Presented as a
radioprogramm with excerpts of just some of the CDs (no vinyl or MP3)
reviewed. It will remain on the site for a limited period of 5 weeks.
Download the file to your MP3 player and enjoy!
complete track and list here: http://www.vitalweekly.net/podcast.html

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* noted are in this week's pod-cast


ANNEA LOCKWOOD - A SOUND MAP OF THE DANUBE (3CD by Lovely Music) *
JUSTIN BENNETT - WILDLIFE (CD by Spore Records) *
IREZUMI - ENDURANCE (CD by Snow Blood)
THANOS CHRYSAKIS & DARIO BERNAL VILLEGAS & OLI MAYNE - PALIMPSESTO (CD by
Aural Terrains) *
COTI - DUNUNG (CD by Antifrost)
RLW & TITO - MAHLZEIT (CD by Hinterzimmer Records) *
KIKO C. ESSEIVA - SOUS LES ETOILES (CD by Hinterzimmer Records) *
THE RITA & WILT - WEREWOLF IN THE BLACK SPACE (CD by Cipher Productions)
CLEW OF THESEUS - THE PLAYGROUND OF THE DAMNED (CDR by Cipher Productions)
LOUIS DUFORT - MATERIAUX COMPOSES (DVD by Empreintes Digitales)
SMALL TOWN BOREDOM - AUTUMN MIGHT HAVE HOPE (LP by Trome Records)
IDEA FIRE COMPANY - THE ISLAND OF TASTE (LP by Swill Radio) *
CONNECT_ICUT - THEY SHOWED ME THE SECRET BEACHES (LP by CSAF Records)
FESTIVAL DER GENIALEN DISSIDENTEN (LP compilation by Enfant Terrible) *
R.O.T. - CECI N'EST PAS AVIOTH/ILS CHANTENT POUR VOUS (LP by Morc Records)
ILLUSION OF SAFETY - SEDATION/QUELL (10" by C.I.P.)
VED - TAYGETOS (CDR by Psychic Malmo) *
GOLDEN VARIOUS (CDR by Bremsstrahlung Recordings)
METEK VS N.STRAHL.N - ANCIENT MACHINERIES (CDR by Dim Records) *
ASHER & UBEBOET - CELL MEMORY (CDR by Winds Measure Recordings)
CIVYIU KKLIU & ILYA MONOSOV - CARTOLINA POSTALE (CDR by Winds Measure
Recordings) *
SERAFINA STEER - PUBLIC SPIRITED (3"CDR by Static Caravan) *
BERLIN ELECTRONICS (4x3"CDR by Absinth Records)
MUS****C (MP3 compilation by Cronica Electronica)
YOSHIMI! - MIXED (MP3)
SIEGMAR FRICKE & ROYCE ICON - FALSE NEGATIVES (MP3 by Agonal Period) *


ANNEA LOCKWOOD - A SOUND MAP OF THE DANUBE (3CD by Lovely Music)
JUSTIN BENNETT - WILDLIFE (CD by Spore Records)
Rivers sometimes provide inspiration for music. Remember 'Mississippi' from
Pussycat? Better not. Wrong example. Strauss jr's 'Blue Danube'? Nice but
romantic kitsch. Smetana's 'Moldau' comes closer. That piece depicts the
start of this river until it's very end. A classic from my childhood, I
might add. Another classic - different time for it's creation and for me -
is Annea Lockwood's 'Sound Map of The Hudson River' from 1982, in which she
does the same as Smetana, but then using sounds recorded at various points
from where its springs to life until it's very end in the Atlantic. It's
however not the only river she has recorded, but the Danube project is
certainly the longest river she did. She spent five trips to Europe over
three years to make the recordings along this river from where it springs in
Germany in the Black Forest to the very end in the Black Sea. Obviously
there is the water flow, but also animals, insects and even several
interviews with people who live along the
river. It comes with an extensive map, and I noticed I crossed it at
Regensburg once, in Passau, in Linz, Vienna and finally Budapest, so I
haven't seen half of it. Lockwood's music is a trip that completes the
entire journey. For almost three hours this takes us along the beautiful
river and its likewise beautiful landscape. The interviews are all in native
language (translation supplied on the backside of the map), but if you
decide not to pay attention to them and try not to understand it than it's
even more journey like. You feel like a tourist on a boat, flowing down
stream, crossing all these countries in which you can not always understand
the language. This is a true sit back and let it all come release. Lockwood
is our guide on this journey, noting whatever is interesting noting to hear.
Maybe I feel more connected to this because the environment is so familiar,
rather than the Hudson River, which I also have crossed a couple of times,
but which is less familiar. And for
someone who doesn't like being on boats, this is the best alternative route
to float.
In a similar line of interest is the work of Justin Bennett. He didn't
release much recently but that's not to say he isn't busy with sound
installations or pieces for dance companies. Out of the latter came
'Wildlife', which seems to me an inappropriate title, seeing it was all
recorded in zoological and botanic gardens in Berlin, Barcelona, Paris,
Amsterdam and Bergen. The sounds were recorded for a dance piece, and later
reworked in 'during a series of live performances and in the studio'. More
than with Lockwood, the pieces flow right into eachother, thus making more a
unified picture of the zoo. Bennett gives his pieces titles that doesn't
leave much to guess, like 'aapjes' (monkeys - Bennett may be from the UK,
but his long term stay in The Netherlands learned him a beautiful new
language), 'Persian Leopard', 'Butterflyhouse' or 'Pond'. It's hard to tell
wether these sounds are all processed or not. The more I hear it, the less I
know. It might be, but on the other hand it
might
not be. Sometimes it sounds as pure as can be, but then what exactly did he
rework in live performances and in the studio. Not that it really matters of
course, it's the end result that counts. And that's beautiful in this case.
Great recordings, great composition, and although different than Lockwood in
many ways, this is great CD. (FdW)
Address: http://www.lovely.com
Address: http://spore.soundscaper.com

IREZUMI - ENDURANCE (CD by Snow Blood)
The French label says Irezumi, at 21, is 'quite possibly the best ambient
artist of his generation', which might be justifiable claim: how many
ambient artists are there anyway at that age? Like young Thomas Köner once
did, in his first album 'Nunatak Gongamur', Irezumi is inspired by the
tragedy of the Antartic expedition of Ernest Shackleton. Music-wise there is
indeed a bit that refers to the classic Köner album, but Irezumi does things
a little bit different. He uses software, synthesizers (analogue or
digital), guitars and spoken word samples to generate a densely layered
pattern of ambient sensibility that has a strong feeling of chilly air,
freedom but also loneliness, a bit like the mountains that are photographed
on the cover. A few persons walking up mountain, among lots of rocks and
snow. Dark but not too dark. Grey sky with a touch of blue - that kind of
feeling is what comes of this release. The voice samples that of a low
voice, which reminded me of the KLF's 'Chill
Out' (when did I last hear that - makes note here to listen again) and music
wise the Space album out of the same KLF home. None of the rhythms are
apparent. Space is suggested by the extensive use of reverb, which is not
always something I like very much, but Irezumi keeps things neatly under
control. Like said, the best ambient artist of his generation might be a
claim to soon; it's a fine idea to keep ears open for whatever else he has
to offer, but as a start, yes! 'Endurance' is a very mature sounding CD and
makes a perfect start. (FdW)
Address: http://www.snowblood.eu

THANOS CHRYSAKIS & DARIO BERNAL VILLEGAS & OLI MAYNE - PALIMPSESTO (CD by
Aural Terrains)
Music by Thanos Chrysakis has been reviewed before, most notable his 'Klage'
CD (see Vital Weekly 586) in which the vibraphone plays a central part, even
when it feeds through some bits of software. A warm, ambient glitch piece of
music. Here he returns with two compadres of whom I never heard, Dario
Bernal Villegas who contributes drums, vibraphone, bass-drum, cymbals and
inside/string piano and Oli Mayne on vibraphone. The latter doesn't play on
all pieces though. 'Palimpsesto' is the work of real time composition as
these improvisations are called. The title refers to the use parchment being
erased and re-written. How exactly this relates to the music here is a bit
of a riddle. Chrysakis writes: "Is music but a palimpsest in the air? A
moment to moment of writing and erasing different temporal layers? A
coexistence of what we have accumulated, and how we relate, and respond to
the instruments and to each other, in the course of a musical encounter?".
The music that comes here to
us, in nine pieces, is of a rather dull nature. It's surely improvised,
there is no doubt about that, but in the good ol' fashioned manner 'let's
hit something together and we'll see what comes out of this' approach, which
indeed sometimes can lead to great results, but also at times some pretty
tiring moments, which counts for this CD as well. Sometimes I felt this was
all pretty tight and strong, but then things break up and down and you land
rather with a bump in some area which you don't want to end up with. So I
have rather mixed feelings about this one. 'Klage' was much nicer! (FdW)
Address: http://www.auralterrains.com

COTI - DUNUNG (CD by Antifrost)
Antifrost's catalogue is in general filled with music that is sometimes best
described as 'difficult', even 'noise', 'conceptual', but hardly ever as
'easy listening'. Coti, who before was one half of Textu Rizer with Nikos
Veliotis, just releases 'Dunung' which is one hell of a break with that.
Coti, real name Costantino Luca Rolando Kiriakos, born in Milan 1966, but
living in Greece, was active since the mid 80s with bands as Ricochet, Dada
Data, Raw, Spiders' Web, In Trance 95 and worked with Tuxedomoon, Stereo
Nova, Blaine Reininger, The Raining Pleasure, Nikos Veliotis and ILIOS to
but a few. On his fifth solo CD he offers music for the piano. Simple as
that. No concept, well not other than playing the 86 keys and a bit of
electronic treatment, like a bit of reverb, processing but it's kept a
strict minimum. Playing the piano is what counts here. Coti plays minimalist
patterns, not unlike old Steve Reich, not always with a similar clarity, but
a bit muffled through the use
sparse
of sound effects. It entirely fits the current wave of people playing the
piano that were so dominant in 2007. If you like your Sakamoto, Harold Budd,
Steve Reich or Erik Satie like than this is right your alley. I thought it
was a bit much for the similarity the work had to offer, but as 'music while
you work' this did a pretty fine job. (FdW)
Address: http://www.antifrost.gr

RLW & TITO - MAHLZEIT (CD by Hinterzimmer Records)
KIKO C. ESSEIVA - SOUS LES ETOILES (CD by Hinterzimmer Records)
Sure, sure. I am a big fan of the music of Ralf Wehowsky, ever since the
early days of P16.D4 down to this very day. Many of his works are recorded
in collaboration with others, and here it's the Transindustrial Toy
Orchestra, a loose collective from Hamburg and Amsterdam, of whom I never
heard. Here they have three members, Peter Kastner, Ine Ophof and Jan van
Wissen, with a 'vast collection of toys and kitchen tools, using electronic
devices to transform them into bizarre acoustic situations'. RLW adds
electronics, instruments, voice and 'body functions', bouncing material back
and forth. Some pieces are by RLW,. some by Peter Kastner, some by Jan van
Wissen and one is 'RLW plays Tito'. 'Mahlzeit', as a title, refers to eating
and cooking: it's German for enjoy your meal. I'll be honest: it's not my
cup of tea. It's quite noisy at times, which put me off a bit, but it's not
the main point. It seems that these pieces are thrown together (probably
they are not, and the result of hard
work), and rather a big bunch of improvisations of all sorts which could
have been edited into nice pieces of music, but it's not. It still stays on
the rough side of things. To use the analogy of cooking: you can eat it, but
does it taste nice? I thought this meal could have used a bit more
preparation. Many dishes are on the table for sure, but the burping says it
all.
At the end of last year I reviewed a CDR releases on Tilt Recordings by Eric
Boros and Kiko C. Esseiva. The latter was unknown to me and played piano on
that release. I never heard his first release, 'Musiques Pour
Haut-parleurs', but here's his second solo release 'Sous Les Etoiles'. Not
limited to playing the piano, in fact hardly at all, this is a release to
combine acoustic instruments, noise, voices, field recordings and 'static
sheets of sound'. Hinterzimmer compares it to the likes of Luc Ferrari and
older Nurse With Wound, which indeed make two great places to start
investigating this album. Hard to describe this melting pot of krautrock
(without any drumming that is), musique concrete, improvisation and
electronic music. As a whole it's a much more coherent work than the RLW &
Tito release, moving around in all sorts of strangely textured sounds and
odd shaped compositions. It doesn't always have the vivid imagination of
Steve Stapleton, but then it's rapid changing sounds,
musique concrete like cutting and pasting of sounds, all in a non academic
fashion is quite nice. Maybe some of the pieces could have used a bit more
rigorous editing, but throughout it's nice. (FdW)
Address: http://www.hinterzimmer-records.com

THE RITA & WILT - WEREWOLF IN THE BLACK SPACE (CD by Cipher Productions)
CLEW OF THESEUS - THE PLAYGROUND OF THE DAMNED (CDR by Cipher Productions)
Counter to the proliferation of "objects" in amongst other things
cybernetics but also in the world of celebrity which appears to cover
everything now- including The Rita- I was reading that despite our primitive
notions of number- that numbers may not be objects at all- but properties -
if so then what we have here is a denial of that, of the de-establishment of
the totality of what The Rita was and is (now) in collaboration with Wilt
which erodes the semantic totalities into something with beginnings middles
and ends. The provision of such pieces found here re-casts the object as
some narrative process, negating what was once Rita's truly
indistinguishable noise (back) into authorship. The semiological breakdown
has been (sadly) arrested. As is said elsewhere the "murderous rampaging of
The Rita material shaped, shrouded and clouded by Wilt." droney echoey
rhythmical intros washed in reverb merge into static and lowrise noise
feedback and back out again or sometimes fade into oblivion- or blocks of
hail and blue echo-spaces like english bank holiday weather. Nothing is
erased - a picture is painted and painted again in the second Cdr where the
monster reverb roams and roars. And what is similar with the first release
is the mix of harsh noise - ambient reverb and quoted speech - Ben Brucato
states his "music" Never sounds like itself. - "Sound can be ambient,
experimental, harsh, quiet, cut-up, wall of sound, etc." Which could be a
plea for noise to progress into a totality of arbitrariness? Of the kinds of
experimentalisms in the use of shortwave radio and the iching of the
previous century. And that would be my main concern - as in recent
conversations with others over the lack of irony which is needed now but
might not be present. Not that there is anything wrong with that - quite the
reverse it holds up (again) an ethic - even if it's a totalizing one.
(jliat)
Address: <cipherproductions@lycos.com>

LOUIS DUFORT - MATERIAUX COMPOSES (DVD by Empreintes Digitales)
Sometimes, afterwards, I think I was a bit too harsh. When I recently
reviewed a couple of DVD (but with music only) releases by Empreintes
Digitales, the final review was a re-run of the previous reviews - as to
outline the repeat character of the music. That was, perhaps, not entirely
fair. But it make want to listen with much anticipation to the release by
Louis Dufort. That was, again, all wrong, as this one, I must admit (and
never afraid of admitting when I'm wrong), I quite liked. The differences
between this, and some of the precedent releases by the label, are to me
clear. Dufort's interest doesn't lie in the ways sounds are processed by
similar pieces of software which seem to be applying to the other composers,
but he rather uses a more roughly shaped compositional method. His sounds
are more direct, more in your face, not processed beyond belief as some of
the sounds what they are. In, for instance, 'Materio _***', there are farm
sounds, scraping the surface, cooking
sounds and clusters of instruments. They all make perfect sense, a fine,
balanced audio picture. Sounds do not bounce up and down, back and forth,
stumbling and tumbling, but are placed with great care in the right spot. Of
course Dufort uses all sorts of computer techniques but as a means, not an
end. O.k. so I was perhaps wrong in writing off this label. It doesn't mean
I will necessary straight away applaud everything they do, but this release
made up things in an excellent way. (FdW)
Address: http://www.electrocd.com

SMALL TOWN BOREDOM - AUTUMN MIGHT HAVE HOPE (LP by Trome Records)
This is one of those albums where the title says it all really. Autumn Might
Have Hope is the debut album of Fraser McGowan (who also writes the lyrics)
and Colin Morrison. Here they are aided by a bunch of friends and local
musicians and together they have created this album, which can probably best
be described as 'would-be low-fi singer/songwriter shoe-gazing' music. You
know what I mean. This is not to say this is a bad record, for a debut this
is well-recorded (and not as low-fi as the band wants us to believe) and
contains decent enough tunes. The problem is however, that this (in the
words of Kevin Rowland) 'all sounds the same'. All songs are based on guitar
and vocals with hardly any rhythm section in sight. All songs are below
mid-pace 4/4 tempo. All lyrics revolve around the 'I'm pitiful because you
left me' theme. You want proof? Check out Apologies For Apathy "I came round
to the sound of quiet backwoods rain, static on the TV and you were gone
again" or "We're here
again with promises lost in this bed" (on Afternoons At Thornhill Road) or
"Its all the same but you're not around" (on Enjoy The Fireworks). You get
the idea. Maybe it would be a good idea if McGowan would allow his bandmates
some input on the lyrics next time. There are those who will lap this stuff
up and there are those who will hate this. I fall in neither category;
however, as much as I enjoyed playing this (and I don't want to sound too
negative about this album) I know I will never play it again. Still, the
packaging is nice with a lovely color sleeve and an insert with all the
lyrics. When you find yourself on a lonely Sunday morning with your lover
gone, the rain pelting against your window, an empty fridge, lying in bed
not able to move your limbs because of an over-powering grief, this is the
album to play. (FK)
Address: http://www.tromerecords.com

IDEA FIRE COMPANY - THE ISLAND OF TASTE (LP by Swill Radio)
I've been waiting for this album to arrive for quite a while. IFCO's
previous album Stranded made it to my 'Top Something' of the year and is
played regularly with great pleasure. With such high hopes the chances that
The Island Of Taste would disappoint are, admittedly, quite high. But The
Island Of Taste does not disappoint. Far from it. More than ever IFCO
(consisting of mainman/women Scott Foust, Meara O,Reilly, Jessi Leigh
Swenson and Karla Borecky, this time aided by Dr. Timothy Shortell, Graham
Lambkin and Frans de Waard) have created their own little safe haven. Like
all IFCO releases this albums sounds out of any place or date, much like a
journey rather than one static location. This is probably why IFCOs music
works much better on LP (where the music benefits from space and length)
than on a single format. Inside the colorful cover (a painting of an island
with huge plants, which seems to be floating above a sea) you will find an
envelope with various cards featuring
photos
of the band (Karla Borecky looking especially cute - I can't help it, I have
a weak spot for pony tails) and essays on the phenomenon that is taste
('Taste is the fundamental quality that sums up all other qualities' - a
quote by the Count of Lautreamont - a man who knew everything about taste).
In short, the concept behind IFCO's music is that taste has been reduced to
a static commonplace. However, true taste (true beauty) is something which
needs to be re-discovered by each individual. The Island Of Taste offers a
possible journey for such a re-discovery. The album starts off with Land
Ho!, featuring sounds of walking/scraping combined with sparse electronics
and bells. The title track, Lost Victories and Like Old Days all consist of
sparse piano playing, bird and rain sounds, singing (on Heroes Of The Last
Barricade), remote feedback and tape hiss. But, as always, I find the music
of IFCO hard to put into words. Somehow the words (also those in this
review) tend to remove the
beauty from the sound, which is not what IFCO is about. There is so much to
discover in this record. To paraphrase Scott Foust: "I think of my work as a
timebomb set for a mythical future. I would like to see it explode during my
lifetime, but if that does not obtain, I will die knowing it is still there.
Ticking". That sums up the output of IFCO perfectly. Beauty waiting to be
discovered by those willing to shake off convention. This is a beautiful
record. (FK)
Address: http://www.anti-naturals.org

CONNECT_ICUT - THEY SHOWED ME THE SECRET BEACHES (LP by CSAF Records)
The time gap between this album and the previous 'LA (An Apology)' is
smaller than with the one before that, 'Moss' on Dehausset Records (Vital
Weekly 569 and 467). Yet the new album seems to be moving away from the
previous, as the pop sensibility of the previous album is gone here and now
in favor for a more regular work of glitch music. Musical glitch I should
add straight away, as Sam Macklin, the guy behind Connect_icut, plays little
melodies with the glitches that he has produced through computer means.
Maybe his sources are guitars or, more likely, organ, but they all undergo
processing through max/msp, that piece of software nobody seems to be
without these days. Still high on influences as Oval, Fennesz, Tim Hecker
and Rafael Toral, I thought that this was a good record, but somehow it
lacks something that made 'LA (An Apology)' so enjoyable. But I am not sure
what it is that is missing here. Maybe its the similar approach that runs
through some of these tracks, or perhaps
the lesser pop approach, I don't know. It's surely still nice music to hear,
away from the very silent microsound approach, still with something of his
own, but also something missing. Hopefully to be returned the next time
around. And this album, of which the releasedate is apparently july 1st (!)
is a lot less limited than the previous album. (FdW)
Address: http://www.connect-icut.com

FESTIVAL DER GENIALEN DISSIDENTEN (LP compilation by Enfant Terrible)
The first time I heard of the Dutch label Enfant Terrible was when they
released, very much to my surprise, a compilation LP of the also Dutch
cassette label Trumpett Tapes, not surprisingly one of my favorite labels of
the early 80s. Little did I know, never willing to keep up with what is hot
and what not, that the electronic pop inspired music by Trumpett Tapes was
still hot, 'in certain musical circles'. Since then I receive their mailing
and, even when I don't get everything they release, there is both love of
the past (releasing a 7" by Störung) and the present followers of fashion.
It's a whole international scene. On the new compilation 'Festival der
Genialen Dissidenten' (which sounds very Neue Deutsche Welle, had it not for
the festival der Geniale Dillitanten in 1984 in Berlin) only has artists
from this day and age. Many of them manage to sound like the very early 80s,
but much to my regret I also hear the influence of EBM, a musical style I
associate with black suits and
marching rhythms. Music history is like a double helix, when one movement is
in the ascendent, the other is in the descendent, like a criss cross.
Someone was said by the guy who played him, and this very true for this kind
of retro music. Some of the music on this compilation sounds fresh because
it's very old and thus very new, and some of the music sounds naff because
the style is something that was cool once, but not anymore. My favorites are
those that simply reminded me of twenty-five years ago, dabbling about, all
day and all night with cassettes. Included are Agent Side Grinder, Dolina,
Vincent K, Nosztalgia Direktiva, Adolf Filter (great name, me thinks),
:Codes, Le Traingle De L'Androgyne, Pierre Normal, Yseult Descieux,
Jongbloed and Coeurvert. Nice record! (FdW)
Address: http://www.enfant-terrible.nl

R.O.T. - CECI N'EST PAS AVIOTH/ILS CHANTENT POUR VOUS (LP by Morc Records)
It's been a while since I last R.O.T. from Belgium, who play foremost 'free
music' inside the boundaries of rock music. Guitars, organs, percussion,
objects, electronics and wind instruments. Now they have two new pieces on
one side of a piece of vinyl, but I found it very hard to get excited by
this. First of all there is the recording quality which is a really lo-fi
affair - like a cheap microphone in the middle of a room while the various
band members just seem to be rumbling about - checking out whatever sounds
they might want to play when they start really recording - but whatever they
might be recording is not what they actually recorded when they cut out
these two pieces out of their waiting and mucking about. Free music is a
nice thing, but why put it on vinyl? (FdW)
Address: http://www.morctapes.com

ILLUSION OF SAFETY - SEDATION/QUELL (10" by C.I.P.)
There was a time when Illusion Of Safety was one of the most active forces
in the US experimental music scene. With a varying line up the nucleas was
and is Dan Burke. He and his band members played lots of concerts, of which
I happened to see quite a few, in varying line ups. They could be a total
miss, but most of the time they were great. Combining real instruments with
electronics, acoustic objects, tapes and later on computers, they carved out
music that was on the crossroad of industrial, ambient and musique concrete.
On CD it was the same, absolute master pieces like 'Probe', 'Cancer' or
'Historical' outnumber the weaker brothers, of which I only remember 'Inside
Agitator'. These days Illusion Of Safety celebrate their twenty-fifth
anniversary and it's mainly Dan Burke solo. Still on the road, still on top
of things, but music is no longer his main thing, diversing with other
activities in life and away from the endless pressure of having to deliver
music. So the releases have
become sparse, but are still great. Two pieces on this 10" 'Sedation' and
'Quell'. Both pieces are concentrated works of densely knitted web of
sounds. Apparently Burke uses an old typewriter, turntable pops/crackles,
shortwave and oscillations. The two pieces could be brothers in arms. Slow
development, taking time to take shape. Dense but not blurred. This is the
Illusion Of Safety side of ambient - not comforting quiet, but discomforting
beautiful. 'Sedation' is a humming low end piece with tension lurking
underneath. Two great pieces of someone who should have his name writing
large in the annals of music history (but of course won't, since there is no
such thing as justification). (FdW)
Address: http://www.cipsite.net

VED - TAYGETOS (CDR by Psychic Malmo)
Not being any sort of design freak, I too am sometimes attracted to covers
of releases, and sometimes not at all. So Ved's 'Teygetos' most definitely
falls in the latter kind. Clumsy folded, badly designed sleeve, totally
uninviting to hear it. And then the label name, Psychic Malmo, what. is that
all about it? So, this is one of those releases I put aside and get until
the very end of the day. The start of the release isn't very promising
either. Some jazz like loops with some high end scraping noise. I am
prepared for an hour of bullshit. But I'm wrong. Dead wrong. To spoil the
end of this story: there is one more stinker on this release, a slow piece
that could be pass off as magickal music. But then: eight absolutely great
tracks. Ved plays or samples guitars, rhythm machines and electronics and
blends it together into some crazy form of popmusic. I must have played it
four times or more by now, and I still find it very hard to make up my mind
what to think. It sounds great, but
what is it. Lounge? Electropop, instrumental? A worn out cliche?
Psychedelic? Reggae tunes then? I don't know. What I do know is that these
eight pieces are very pleasant easy pieces of music, which I enjoyed very
much for what it is. Whatever it is. Great popmusic. (FdW)
Address: http://www.myspace.com/psychmalmo

GOLDEN VARIOUS (CDR by Bremsstrahlung Recordings)
The following I had to copy straight from the information: 'The Golden Mean
is perhaps the best known ratio in the world. If one produces a series by
adding two consecutive terms to arrive at the next term
(0,1,2,3,5,8,13...etc.) then as the numbers increase the factor each term is
larger than the previous term approaches it's limit; 1.6180339887... It is
this limit that is often called the "Divine Proportion," and it and its
reciprocal have been widely drawn upon for inspiration and explanation in
the natural sciences, architecture, engineering, art and music." When I was
thirteen I failed miserable in my maths, but I have an idea what the Golden
Mean is, perhaps because I saw it explained with a painting at hand. Here
eleven musicians deal with The Golden Mean, each in their own way. Liner
notes explain what they are doing, which makes the non-math guy in me think
that this Golden Mean isn't that obvious. Josh Ronsen, a.k.a.
Brekexkexkoaxkoax says he didn't succeed in translating
the Golden Mean into music, but still has a track on this compilation, which
I thought was pretty funny. I found it hard to follow some of the more
conceptually inclined pieces in that sense that I know what they want and
what it is about, but do I like to hear them? That might altogether be a
different thing. Sine waves of certain frequencies for certain lengths -
well, ok... Just like my math books gave me a headache when I was thirteen,
the liner notes did pretty much same here, and I started ignoring it, while
listening. That did my alpha (or was it beta) head much more right. The
artists on this compilation all arrive from the microsound scene and one
should be prepared for some lo-fi humming, crackling of field recordings and
static sounds. None of the tracks really stood out as being different than
another, but then on the other hand it was also difficult to point out the
weaker brother in this lot. It all sounded pretty decent to me. Included are
Jos Smolders,
Elektronengehirn, Dale Lloyd, Brekexkexkoaxkoax, Toshiya Tsunoda, Dan
Warburton, Toy Bizarre, John Kannenberg, Alex Keller, Brent Fariss and Josh
Russell. (FdW)
Address: http://www.bremsstrahlung-recordings.org

METEK VS N.STRAHL.N - ANCIENT MACHINERIES (CDR by Dim Records)
Recently we came across the name Metek for the first time (although has been
around since the early 90s), when he made a collaborative release with
Jliat. Here he returns for another collaboration, with Germany's N.Strahl.N.
Metek is from Sweden and has some thirty-five releases to his name and
twenty collaborations. They supplied eachother with 'field recordings,
unfinished compositions and loops' to work on. Metek has two pieces, and
N.Strahl.N four. That be the statistics from this release. I am not sure
what the ancient machineries are that are mentioned on the cover. Maybe old
and rusty machines that were recorded? Or perhaps it refers to the old
school industrial music to which certainly has its ties. Both artists love
the mechanical movements of such machines, which they recorded and then, in
all sorts of manners transform using their computers (o.k. that might be a
break with the old school). Looping things around to make it even more
mechanical, bringing out certain
frequencies. The result is a soundtrack of alienation, the empty factory
space. Certainly one we heard before, quite as good as this one, which on an
average level ranks 6 out of 10. For the lovers of the darker side of
industrial ambient. (FdW)
Address: http://www.myspace.com/dimrec

ASHER & UBEBOET - CELL MEMORY (CDR by Winds Measure Recordings)
CIVYIU KKLIU & ILYA MONOSOV - CARTOLINA POSTALE (CDR by Winds Measure
Recordings)
Very hot on the wheels of their recent collaboration here is another one by
Asher Thal-nir and Miguel A. Tolosa, also known as Asher and Ubeboet. It
doesn't say on the cover, but no doubt this is the work of field recordings
being processed. Two pieces of almost equal length of some utter dark and
densely layered material. Slowly moving forward, like a giant beast leaping
forward. It sounds like the processed sound of wind humming, recalling
ghostly voices. If dark ambient didn't exist already as a musical genre it
could be invented by this release. Not really the sort of spectacle that the
music could be, but in its genre quite nicely put together.
More 'trouble' I had with the release of Civyiu Kkliu and Ilya Monosov -
both gained some reputation for some of the more conceptual outings in
music. In 2002 already they recorded some improvisations together. Monosov
plays a music box and toothpicks, whereas Kkliu plays blank vinyl and a
metal object. "The duration and nature of the work corresponds to the
small/intimate/charged space of a postcard. Postcards as artifacts of
place/time/memory/distance/immediate impressions, etc. frame (sound-) text
in interesting ways" they write, and the release is packed on a postcard.
The music is utterly soft. I put it in my computer, normalized at zero DB
and it's still soft, but a lot more hissy. Rumbling about is the best
description I can come up. I have no idea what this means. The two of them
mess about for some twenty-three minutes and left me completely puzzled. I
am sure I missing a conceptual edge here entirely. (FdW)
Address: http://windsmeasurerecordings.net

SERAFINA STEER - PUBLIC SPIRITED (3"CDR by Static Caravan)
Head down in the world of field recordings, computer processing, hiss,
crack, noise one tends to forget there is a whole world of normal music, and
luckily there is Serafina Steer to remind us. Back in Vital Weekly 577 we
already reviewed her CD, which she cited such influences as The Cure, Kate
Bush, Fleetwood Mac (all three also my favorites), Leafcutter John and
Leonard Cohen. Here she returns with four new songs, why oh why on a 3"CDR
and not a nice 10", Static Caravans? Steer's voice is more sweeter than that
of Björk, to which she reminded me initially. Now the music, played on harp,
synthesizer and vocals (with additional drums and clarinet by others) sounds
even more folky than before and have a great charming quality which stick
right in your brain. Great sweet music. The great counterpart after a day of
field recordings, computer processing, hiss, crack, noise. (FdW)
Address: http://www.staticcaravan.org

BERLIN ELECTRONICS (4x3"CDR by Absinth Records)
Some pretty long time, Absinth Records from Berlin send us a release
containing four 3"CDR releases, all dealing with strings - see Vital Weekly
410. Here they come up with a new edition, also in four different 3" CDRs
under the banner of 'Berlin - Electronics'. Nothing is written on them, but
the timing is on the cover, so one can see whose who here. Gilles Aubrey's
'Computer Programming' is probably the only solo computer pieces here. Maybe
it's him programming his computer, with the attack on the keyboard being
amplified and modified through real time software? That's at least the way
it sounds like and I must admit I thought it was interesting on a conceptual
level (if indeed true) and not as much as on a musical level. Of the three
pieces, 'Volutes III' was the most minimal, but also the most interesting
one. Annette Krebs could have been on the previous release of string music,
because she plays electric guitar, next to mixing board, tape, objects and
radios. Her piece sounds
more improvised that Aubry, and has a strong dynamic outline, ranging from
the subtle to the peak end of noise. Moving back and forth with great ease.
I never heard of Andrea Ermke, who arrives just armed with a minidisc and a
mixing desk. I think these minidiscs of Ermke are filled with field
recordings of some kind - hard to define what it is - which are being mixed
on the mixing desk. It's pretty raw stuff going on here, not really careful
but quite raw. That rough quality makes it actually quite worthwhile. The
last is Ignaz Schick who plays organ pipes, cymbals, objects, violin bows,
turntable looper and electronic treatments. This is the most musical of the
four. Strange flute like sounds working in the field of overtones make the
four pieces very enjoyable. Here too a certain rawness give an additional
power to the release, but the best is saved until the last in the lot. (FdW)
Address: http://www.absinthrecords.com

MUS****C (MP3 compilation by Cronica Electronica)
The older I get, the more melancholic I get, the faster time flies by like
there is no yesterday, today or tomorrow. Is it tuesday again, am I doing
yet another Vital Weekly. It seems so. So in my perception of things Cronica
Electronica have been around for ages, but they celebrate their fifth
birthday with an online present. No less than 192 minutes of music (which
would have been three CDs in real life, but I assume they don't want to end
up financially broke from such an affair) and I was wondering when ever they
released some of these people. The older I get, the more I tend to forget.
Surely I remember Janek Schaeffer, Ran Slavin, o.blaat or Marc Behrens but
erm, Heitor Alvelos, James Eck Rippie, Cem Güney? I don't seem to remember.
If you would be looking for a good compendium of todays electronica boys
(and some girls - counting one here only), a bit like Mille Plateaux used to
do with their compilations 'Clicks & Cuts' and 'Modulation & Tranformation',
but then updated to
today's standard, this is a very good place to go. None of the artists seem
to have send it throw away pieces, 'since it's only an online compilation'
and many take advantage of the medium to sen in long pieces. Güney has the
longest with fourteen minutes, but also @C, Freiband (who sound like a
microsound remix of Electric Light Orchestra), Pedro Tudela and Vitor
Joaquim go well over ten minutes, while others go easily for six.
Autodigest's merely one minute is pale. As said this is a pretty good
compilation with music from the low end fields to the loud noise of Alvelos,
from chirpy techno like music and the full on abstract. A great party bash
this one. (FdW)
Address: http://www.cronicaelectronica.org

YOSHIMI! - MIXED (MP3)
Some time ago we reviewed Yoshimi!'s release for Esc. Rec and now he already
returns with a work that is not entirely his, but then again it is. It has
four pieces of remixes and covers of his work. Toxic Chicken does a nice
quirky remix of 'Hot Stuff'. Crash Roswell bleeps away in a cover, played on
what sounds like gameboys and a vocoder. Evince takes a somewhat more
serious approach, but his remix didn't entirely convince me. The EP closes
with Sebastian Cain feat Yoshimi & The Cartel with what could be a new
piece, and breaks entirely with the other three tracks: a slow piece,
mumbling vocals but in fact it has quite a nice tension to it. Quite a nice
remix work altogether and a nice introduction to this talented young man.
(FdW)
Address: http://www.yoshiminotaband.com

SIEGMAR FRICKE & ROYCE ICON - FALSE NEGATIVES (MP3 by Agonal Period)
One of the things you can never 'proof', if there is such a thing to be
proven, is the influence people have on other people. But here's a little
theory I thought of. Siegmar Fricke helps out Maurizio Bianchi these days
and is thus influenced by Bianchi, either from his old work or his more
recent. Of course Fricke takes in whatever he has already done in the past
(of which I only seem to remember some rhythm music and a collaboration with
Giancarlo Toniutti). Effect loaded music that is. Here he teams up with a
young artist called Royce Icon, in order to make music 'sure to make you cum
in your panties', the label promises us. I very seldom have wet dreams from
music, and certainly not this one, although the thirty or so minutes that
this harsher form of ambient hovered my space, was quite nice. Loaded with
whole stacks of sound effects to which extend the feedback is totally
altered, alienated and makes a pleasant - well, almost pleasant - room
filling vibration. Not far away from
some of the recent Bianchi music, actually... (FdW)
Address: http://www.taediumvitae.com/agonalperiod/


1. From: olivia block <oliviablock@comcast.net>

March 28-9, 2008 Santa Fe, New Mexico. Santa Fe International Festival of
Electroacoustic Music. Performance for piano and electronics
http://sfifem.csf.edu/

March 31-April 1 Brooklyn, NY (in absentia) Mata Young Composers Now
festival will have an encore presentation of "Angry in Your Sleep" multi
speaker sound installation
http://www.matafestival.org/Mfestival08.html

April 5, 2008 Santander, Spain. Performance for piano and electronics in SDR
Muestra de Arte Sonoro festival.
http://www.santandersonoro.org

April 8, 2008 Chicago, IL. (in absentia) Chicago Cultural Center Chicago
Sound Map festival. Encore performance of "Stop the Sound of the Big Bell"
for large ensemble of improvisor/performers conducted by Don Malone, along
with a new composition by Ernst Karel
http://www.kuronekomusic.com/Chicago-Sound-Map-2008

April 28, 2008 Los Angeles, California. CalArts Center for Experiments in
Art. CEAIT festival. Performance/interpretation of a graphic score by Jason
Kahn on piano with Jason Kahn, Mark Trayle and Ulrich Krieger
http://redcat.org/season/0708/mus/mus.php

(scroll down)

2. From: douglas@benfo.demon.co.uk


----------------------------------------------------------------
MAY event
----------------------------------------------------------------
** SONICRECYCLER4
A night of reinvented sounds... 2008 edition!

A packed evening of radical sounds in this lovely Thame-side venue again.
- Think: Reduce, Re-use, Recycle

Saturday May 10th, 4pm to 11.30pm

live:
BLEVIN BLECTUM
DAVID TOOP
SEAN O'HAGAN (High Llamas/Microdisney)
ALEKS KOLKOWSKI (Recording Angels)
SIMON BOOKISH

DJs
LAETITIA SADIER (Stereolab/Monade)
JANEK SCHAEFER (rummages the Oxfam box as DJ Dedication)
IRIS GARRELFS

+ demos/installations:
Aleks Kolkowski - live CD recycling demo
Dithernoise + Simon Storey - pedal-powered installation

** bring your old CDs to be recycled into vinyl
records or for the Oxfam box...**

stalls + restaurant and River Terrace Bar.
Admission: Tickets £10 (Conc £8) from Box Office or online at
http://www.wegottickets.com/event/28432
(Foyer/bar area free admission)

Venue:
Watermans Art Centre
40 High Street
Brentford, London, TW8 0DS
Box Office 020 8232 1010
http://www.watermans.org.uk
For updates, sample sounds, movies
http://www.myspace.com/sonicrecycler

SUPPORT WATERMANS ART CENTRE!
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/support-watermans-100%20

----------------------------------------------------------------
upcoming in JULY
----------------------------------------------------------------

** Horatio Oratorio
A concert & sound installation by Recording Angels
- Aleks Kolkowski and Stephan Mathieu.

July 11th & 12th, 2008

Horatio Oratorio is an exploration through the history of recorded sound.
The earliest recording and plackback technologies and rare
mechanical-acoustic string instruments are combined with vintage and
state-of-the-art electronics. A magnificent array of acoustic horns and
custom-built loudspeakers project sound from historic wax cylinder
phonographs, gramophones and stroh violins, layered and transformed by live
digital sound processing.

The Shunt Vaults, Joiner Street,
London Bridge tube station, London SE1
Funded by PRSF Live Connections

----------------------------------------------------------------
other UPCOMING PERFORMANCES etc
----------------------------------------------------------------
MAY 24
IRIS GARRELFS installation
Evolution Festival, Leeds, UK

JULY 29
IRIS GARRELFS residency with Urbania
Grizedale Art, Coniston, Cumbria, UK

3. From: incite@gmx.de

Hoerbar Hamburg presents:
Mecha/Orga (GR)
Broken Sleep (CAN)
29.03. - 21:00 - 5?
Hoerbar / B-Movie
Brigittenstr. 5
Hamburg St.Pauli
<http://www.hoerbar-ev.de>http://www.hoerbar-ev.de

4. From: echomusic <echomusicrecordings@yahoo.com>


mecha/orga live:

March 28 @ <http://www.hoerbar-ev.de/>the Hoerbar, Hamburg, Germany (also
participating: Broken Sleep)
March 29 @ Divus gallery, London, UK (presented by
<http://www.entracte.co.uk/>Entr'acte)
April 4 @ <http://www.wittezaal.be/>De Witte Zaal, Ghent, Belgium (presented
by <http://www.odradek.net/>Odradek, also participating: illusion of safety
and if,bwana)
April 6 @<http://www.stadtgarten.de/>Stadtgarten-studio672, Cologne, Germany
(presented by <http://www.aufabwegen.com/>Auf Abwegen also participating:
illusion of safety and if,bwana)

www.mecha-orga.com

5. From: "> vertigo" <herrkock@gmail.com>


O Tannenbaum programme

March 26
die Sibirische Zelle
filmpresentation /film premiere Colum One!
19.00 - 23.00 hours
entree 2,00 euro


March 27
Raw Meat
Eskimo Films hosted by Taco Hidde Bakker.
20.00 - 23.00 hours
entree 1,50 euro

pfügerstrasse 79
berlin

6. From: "David Galbraith" <djg@panix.com>

EITHER/OR SOLOS WITH TECHNOLOGY
AT THE STONE
Avenue C and 2nd Street, New York City
March 26, 2008, 10pm
tickets are $10 at the door, no reservations

Either/Or, "a new and first-rate new-music ensemble"
Bernard Holland, The New York Times

Either/Or are proud to present three dynamic and cutting edge works for
soloists with analog synthesizer, tape, and amplification performed by
Richard Carrick, piano, David Shively, percussion, and Alex Waterman,
cello. Program includes the west coast premiere of Keeril Makan's new
work for amplified percussion and the world premiere of David Galbraith's
new work for cello, analog synthesizer and digital oscillators.

program
Luigi Nono "...sofferte onde serene" for piano and tape, 1977
Richard Carrick, piano
Keeril Makan "Resonance Alloy" for amplified percussion, 2007,
east coast premiere
David Shively, percussion
David Galbraith - "Composition 2005 No. 1" for cello, analog
synthesizer and digital oscillators; world premiere
Alex Waterman, cello


Since 2004, Either/Or, "a new a first-rate new music ensemble," (The New
York Times) has been hailed for its dynamic performances and creative
programming of new and recent chamber music in distinguished venues in New
York City and beyond. Either/Or concerts present new works for
unconventional chamber ensembles and soloists rarely heard elsewhere.
Drawing equally on the latest works of emerging composers, classics of
the historical avant-garde and American experimentalists, Either/Or is
fast developing a reputation as a compelling new voice on the New York
concert calendar. www.eitherormusic.org

The Stone is a not-for-profit performance space dedicated to the
EXPERIMENTAL and AVANT-GARDE. All expenses are paid for by the MUSIC
itself - through the online sale of special Limited Edition CDs released
yearly on the Tzadik label. Each month a different musician is responsible
for curating the programs with 100% of the nightly revenue going directly
to the musicians. www.thestonenyc.com
--


Vital Weekly is published by Frans de Waard and submitted for free to
anybody with an e-mail address. If you don't wish to receive this, then let
us know. Any feedback is welcome <vital@vitalweekly.net>. Forward to your
allies.
Snail mail: Vital Weekly/Frans de Waard - Acaciastraat 11 - 6521 NE
Nijmegen - The Netherlands
All written by Frans de Waard (FdW), Dolf Mulder (DM)
<dolf.mulder@hetnet.nl>, Robert Meijer (RM), Niels Mark (NM), Jeff Surak
(JS), Craig N (CN), Boban Ristevski (BR), Maurice Woestenburg (MW), Jliat
(Jliat), Freek Kinkelaar (FK), Magnus Schaefer (MSS) and others on a less
regular basis.
This is copyright free publication, except where indicated, in which case
permission has to be obtained from the respective author before reprinting
any, or all of the desired text. The author has to be credited, and Vital
Weekly has to be acknowledged at all times if any texts are used from it.
Announcements can be shortened by the editor. Please do NOT send any
attachments/jpeg's, we will trash them without viewing.
There is no point in directing us to MP3 sites, as we will not go there. Any
MP3 release to be reviewed should be burned as an audio CDR and send to the
address above.
Some people think it's perhaps 'cool', 'fun', 'art' or otherwise to send
something to Vital Weekly that has no information. Don't bother doing this:
anything that is too hard to decipher will be thrown away. Also we have set
this new policy: Vital Weekly only concerns itself with new releases. We
usually act quick, so sending us something new means probably the first
review you will see. If we start reviewing older material we will not be
able to maintain this. Please do not send any thing that is older than six
months. Anything older will not be reviewed. In both cases: you can save
your money and spend it otherwise.
Lastly we have decided to remove the announcement section of Vital Weekly
that is archived on our website that is older than five weeks. Since they
95% deal with concerts that have been, it's gentle to remove the
announcement and more important the e-mail addresses coming with that.


the complete archive of Vital Weekly including search possibilities:
http://www.vitalweekly.net

понедельник, 24 марта 2008 г.

Connexion Bizarre NEWS

 
 
Greetings,

Connexion Bizarre was updated on 2008-03-24 with new webcasts, an updated media feature and recommended links.

In the media section, a new installment of "Business Traveller".
This week's webcast features "Cultured Box (part II)" with music selection by DJ Istabmyhead and "20080324-0330" with music selection by M.

Regards,
Connexion Bizarre
(www.connexionbizarre.net



Webcast & Radio Show


Part 1 - Click here to stream or right-click to download
("Culture Boxed (part II)" with music selection by DJ Istabmyhead)

Drop The Lime - Circles
[Shot Shot Hearts - Tigerbeat6]
Burial - Archangel
[Untrue - Hyperdub]
Silk Saw - Jugstrack
[Maschinenfest 2000 - Pflichtkauf]
Spyweidos - 3.5 ec
[Wetsound Orchestra - Poeta Negra]
Black Lung - Panic Squad Interruption
[The Great Architect - Nova Zembla]
Sven Väth - Dein Schweiss
[Contact - Schallplatten GmbH]
Modeselektor - Godspeed
[Happy Birthday! - BPitch Control]
Saul Williams - African Student Movement
[Saul Williams - Fader Label]
Autechre - Eutow
[Tri Repetae - Warp Records]
Architect - Colorado 6am
[I went out shopping to get some noise - Hymen Records]
Twinkle - La Victime Volontaire
[Le Jouet - Audiotrauma/Ant Zen]
Polyspace - Express
[The Label Compilation 01 - Funk Welten]


Part 2 - Click here to stream or right-click to download
("20080324-03230" with music selection by M.)

Kenji Siratori - Dead Souls (feat. Julia Durer)
[Epidemic Animals - Old Europa Café]
Manufactura - God Damn The Sun (Swans Tribute) [MNFCTR vs. The Operative]
[In The Company Of Wolves - Crunch Pod]
Xabec - Open State (Re-Programmed Rmx by Mnemonic)
[V/A - Hyperreality - Aliens Productions]
Saburo Hirano - Depths In Minamo 2
[V/A - My Life In An Insulation Test - Electr-Ohm/Appliance Japan]
Andrew King - The Knight Templar's Dream
[The Amfortas Wound - Athanor]
PS vs Sektor304 - 4:57
[PS vs Sektor304 - Enough Records]
ESA - Principals of a Paradisic Resolve
[How Pure Would Your Utopia Be? - Hive Records]
Ambassador 21 - Megeneration
[Fuck All Systems - Invasion Wreck Chords]
Sona Eact - Hydro Crash
[Hard Industrial Loop Check - Pro Noize]
Beton Barrage - All Signals Down
[V/A - Like Music To Their Ears Vol. 2 - Mechanoise Labs]
Tugboat - Never Enough
[V/A - 8BP050 - 8bitpeoples]
Quench - Fanion
[Fanion - Lovethechaos]

Listen to the Webcast


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.

 


Media
 
  Carlos Ferrão - Business Traveller
"This is the first chapter from Saskia Miller's draft novel which I feel is relevant to your understanding of Mr Tim Miller and what has occurred. It details his first night in India and is a clear sign of his failing mental health..."
Read more
 
 


Connexion Bizarre events status:

Bodypop @ "Era Uma Vez No Porto" bar (map location)
19/04, saturday, 11pm-2.30am; Rua do Passeio Alegre 550, Porto (Portugal).
The "usual selection and latest news" of synthpop, electropop, robotpop, 8bitpop and bodypop!

Bodypop @ "Era Uma Vez No Porto" bar (map location)
17/05, saturday, 11pm-2.30am; Rua do Passeio Alegre 550, Porto (Portugal).
The "usual selection and latest news" of synthpop, electropop, robotpop, 8bitpop and bodypop!

Recommended Events:
Note: we are not directly involved in the organization of these events.

 
PT.Core 4
2008-03-28, Rock In Chiado, Lisbon (PT)
Please check Thunderdome.Web.PT for more information.

 
Slaughterhaus 5: Colonisation Begins
2008-03-29, The Others, London (UK)
Please check Slaughterhaus 5 for more information.

 
STFU Porto
2008-04-24/25/25, Fábrica de Som, Porto (PT)
Please check www.myspace.com/stfuporto for more information.


 


Recently added links

ManGenerated/RRs.R, Belgian experimental/noise collective/resource/label
Invisible War, podcast host, serious music appreciation and discussion platform
Dtrashcast, D-Trash Records podcast

Netlabel releases spotlight:

ZandoZ Corp. "Organismus Palhaçus" (Alquimia Sonora)

Latest recommended links

D-Trash Records 2008 New Releases Mix
Gutsville #1 (full issue), available for free as JPG's @ Newsarama.
Everywhere and nowhere: social networking will become a ubiquitous feature of online life. That does not mean it is a business (Economist)

Constantly updated links

Connexion Bizarre @ del.icio.us, also available as  RSS 


 


Merchandise
 
  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.
Read more



 
 
Connexion Bizarre web-logs & networking sites (in decreasing order of activity/importance)
Livejournal: livejournal.com/users/connexion
MySpace: www.myspace.com/connexionbizarre
Facebook: Connexion Bizarre page & Connexion Bizarre group
Ning: Connexion Bizarre Network
LastFM: www.last.fm/user/connexion_biz
Trig: www.trig.com/connexionbizarre
Hi5: connexionbizarre.hi5.com

News feeds
 RSS  - http://www.connexionbizarre.net/rss.xml - site updates
 RSS  - http://del.icio.us/rss/connexionbizarre - link updates
 



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На данный момент программа удалила 4505 письма, содержащиеспам.
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вторник, 18 марта 2008 г.

Connexion Bizarre Magazine News

 

Connexion Bizarre

Greetings,

Connexion Bizarre was updated on 2008-03-17 with new webcasts, new reviews, new media features, new recommended events and links.

Reviewed this week were Null Device "Excursions", Totakeke "eLekatota: The Other Side Of The Tracks", ESA "How Pure Would Your Utopia Be?", Algol "Deep Thoughts About Universe9", Parade Ground "Rosary".
In the media section, a new installment of "Business Traveller" and the re-release of the "Mothers Against Noise vol.1" compilation.
This week's webcast features "Cultured Box (part I)" with music selection by DJ Istabmyhead and "Razorwire Candy" with music selection by M.

Regards,
Connexion Bizarre
(www.connexionbizarre.net)




Webcast & Radio Show


Part 1 - Click here to stream or right-click to download
("Culture Boxed (part I)" with music selection by DJ Istabmyhead)

Ab Ovo - Fragments
Hinsidan - Finally
¥?¥ - White Sand
Ad.Ver.Sary - Friends of Father
Scott Sturgis - Euphondisson
Sofa Surfers (feat. Oddateee) - 21st Century Army
Amon Tobin - Defocus
cLOUDDEAD - I Promise Never To Get Paint On My Glasses Again (1)
Boards of Canada - Sixtyniner
Ra - Wonderful Bastard



Part 2 - Click here to stream or right-click to download
("Razorwire Candy" with music selection by M.)

Autoclav1.1 - This is Untitled (Synnack remix)
[Broken Beats For Broken Hearts - Hive Records]
5F-X - Breikelbitjes
[The Xenomorphians - Your Friendly Alien Invasion - Hands Productions]
Memmaker - Energon³
[How To Enlist In A Robot Uprising - Hive Records]
Ambassador 21 - In Love
[Fuck All Systems - Invasion Wreck Chords]
H.I.V.+ - Havoc2027 (ultimate EBM mix by Bak XIII)
[We Are All Haunted Houses - Caustic Records]
Mandelbrot - Thorny Hands
[Thorns - Audiophob]
Nazi Bastards From Aldebaran - Cleansing The Planet
[Invasion - Zhelezobeton]
dISHARMONY - Masonic
[Frames - Aliens Productions]
Heimstatt-Yipotash - Mühsal Der Kosmonautenkrankheit
[Perpetual Beta - Hands Productions]
Oxyd - Transmission
[Larva - Aliens Productions]
S.i.c. [Single impulse code] - Play On
[1 Drum Line 8 Analog Lines - Caustic Records]
Mark Hamn - À partir est d'ici la seule solution
[Je déchire l'ongle aux criminels - Afe Records]

Listen to the Webcast


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

Null Device - 'Excursions'

Null Device - Excursions
You know it when you find something that can't be easily categorized and yet it does fit the title with such perfection that only the album itself can rival with... This is one of those cases and it does make it as an interesting experience indeed.
Read more

Totakeke - 'eLekatota: The Other Side Of The Tracks'

Totakeke - eLekatota: The Other Side Of The Tracks
"eLekatota" is one of those albums that demands (and deserves) the listener's undivided time and attention to be fully appreciated. An excellent listening choice for those occasions in which one finds time to not do anything else but sit down, relax, appreciate a very good record and forget about life's worries.
Read more

ESA - 'How Pure Would Your Utopia Be?'

ESA - How Pure Would Your Utopia Be?
The sophomore release of British musician Jamie Blacker's solo project, ESA (Electronic Substance Abuse), shows that the positive critical reactions his debut offering were quite deserved and that the artist was still capable of improving the quality and creativity of his work.
Read more

Algol - 'Deep Thoughts About Universe9'

Algol - Deep Thoughts About Universe9
The tracklisting on Algol's "Deep thoughts about universe" reads like something approaching the catalogue of a surrealist art collection (exemplified by "Aware of universe's inevitable collapse" and "The conversation of space to time") but the lofty pretensions to high art end there, thankfully.
Read more

Parade Ground - 'Rosary'

Parade Ground - Rosary
"Rosary" won't certainly bring Parade Ground into the forefront of industrial music, but it's worth a few spins especially if you miss the sounds and experiments of the 80's. If you don't, it is possible that you will get tired after some minutes into the record, since this is certainly not easy-listening stuff.
Read more


Media

V/A - 'Mothers Against Noise vol.1'

Various - Mothers Against Noise vol.1
Re-release of the "Mothers Against Noise vol.1" noise and experimental sound-art compilation. Originally released in 2005 as part of the Mothers Against Noise (dot) Org temporary web phenomenon.
See more

Carlos Ferrão - 'Business Traveller'

Carlos Ferrão - Business Traveller
"As agreed, I will begin sending you copies of the documentation we have been compiling. Once again I apologize for the piecemeal nature of these deliveries but I know you are eager to start your work. I am starting today with the first e-mail of many."
Read more


Connexion Bizarre events status:

Bodypop @ "Era Uma Vez No Porto" bar (map location)
19/04, saturday, 11pm-2.30am; Rua do Passeio Alegre 550, Porto (Portugal).
The "usual selection and latest news" of synthpop, electropop, robotpop, 8bitpop and bodypop!

Bodypop @ "Era Uma Vez No Porto" bar (map location)
17/05, saturday, 11pm-2.30am; Rua do Passeio Alegre 550, Porto (Portugal).
The "usual selection and latest news" of synthpop, electropop, robotpop, 8bitpop and bodypop!

Recommended Events:
Note: we are not directly involved in the organization of these events.


Sick Disko
2008-03-22, Branx, Portland OR (US)
Please check Sick Disko for more information.


Deep6 Productions presents Iszoloscope vs. Memmaker + Sinnack & Worms Of The Earth
2008-03-23, DC9, Washington DC (US)


PT.Core 4
2008-03-28, Rock In Chiado, Lisbon (PT)
Please check Thunderdome.Web.PT for more information.


Slaughterhaus 5: Colonisation Begins
2008-03-29, The Others, London (UK)
Please check Slaughterhaus 5 for more information.


STFU Porto
2008-04-24/25/25, Fábrica de Som, Porto (PT)
Please check www.myspace.com/stfuporto for more information.


Recently added links

Grenadier
Igorrr
Taratulla Shop

Netlabel releases spotlight:

833-45 "Tunguska" (Excentrica Netlabel)
Heimstatt-Yipotash "Landslide"

Latest recommended links

Downtao "Live" (video here and here)
I-Blog
Child-like intelligence created in Second Life (iT News)
Bad Science Journalism and the Myth of the Oppressed Underdog

Constantly updated links

Connexion Bizarre @ del.icio.us, also available as  RSS 


Merchandise

Connexion Bizarre Pins

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.
Read more


Connexion Bizarre web-logs & networking sites (in decreasing order of activity/importance)
Livejournal: livejournal.com/users/connexion
MySpace: www.myspace.com/connexionbizarre
Facebook: Connexion Bizarre page & Connexion Bizarre group
Ning: Connexion Bizarre Network
LastFM: www.last.fm/user/connexion_biz
Trig: www.trig.com/connexionbizarre
Hi5: connexionbizarre.hi5.com

News feeds
 RSS  - http://www.connexionbizarre.net/rss.xml - site updates
 RSS  - http://del.icio.us/rss/connexionbizarre - link updates


 



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Vital Weekly 619

============
VITAL WEEKLY
============
number 619
------------
week 12
------------


Vital Weekly, the webcast: we offering a weekly webcast, freely to download.
This can be regarded as the audio-supplement to Vital Weekly. Presented as a
radioprogramm with excerpts of just some of the CDs (no vinyl or MP3)
reviewed. It will remain on the site for a limited period of 5 weeks.
Download the file to your MP3 player and enjoy!
complete track and list here: http://www.vitalweekly.net/podcast.html

before submitting material please read this carefully:

http://www.vitalweekly.net/fga.html Submitting material means you read this
and approve of this.

* noted are in this week's podcast

MACHINE FOR MAKING SENSE - THE ACT OF OBSERVATION BECOMES THE OBJECT ITSELF
(CD by Rossbin) *
LINSEY WELLMAN & MIKE ESSOUDRY - SAME (CD by Malasartes)
YUL - DEPARTURE (CD by Malasartes)
THE MAGIC I.D. - TILL MY BREATH GIVES OUT (CD by Erst Pop) *
K. LEIMER - LESSER EPITOMES (CD by Palace Of Lights) *
VATICAN ANALOG: SHOW THE LOVE (CD compilation by Vatican Analog)
SHIN JIN RUI - ZUTIQUA (CD by Ex Libris Records)
1/3 OCTAVE BAND - I WILL PASS BY HERE (CD by Humbug Records)
EDWARD RUCHALSKI - WATER TRAIN (CD by Humbug Records) *
RYOJI IKEDA - 1000 FRAGMENTS (CD by Raster Noton)
FRANK ROTHKAMM - JUST 3 ORGANS (CD by Flux Records) *
WERNER DURAND - REMNANTS FROM PARADISE (CD by Absurd) *
FEAR FALLS BURNING - FRENZY OF THE ABSOLUTE (CD by Conspiracy Records) *
SUNS OF ARQA - SUNS OF ARQA RE-MIXS MUSLIMGAUZE (CD by Soleilmoon
Recordings)
ARANOS - MOTHER OF MOONS BATHING (CD by Soleilmoon Recordings) *
FREDERIC BLONDY & THOMAS LEHN - OBDO (CD by Another Timbre) *
CLIVE BELL & BECHIR SAADE - AN ACCOUNT OF MY HUT (CD by Another Timbre)
MAX EASTLEY & GRAHAM HALLIWELL & EVAN PARKER & MARK WASTELL - A LIFE SAVED
BY A SPIDER AND TWO DOVES (CD by Another Timbre)
METALYCEE (12" by Interstellar Records)
ZACK KOUNS - SON IS ALONE ASLEEP IN HIMSELF (CDR by Moonmoonmoon)
K.E. REVIS - SLOWLY UNCOVERING FINAL DECEIT (CDR by Boxer Music) *
ABESTA - TOSCO (CDR by Sonora) *
PAPER THING STAGES - FLYING HEARSE (2CDR by Sort Of Records)
THE FRICTION BROTHERS (CDR by Abstract Black)
DAVID BERNABO - GRAPHIC SCORES (CDR by Abstract Black) *
BRAM STADHOUDERS - MENS (CDR by Brammetje Records)
BRAM STADHOUDERS & ONNO GOVAERT - ENDERRA (CDR by Brammetje Records)
C. REIDER - FINE FAILURES (MP3 by Vuhz Music)
THE SONICS OF ART SPACES (MP3 by Stasisfield)
FOURM - CIL (MP3 by Stasisfield)
TAU - DIALECTICAL MOVEMENTS (MP3 by Stasisfield)
THE LOST DATA PROJECT - ANYWHERE OUT OF THE WORLD (MP3 by Stasisfield) *

MACHINE FOR MAKING SENSE - THE ACT OF OBSERVATION BECOMES THE OBJECT ITSELF
(CD by Rossbin)
How noble! Rossbin no longer sell their CDs but give them to anyone who make
a donation to a private institution for poor and disabled children in Peru.
That's something that should be done more, but I'm afraid it won't easily
happen. Over the many years of their existence, Australia's Machine For
Making Sense have had many members, with, I believe Jim Denley and Stevie
Wishart to be constant factors. They play hurdy gurdy, vocals and
electronics and wind instruments and electronics. Here they are together
with Amanda Stewart (voice and text) and Rik Rue (analog and digital
manipulation). As a 'band they explore relations between linguistics,
poetry, speech, music, notions of sound, science and politics.' To that end
the conversation is important - be it the conversation between instruments,
the conversation of techniques applied as well as the multitude of voices
that they use and which come to the listener in all sorts of appearances,
many of them not to be dissected as voices.
Above and beyond all doubt Machine For Making Sense is a group of musicians
who play improvised music. Even when this was recorded in 2001, the group
uses extended techniques, anywhere for regular playing of their instruments
to the 'instrument as object' treatment from the world of silence
improvisers. Text bits fly about, and the whole thing requires a lot of
attention. Despite being inspired by the onkyo posse, Machine For Making
Sense make a lot of sound, constant, densely layered and one has to keep the
full attention span as not to make loose anything that is going on here. Not
really easy listening, laid back improvisation, but sturdy and powerful.
Peal off some more layers, and more beauty will unfold. (FdW)
Address: http://www.rossbin.com

LINSEY WELLMAN & MIKE ESSOUDRY - SAME (CD by Malasartes)
YUL - DEPARTURE (CD by Malasartes)
Two new releases from the small Malasartes label that is run by Damian
Nisenson.
Linsey Wellman (alto and soprano sax) and Mike Essoudry (drums, percussion)
are together here for their first effort. In thirteen pieces that are
composed and arranged by themselves, they play charming duets. In most
pieces Wellman leads with his beautiful saxplaying. He has a nice tone, and
there is some eastern touch in his playing. But Essoudry places many
effective accents with his reduced playing. Together they built nice
atmospheres. Most pieces are of a meditative nature. Inspired music it is.
Yul is a trio of Pierre Tanguay (drums), Erwin Vann (saxes) and Michel
Mergaerts (bass). Tanguay needs no introduction. He left his mark on dozens
of albums, many of them on the Ambiances Magnétiques label. Vann and
Mergaerts are both from Belgium. Vann is a professional since 1985. Worked
with Toots Thielemans, Wayne Shorter, Paolo Fresu, Marc Ducret, Bobby
Previte, a.o. Michel Mergaerts from Brussels, started his career as a blues
guitarist. Later he played with belgian jazz giants as Steve Houben, Pirly
Zurstrassen and Jean-Louis Rassinfosse. Since about seven years he lives in
Canada, playing with vocalist Julie Lebon and Trioxyde, a prog-rock/jazz
outfit. The three met in 2005 and started their Yul-project. The title of
their CD refers to a common experience for all three of them: passing
airports. Compared to the cd by Wellman and Essoudry this one is much more
close to jazz. The playing of Vann is delicate and poetic. A lyrical player.
Mergaerts produces a warm sound from his
bass. Tanguay is the most eccentric of the three with his polyrhytmic
playing. But if you don't share their love for jazz, this one will not talk
to you. (DM)
Address: http://www.actuellecd.com/

THE MAGIC I.D. - TILL MY BREATH GIVES OUT (CD by Erst Pop)
Improvisation and popmusic is a rare combination, but it's surely an
interest for Kai Fagaschinski and Christof Kurzmann. They worked together on
a release before, 'First Time I Ever Saw Your Face' by Kommando Raumschiff
Zitrone, but that was merely a shadow of what now has become The Magic I.D.
Back then (Vital Weekly 567) things were still firmly rooted in
improvisation, here it's starting to shape up as popmusic. The band has two
clarinet players. On the right hand Kai Fagaschinski and on the left Marcel
Thieke, whereas there is also on Margareth Kammerer on vocals and guitars
and Kurzmann on vocals, laptop and lloop. As you should I always welcome
popmusic, be it stupid, be it intelligent, and most of all in combination
with all the other musical interests I have. So: hurrah to The Magic I.D.
The pieces were recorded live in the studio, with the emphasis on the voice
of Kammerer, who sings them with a rather sweet, jazzy voice. Sometimes in
duet with Kurzmann whose voice fits
well. The music on the other hand is all improvised, of course with a large
portion for the two clarinets. The laptop is merely an ornament, keeping
things reduced to the background, while the guitar gently weeps in the wind.
Still the improvisational aspects of this release are high and mighty, but
they break away from the routines that sometimes hoover in these areas and
combine it with something entirely different. The Magic I.D. are not likely
to be seen on MTV miming their hit, nor easily in anything even remotely
alternative popmusic, or jazz by any standard. So they find a voice of their
own, a rarity these days. This offers many new roads to be explored. Perhaps
Erstwhile, on whose sub division this is, will surprise us some more. (FdW)
Address: http://www.erstwhilerecords.com

K. LEIMER - LESSER EPITOMES (CD by Palace Of Lights)
In less than eighteen months K. Leimer released three CDs (see also Vital
Weekly 533 and 573), which is a great break from the silence of the years
before. 'Statistical Truth', the first after his return, was the last work
of the old Leimer, the world of analogue synthesizers and ambient. 'The
Useless Lesson' after that had a more classic approach, with a string trio
among others. As remarked back then, Leimer re-invented his ambient music
through classical means, and this is what he continues here on 'Lesser
Epitomes', which has twenty-one tracks, divided among three pieces, but the
cover suggests to play these in random order. It also says that this is
'process music for active and passive listening. The pieces are derived from
the aleatoric reordering of discreet, compatible musical components in
relationships that emulate typical theme and variation'. The cover doesn't
list any players of the string instruments, which leads us to believe that
Leimer played them himself, or
perhaps
uses a piece of software that imitates the sound of strings. 'Nonadaptive
Layers' and 'Nine Approximations' are much a like - layered string pieces of
violins and cello's, moving slowly and majestically. 'Naive Music' (seven
parts), is the old Leimer, although it seems, again to the cover, that he
uses field recordings in these pieces, but also, me thinks, analogue
synthesizers. Played at random the pieces start to differentiate and as such
make a bigger impact than played from beginning to end, because the first
two are the beginning and sound much alike. But when the pieces from 'Naive
Music' are thrown in, things really start to differ, and make this a
particular strong album. Leimer is a highly accomplished ambient musician
and 'Lesser Epitomes' is a great work. The press blurb says that it should
'find favor with fans of a certain eggheaded Englishman' and I am spending
my sunday afternoon thinking who that would be: Eno or Nyman?
Address: http://www.palaceoflights.com

VATICAN ANALOG: SHOW THE LOVE (CD compilation by Vatican Analog)
"We are Vatican Analog. We play and book shows for both music & art. We
release silly records for silly people [...] this CD is 1 euro. Don't pay
more". Tilburg is by now the fifth biggest city of The Netherlands (I
believe), so it has lots of artists and when they decide to be together and
make something happen together they have my warm enthusiasm. On this sampler
we come across names that are common places in Vital Weekly, such as Jos
Smolders, Staplerfahrer, Vincent Koreman, THU20 (not strictly a band from
Tilburg, mind you), DMDN & The Haters (with a recording from 1987) but also
names that are entirely new to me such as Neurobit, The Truth Is In The Eyes
Of The Deer, Meldy Peaches, Jimmy Hawthorne, Autonon, Bas Verbeek. This 1
euro CD has sixteen bands and projects (some of these may contain the same
names actually, but in different combinations). The musical range of the
boys (no girls can be seen from this end of the telescope) is wide apart.
There is breakcore, old school
industrial, current day laptop microsound, ambient drones and wacked out
techno. Maybe a too mixed bag to be fully enjoyed as one thing, but perhaps
if you are open minded enough. Otherwise pick your favorites and start
throwing a party with them. An amazing collection of music from one city,
where just a lot of very interesting things are happening. This is your
ticket inside. This is just well spend 1 euro. (FdW)
Address: http://www.vatican-analog.com

SHIN JIN RUI - ZUTIQUA (CD by Ex Libris Records)
More and more people try to send anything to the Vital Bunker, and more and
more they have no clue what Vital Weekly is. 'Here's our two house tracks',
'here's a re-issue of 'The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn' or 'here's comic book
punk rockers discuss Spielberg, the undead and valve amplifiers' - all three
actually happened in a matter of a week. The first two wait for possible
inclusion (more likely not to happen), the latter is said about Shin Jin
Rui, a three piece from Newcastle, packed with all the marketing language
that is required to sell anything mediocre as exciting. Name dropping, David
Lynch, Birthday Party (plays loud on the stereo 8-track), Mark E. Smith,
Pixies, Marquee Moon - geeh - what an arty street credibility. I'm well into
the third track now of the first round of playing. The next minute will be
spend skipping through the rest [skip] O.k. it was two minutes, but sixteen
tracks. Mediocre, semi alternative rock music that these pages should not
pay attention about,
but just did, for about fifteen minutes. (FdW)
Address: http://www.exlibrisrecords.com

1/3 OCTAVE BAND - I WILL PASS BY HERE (CD by Humbug Records)
EDWARD RUCHALSKI - WATER TRAIN (CD by Humbug Records)
This is already the third release by the 1/3 Octave Band from New Zealand,
following 'Sub Limina' (Vital Weekly 515) and 'Icarus' (Vital Weekly 586).
Originally the 1/3 Octave Band was a solo project of Bill Wood, who produced
a whole string of CDRs, lathe cut records, vinyl and CDs, but now a duo with
Jules Desmond (of Black Boned Angel and The Grey Daturas). Humbug announces
this new CD not to be 'an original piece of music', but the result of many
influences, such as the early Tangerine Dream, Taj Mahal Travellers, Tony
Conrad, Stars Of The Lid, Oren Ambarchi and more from the field of drones,
atmospherics, dark ambient or isolationist music (to use that fine old
phrase). Still lots of guitars, doubled by more than you eat sound effects,
creating five lengthy pieces (from five to twenty-five minutes) of highly
atmospheric music. Humbug is right, there is no prize to win here for
original thoughts on the subject of drone music, but it still sounds great.
Orchestral at times,
spherical, like drifting, grey clouds passing by like a Ligeti piece. Very
nice indeed.
A long time ago, in Vital Weekly 315, I was first introduced to the music of
Edward Ruchalski, though his self-released 'Radio Journal' CDR which was
later he re-release by Norway's Humbug label who also released 'Moveable
Sites' (Vital Weekly 355). Ruchalski also released music on Taalem and
Digitalis Industries. Ruchalski, by day a teacher of the guitar, does a
variety of works: sound installation, collages, builds his own instruments
and works with field recordings. For reasons that are not entirely clear to
me, well other than of course someone really liking the old material,
Humbug's latest Ruchalski release is a best of of the first two releases on
Humbug, selected by Ruchalski plus two new pieces. Ruchalski uses field
recordings, motorized objects and loops of sound. Ruchalski's work is of
great, beautiful simplicity. His pieces evolve or revolve around just one or
two sounds, which are played in a kinda irregular manner. They are looped by
the irregular (slightly I must add)
of the motors running say rubbing bands against them. This adds a strange
effect to the music, which is of great naivety. Ruchalski's music is a
delight to hear. Part improvised, part drone based, part musique concrete,
but all combined in a highly personal manner. None of the material lost
their strength over the years, so perhaps its entirely justifiable that it's
preserved for a longer period through the release on CD. (FdW)
Address: http://www.myspace.com/humbugofnorway

RYOJI IKEDA - 1000 FRAGMENTS (CD by Raster Noton)
This afternoon I spent some time with nostalgia, flipping through Vital,
when it was a real, small fanzine on paper. I was looking for a review of
'1000 Fragments' by Ryoji Ikeda. When released in 1995 Vital was still on
paper, and then shifting in that year to an e-mail newsletter. For whatever
reason, I didn't review it, nobody did, but I don't know why. In the world
of digital music there are a few groundbreaking records, and '1000
Fragments' is one (oddly enough 'Get Out' by Pita was also just re-released)
for sure. Ikeda plays around, for the first time, with digital sound
manipulation in a highly vivid mix of radio sounds, sine waves and
clicki-click rhythms. If you hear this now it is perhaps a bit too much of
plunderphonics, certainly in 'Channel X' (which spans nine tracks), but all
the elements of the future Ikeda is in there, best captured in '5 Zones' and
'Luxus'. Not as refined and heavy in the real low and real high end of his
later work, this is however a landmark of
digital electronic music, one of the few starting points for so many of what
is discussed in Vital these days. I didn't hear this in a long time and I am
still amazed by it's quality. Much needed re-issue. (FdW)
Address: http://www.raster-noton.net

FRANK ROTHKAMM - JUST 3 ORGANS (CD by Flux Records)
The organ depicted on the front cover of this new Frank Rothkamm CD are
those that my little nephew used to play: a big machine with a built in
speaker, blue, green, yellow and red knobs to handle the rhythms and sounds.
A cheesy organ I always thought, but these days I would love to have one.
Everything on the Rothkamm deals with the number three: three organs,
thirty-three minutes and thirty-three seconds, nine (three times three)
tracks, which don't last three minutes however. The organs are played with
six hands, well, no doubt three times two. Rothkamm plays it like a modern
classic master. Sounds swell and die, like those nice oscillator albums of
forty years ago, except that the sound is like an organ. It's not unlike his
previous album 'LAX', which also sounded like another attempt at playing
like 'Forbidden Planet', but with a different sound. Rothkamm puts out
interesting conceptual records that work well throughout. Here is all quite
nice again, just 'LAX', with not every
track being a masterpiece but as a concept it's certainly well-made. (FdW)
Address: http://www.fluxrecords.com

WERNER DURAND - REMNANTS FROM PARADISE (CD by Absurd)
The name Werner Durand might not be very well-known, which is a great pity.
His claim to fame has nothing to do with his real music: he played flute on
Muslimgauze' 'Mort Aux Vaches' release. But Durand's background is with
improvisation and wind instruments. As far as I can remember there is only
solo release by him, 'The Art Of Buzzing' on X-TRact/Edition RZ (see Vital
Weekly 305), where he plays PVC pipes with saxophone mouthpieces or flower
pots and tin foil plates as resonators. His great power lies in
multi-tracking his playing, obscuring the original sounds through very
simple means of layering many on top of each other. After all these years
it's still his favorite method of composing music. The cover lists the
instruments such as bamboo and metal mouthharps, tanpura, sliding pvc-ney
and sliding pvc clarinets with prepared resonators, electronics and delays.
The end result is a highly minimalist pattern which he gently waves
together, going to small changes all the time, thus
avoiding leaping into pure minimal music. One could say that this is drone
music, but like before I like to draw a parallel to the work of Phill
Niblock, even when Durand's music is a bit more clouded and less detailed.
Overall however it's a highly atmospheric set of sounds Durand is playing
here. Hopefully more music will be made available and not in another seven
years, as this is really nice stuff. (FdW)
Address: http://www.void.gr/absurd

FEAR FALLS BURNING - FRENZY OF THE ABSOLUTE (CD by Conspiracy Records)
Where to next? It's a question that is sometimes raised here in these pages,
certainly for those artists who have a flood of releases in a short period.
I think it's a valid question: how many releases can you create that sound
the same? Only so much. I don't know but it might have been a train of
thought that also went on in the head of Dirk Serries, formerly of Vidna
Obmana and since a few years as Fear Falls Burning. As Vidna Obmana he had
many releases too, but every now and then he re-set the standards and moved
somewhere else. So far he didn't do that with Fear Falls Burning, his
project of playing live guitar and sound effects. He played with other
people, such as Nadja and Birchville Cat Motel, but those were
collaborations. On his new, main 2008, release he changes in his song by
allowing drummers to be present on his music. On the CD three long tracks
(that feature remained) of his heavy guitar playing - more heavy, less
subtle than before, with the addition of very slow
drums in the title drums an on 'We Took The Deafening Murmer Down' and bowed
cymbals on 'He Contemplates The Sign', adding a whole new layer to the
sound. The built up of his pieces for instance changes: no longer the long
crescendo and quick break, but remaining the same on the same dynamic level,
with the differences in the playing. Sounds feed of through all the effects,
in which they get stuck and lurk around like bacteria. Wailing around like
endless drones, but stuff gets added and perhaps removed in the process. A
pretty clever move if you ask me, this is vital yet subtle change in the
sound, opening new paths to explore. Perhaps it would be wise(r) to change
perhaps a bit quicker next time, but no doubt the many fans will disagree.
(FdW)
Address: http://www.conspiracyrecords.com

SUNS OF ARQA - SUNS OF ARQA RE-MIXS MUSLIMGAUZE (CD by Soleilmoon
Recordings)
ARANOS - MOTHER OF MOONS BATHING (CD by Soleilmoon Recordings)
There was a time when I heard the music of Muslimgauze almost every day,
because it was my work back then. When it was no longer my work, I didn't
play it again for three years, unless I was reviewing something for these
pages. I still like that small, minimal intake, but there is no necessity to
keep up with everything that still sits in vaults, now, almost ten years
after Bryn Jones died. My best guess is that Soleilmoon has the best filled
vault when it comes to unreleased Muslimgauze music. Jones working methods
were very straight forward: sampling drum bits, ethnic (arabic) sounds and
cook up a mix with electronics. Taping everything for possible release,
Jones would mail off everything to his labels, Soleilmoon and Staalplaat.
But not every master contained great music: some of the pieces were too
sketch like to be released. Probably one of the reasons why not everything
has been released. It would be a good idea, me thinks, if a dedicated
producer would take the best bits and
make a proper release. As such we should also see this release. Muslimgauze
liked to make 'remixes' of whatever he was sent, and through the connection
he had to that ever lasting, friendly Japanese force Satoshi Morita he got
to know Micheal Wadada, also known as Suns Of Arqa, who produces some
curious mix of reggae and eastern music. In 1996 Jones created these
twenty-one remixes, which are sometimes merely a curious notion, a sketch, a
start but also some great pieces. Here's where the producer should have come
into action: select these great moments, shape them a bit further and make
that killer CD. But now it's too much a mix up of great and weak moments.
Great for completists though and that's perhaps why releases like this will
appear until the vaults are really empty.
I am not sure wether I reviewed the music of Aranos, who is from the Czech
part of Bohemia but now lives in Ireland, not far away from Steve Stapleton.
Perhaps not, but I don't know the reasons. There have been releases on Beta
Lactam-ring Records, Brainwashed, Crouton, Klanggalerie, Noise Museum an
United Daries. It's certainly not music that is easy to catch - and maybe
that's my problem with it. His principle instrument was the violin, but
Aranos plays so much more, mainly in the field of electronics, looping
sounds and voices. Sometimes one has the idea that it's a folk like record,
but electric, but there is also the Reichanian looped voices in 'Ta-taa-ta,
Taah Merged' or the long violin improvisations of 'Towards Glittering Warm
Dumplings' that moves towards a dance piece. Tracks run into eachother,
which makes things even more complicated. The influence of Stapleton's Nurse
With Wound is never far away, the two share a taste for the bizarre
combination of music, although
Aranos
puts them on one album, and the Nurses one style per album. I am not sure if
this mixture really appeals to me: there are certainly bits and pieces that
I like, but as a whole, as an album it didn't work for me. Too fragmented
and scattered, and not all the ideas fully explored. Some pieces needed some
more editing and working it seemed. Mixed music bag received with mixed
feelings. (FdW)
Address: http://www.soleilmoon.com

FREDERIC BLONDY & THOMAS LEHN - OBDO (CD by Another Timbre)
CLIVE BELL & BECHIR SAADE - AN ACCOUNT OF MY HUT (CD by Another Timbre)
MAX EASTLEY & GRAHAM HALLIWELL & EVAN PARKER & MARK WASTELL - A LIFE SAVED
BY A SPIDER AND TWO DOVES (CD by Another Timbre)
One can only be jealous I guess at the workings of labels of Improvised
music. Are they sponsored by the mafia? Just where exactly do they get their
money? Another Timbre exists only a few months and here they offer release
number eight to ten. Two times a duo and one quartet. File under: improvised
music. First we have Frederic Blondy on piano and Thomas Lehn on analogue
synthesizer. The latter picks up the sounds produced on the piano with his
'external input' and thus can do real time processing of the sounds using
the filters, reverberation, ring modulation and what else such a machine
offers. The have two pieces, the first and shortest one is an edit of
various bits from a concert in Bourogne with a bit of a recording from
Montreuil, whilst the second, title, piece is a straight recording from one
concert, save for some minor adjustments. It's interesting to hear what
editing could do here. In 'Pooq', things are kept highly 'silent' with just
a few careful sounds. It sounds like
the music was edited out, certainly if we compare it to 'Obdo', which is a
much fuller piece, if not, at times, a noisy piece. The piano is scanned for
all sorts of sound possibilities, hitting the keys, the body, the strings
and together they wave an endless stream of sound together, a pairing that
goes wonderfully well together. A fine, thought out work of improvisation.
Wind instruments are the main players on the disc by Clive Bell, who plays
Shakuhachi, and Bechir Saade, who plays the Ney. Two non-western
instruments, recorded live in concert in 2007 in London. I must admit it
costed me considerable more trouble getting into this. They have seven
piece, each of around five to almost nine minutes, and the playing and
recording is more than excellent. That isn't the trouble here. After I heard
three pieces, I thought I heard enough. Everything after that seemed a mere
repetition of moves, skills, techniques. I thought the best pieces were the
most silent ones, in which they work the overtones, like in 'Cloud Trapeze'
(which proofs I heard the entire disc, which sometimes people doubt). Like
the previous, this is also an endless stream of sound, but with less density
and variation and one that probably requires a totally different listening
approach.
Two generations meet up, it seems, on the disc of Eastley and Parker on one
side and Halliwell and Wastell on the other side. Parker plays his soprano
saxophone, while Halliwell is on computer and electronics, Wastell on tam
tam, metal percussion and harmonium and Eastley on an electro acoustic
monochord called Arc. The music on this release is from their very first
concert as a quartet, which continued afterwards. The improvisations going
on here aren't easy to describe. There are on one hand the electronic and
electric charged machinery, which provide a very modern look, crackling,
drone, static, but on the other hand there is the acoustical instruments
that, especially Parker's saxophone, that sound very traditionally
improvised. However most of the times this marriage works wonderfully well.
The stream of sound thought, let's continue that here too then, works fine
here too. An endless stream of sounds colliding into eachother, bumping but
also carefully missing eachother, like
a
near collision. In that way each of the player knows how to avoid the other,
but also it's a matter of respect for the others; each of the players get
room to play, to develop, take shape and transform, noting what the others
do and adding where necessary. A great work too. (FdW)
Address: http://www.anothertimbre.com/

METALYCEE (12" by Interstellar Records)
Much water has passed under the bridge since I heard 'Another White Album'
by Metalycee, back then (Vital Weekly 443) a duo of Armin Steiner and Nik
Hummer (who are also part of Thilges3), taking heavy metal drumming into the
world of electronics. I thought it to be a daring album, but not entirely
convincing. After years of silence they return, as a five piece, with
Bernhar Breuer on drums, Melita Jurisic on vocals and Matija Schellander on
bass and the original two on synth and trautonium. Their metal drumming is
slow core by any means, actually more hip and trip hop, with deep rumbling
bass and synthesizers, with dark spoken (even more rap) rather than sung
texts. Like before I think more appealing to people who like electronic
music rather than metal heads. I must admit that I quite liked the three
songs on this 12" single, a well rounded dark trip along empty barely lit
streets. Big city angst. Time for another album I'd say. (FdW)
Address: http://www.interstellarrecords.at

ZACK KOUNS - SON IS ALONE ASLEEP IN HIMSELF (CDR by Moonmoonmoon)
'As you'll notice there are intentionally no song titles (much the same way
that every book doesn't contain chapter titles because the main title of the
book provides the necessary theme)' it says on a piece of paper that comes
with Zack Kouns release 'Son Is Alive Asleep In Himself'. A handmade package
tops the lo-fi quality of the release, which music is much alike the
package. Kouns signs no-sense words, feeding it through an echo unit, and
has a bunch of sounds to go along. In the first 'song' a saxophone, in the
second feedback humming and maybe some computer processed sounds, which
quickly disappear. Later on in this long track the saxophone returns, but
sounds distorted. In the third piece all of this comes together again, but
here we recognize some words. I have no idea what the theme would be here.
'Isolation'? 'Be creative alone'? I must admit things like this are not well
spend on me. Things could be worked better here, I imagine. (FdW)
Address: <lucpascal@yahoo.com>

K.E. REVIS - SLOWLY UNCOVERING FINAL DECEIT (CDR by Boxer Music)
Despite him working on his own music since the late 80s, I never heard of
K.E. Revis, partly because he didn't release any until 2007. He started
Boxer Music and has released seven CDRs so far of which two contain the
music of Revis. 'Slowly Uncovering Final Deceit' is his second release. It's
hard to tell what exactly is at work here, as the cover doesn't provide with
much information. Some weeks ago I was playing some music to someone,
totally unlike Revis actually, and my friend remarked: typical Ableton
music. That still floats through my brain. I am not at all qualified to
comment on either studios, instruments let alone software used, but I do
know what Ableton does, and why is this in my head when I hear the music of
Revis? Partly this has to do with the fact each of the five, lengthy pieces
uses a lot of loops. Loops of whatever origin (hard to know what), but they
are sliced to portion. Some longer, some shorter, forming small blocks of
rhythm, which Revis lets run through
his mixing board (well, perhaps Ableton even), adding a bit of sound effects
here and there. But throughout things remain rather unprocessed. It's nice
as a backdrop, but if you listen more closely, there is great sense of
uniformness in these sounds, which doesn't always sound very engaging.
Pieces are too long and don't use enough variation inside them, nor do they
have tension or built up like say in trance inducing state. But as said as
a backdrop, say reading a nice book, this worked alright. (FdW)
Address: http://www.boxermusicstore.com

ABESTA - TOSCO (CDR by Sonora)
Two brothers from Brazil, Zimmer (vocals, screams and feedback) and Suzuki
Bata (scrap metal, contact mics, effects and noise generators) form Abesta.
The picture provided by Sonora makes it look like a Merzbow line up of
guitar pedals and the music certainly borrows ideas from the Jap master, but
there are some differences. Abesta is more rhythmical in their approach,
cutting sounds in and out, against the wall of noise approach. Also they
have shorter pieces, with minor differences that is, but there are
differences. One thing is that I think Abesta are more interested in taking
noise to another level, not play the endless stream of feedback and
distortion, but actually composing with the noise they put on. Maybe the
sound is still a bit too Merzbow like, but here's a noise band which I think
has potential to grow further and move beyond. Future will tell, but this is
solid start. (FdW)
Address: http://www.sonorodisc.com

PAPER THING STAGES - FLYING HEARSE (2CDR by Sort Of Records)
THE FRICTION BROTHERS (CDR by Abstract Black)
DAVID BERNABO - GRAPHIC SCORES (CDR by Abstract Black)
The covers of these CDRs on Sort Of Records and their subdivision Abstract
Black are all digipacks and look quite professional. I think, judging by
these three releases, that Abstract Black releases the more experimental and
improvised music, while on Sort Of releases slightly more 'normal' music.
Paper Thing Stages is a trio of Nate McDermott (guitar, vocals, sound), John
Perotti (pedals, vocals, sound) and Edward Hadley (percussion, bass, sound),
who now live in Boston. Their music is rooted in rock and post music, culled
from hours and hours of improvisations. Eight pieces on this double release,
which is a bit much. Why not five on one disc, and make the exact same
point. They play right by the post rock book, though not as complex as some
of the others, earlier bands in the field. They move into a set of sounds
together and when there they continue to explore the sounds until the end of
a piece, and sometimes it may take some time before they are there. Nice,
but not great or
exactly original.
Behind the Friction Brothers we find the not exactly young (but not old
either). long serving improvisers Micheal Zerang (percussion, piano
insides), Fred Lonberg-Holm (cello, implements) and Michael Colligan (dry
icy, implements). I copied the instruments from the press blurb - the cover
lists many more. All three hail from Chicago and have played with almost
everyone in this city. As The Friction Brothers they play three piece of
improvised music that deals partly with objects and partly with instruments.
However the outcome is fairly traditional in approach, I think. Lots of
sound exploration, lots of small things happening but also not always
engaging to make a difference. Nice, but not great again. I think they could
do much better.
Labelboss David Bernabo is from Pittsburgh, who is a member of the
'afro-beat-noise-improv band DBL D' and before that of Boxstep and Vale And
Year. He plays various instruments such as the guitar, percussion, piano and
synthesizer. Here he interprets 'graphic scores', which are not on the
cover, nor who composed them. So let's say it's Bernabo himself who composed
them, and executes these with the help of some people on violin, acoustic
guitar and violin. This is much more varied than the Friction Brothers. Some
pieces seem to be more like group improvisations, whereas others are more
like solo pieces. Here too things are heavily covered in the world of
improvised music, but the variations on offer here, make it quite a nice
disc, perhaps the nicest of the three. I say perhaps, since the
improvisations themselves are quite 'regular' and 'old-fashioned'. So it's
all o.k. but not great again again. (FdW)
Address: http://www.sortofrecords.com

BRAM STADHOUDERS - MENS (CDR by Brammetje Records)
BRAM STADHOUDERS & ONNO GOVAERT - ENDERRA (CDR by Brammetje Records)
In Vital Weekly 606 I reviewed 'Tonelist' by Bram Stadhouders which had some
spacious, jazzy piano playing. I was not entirely convinced, and perhaps in
an attempt to convince this time, he sent me three releases, but didn't
notice (reading in the age of internet is a much underdeveloped skill) that
I wouldn't review 'Glasba' which was already released in May 2007 and which
sounds much like the jazzy 'Tonelist'. So I skip that one, and turn to the
music of the future. On the cover of 'Mens' we read that it was recorded in
November 2008 in Oslo. Future music was never more future, I am obliged to
think. On 'Mens' (meaning human), Stadhouders explores once again the piano,
through just playing it, sampling it, adding electronics. As the release
progresses things grow fuller and fuller until in 'Prek' he uses orchestral
samples (well, that, or Garage band) to play semi classical music. Using a
big amount of echo and reverb on his music, perhaps in attempt to be Brian
Eno/Harold Budd,
this is again not really highly engaging. Not unpleasant to hear either,
head down in a good book, this is a bit too much aural wallpaper.
Stadhouders is on a Dutch tour soon with Onno Govaert, who plays drums,
bells and crotales. Stadhouders plays here guitar, guitarsynthesizer and
laptop. Eight improvisations here, with another unhealthy amount of reverb
suggest 'space' and 'mood', which really puts me off. Stadhouders waves
together a very ambient setting together, while Govaert bangs his drums, all
drowned out in reverb. I see they don't visit my city. That's fine; I had no
plans to get out. (FdW)
Address: http://www.bramstadhouders.nl

C. REIDER - FINE FAILURES (MP3 by Vuhz Music)
Maybe my idea about C. Reider is clouded by ill judgment, who knows? If you
would asked me before I started playing this new release, I would have said
he is one of the drone boys, but this new release proved me wrong. In the
early 'zeroes' (C. Reider expression) he got interested in minimal techno
but with a less mechanical groove and when downloading some through dial-up
(which he still has, as one of the few I guess), some of the techno had
little 'hiccups' making the music a little bit off beat. Thats what inspired
his 'Fine Failures'. He makes his point loud and clear in twelve pieces,
which is a bit much. His piece have a certain groove indeed, but it's not
entirely indeed dance floor material. Some of the pieces go off the rails
like 'Ovea Disrhythmia', in which too much happens. The best pieces are
those at the beginning when he still uses a stripped down version and the
hiccups are less apparent. Throughout this material is pretty much o.k., but
a bit too much. The good
thing
is that with downloads like this, you can always throw away those pieces you
don't like. File under head nod music. (FdW)
Address: http://www.vuhzmusic.com

THE SONICS OF ART SPACES (MP3 by Stasisfield)
FOURM - CIL (MP3 by Stasisfield)
TAU - DIALECTICAL MOVEMENTS (MP3 by Stasisfield)
THE LOST DATA PROJECT - ANYWHERE OUT OF THE WORLD (MP3 by Stasisfield)
Things have been quiet for a year or so for Stasisfield, the online label
from John Kannenberg. The first one is a compilation of 'field recordings
and musical compositions focussing on the acoustics of art museums and
galleries around the world', with various pieces by Kannenberg, Anne
Guthrie, Mike Hallenbeck, Christopher DeLaurenti, My Fun, Tau and Steve
Roden. Lots of recordings that sounds like empty halls with silent activity,
and as such the piece 'SFMOMA4' by Glenn Bach is nice, since it has music.
Music and museum/art spaces don't mix very well, I sometimes experience, but
of course this is the sound from a museum/art space. It's an o.k. collection
of sounds, raw and processed, but nothing special as such.
Fourm is one BG Nichols, who has a long career in journalism (Music From The
Empty Quarter, EST and such like) and worked together with S.E.T.I. on
'Probe' (see Vital Weekly 426). Here he returns with a release of seven
tracks which shows a love for sine waves and ring modulation. Everything
happens in the upper high sound spectrum. It sounds like Nichols takes a
track and then feeds it through the plug in 'ring mod' and leaves the result
as is. After three of these pieces headache leaped in and I got tired of
listening to the same thing over again. Music like this, 'releases' like
this, make want to give up reviewing MP3 releases.
One Melissa Moore is Tau, who offers two tracks of what could be field
recordings being reworked. Perhaps I'm entirely mistaken. It's a microsound
affair for which I can hardly find any excitement. It sounds alright, but
worn out. There is a massive flood of music like this, and this marks hardly
a difference.
The best is kept until the end. The Lost Data Project is the improvisational
powers of Jon Mueller, Jim Schoenecker and Hal Rammel with a live recording
of september last year. Analogue synthesizer, a drumkit, electronics and
samples make up a solid but silent improvisation for some fifty minutes.
Things slowly develop, slowly change and slowly die out. Clearly the work of
three accomplished improvisers who enjoy what they are doing, and knowing
they are in good company to do this. In terms of improvisation nothing new,
but by itself a mighty fine work. (FdW)
Address: http://www.stasisfield.com


correction: the tape by Adam Sondererg reviewed last week is actually a
split release with Ophibre on the oph sound label. Not that I could tell in
anyway. Ophibre's piece is untitled for '.aiff and magnetic tape' while
Sonderberg is the author of 'untitled for bell and sine tone'.


1. From: "Cold Spring" <info@coldspring.co.uk>

COLD SPRING PRESENTS:

MERZBOW / SUTCLIFFE JUGEND / SATORI

19th APRIL 2008 - ULU, MALET STREET, LONDON, ENGLAND, UK.

FREE CD WITH EXCLUSIVE TRACKS BY EACH ARTIST WITH EVERY TICKET PRESENTED AT
THE COLD SPRING STALL!

FULL DETAILS: http://www.coldspring.co.uk/merzbowULU.php

2. From: "Caustic Castle" <causticcastle@gmail.com>

Insects With Tits are hitting the road June 23rd thru July 7th and embarking
on a East Coast & Midwestern Tour. We need help! ! ! We're hoping to find
shows in the following cities, we will need some sorta of loud p.a. and a
place to crash, and hopefully enough money to get to the next city:

Insects With Tits is Roger Smith (Chefkirk) & Kenneth Yates (Harm
Stryker/Caustic Castle). Both artists pull sound from their own style of the
no-input mixing board technique, improvising off eachothers unique sound.

We're looking for interested organizers in these cities...

Baltimore
Philadelphia
Providence
New York City
Buffalo
Rochester
Knoxville
West Virginia
Chicago
Boston
Lansing, MI
Detroit, MI

http://myspace.com/insectswithtits

3. From: "> vertigo" <herrkock@gmail.com>


In "O Tannenbaum"

(Pflügerstrasse 79a Berlin)

March 23
Disco Universe
Sun Ra Filmnight

with:
* The Cry of Jazz (Jazzdocumentary with Sun Ra fragments)
* A Joyful Noise (Sun Ra Documentary about Sun Ra)
* The Magic Sun (Artmovie with Sun Ra Music and Images)

+ extra film on monitor

+ dj Mobiletti Giradischi (excentric electronics!)

17.00-23.00


Diner 19.00 (3,50 euro)
Entree 1,50 euro


March 26
Sibirische Zelle

Performance, Presentation, Films with Column One filmpremiere!
<http://www.90-prozent-wasser.de/>www.90-prozent-wasser.de/

19.00 Uhr- 23.00
Entree 3,00 euro


March 27
Raw Meat

Evening with Eskimo Films hosted by Taco Hidde Bakker
<http://www.myspace.com/dailytaco>http://www.myspace.com/dailytaco

20.00-23.00

Entree 1,50 euro
--


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