30 июн. 2012 г.

RELAY : Archive 2007 - 2008


 
A collection of ten improvisations from various permutations of the musicians involved with the Manual label and invited guests. Ryu Hankil seems to have shown very good judgment in culling these tracks from what I imagine to have been a substantial volume of work; almost every track is at least strong, often very compelling. The sole exception perhaps not very surprisingly, is a trio with Choi Joonying, Jin Sangtae and Mats Gustafsson. The latter is all too often intent on muscling his way through, something he's extremely adept at in other contexts but ill serves him here. It's not terrible, but when compared with, for example, the trio of Choi, Hong Bulki and Kai Fagaschinski, it's fairly clear which reed player has the deeper understanding of this area of music.

Most tracks are in this guest/residents format. Listeners familiar with the fine, fine work of the Manual, Balloon & Needle, etc. crew will have a good idea of the general territory covered here--rough-edged electronics of the open circuit kind, usually on the quiet side but with the odd explosion, etc., but there's more than ample variation to be heard. It's not "new" in that sense, just very accomplished. Other guests include Toshi Nakamura (a deliciously bumptious duo with Park Seungjun), Klaus Filip, dieb 13, Iida Katsuaki, Noid, and both Takus. Joe foster is also present in both a trio and as half of English with Bonnie Jones (an excellent cut).

Writing about it in detail is something of a fool's errand. I'll say that my favorite track may have been the trio of Choi Joonyang, dieb13 and Joe Foster if only for the fact (guess, I suppose) that dieb13 inserts a dose of viscosity into a textural area that tends toward the crackling and prickly; makes for an especially dense and piquant stew. (Though I think Filip does that a bit as well). The last piece brings together ten musicians and--of course since it's a Sugimoto composition -- is by far the quietest in the collection. More external sounds than musicianship here. I'm probably more of a fan of this aspect of Taku than many, but I found it quite successful.

“The first RELAY meeting was on 18 March 2005. We had two things in out mind; aesthetically speaking, we wanted a monthly improvisation concert more concentrated on making music (I still call it music) out of non-musical sound/noise, or even interaction with something extra-aural, the visual; regarding our artistic lives, RELAY’s main goal was to build a sustaining network among improvisers and experimental musicians domestic and abroad.” -Hong Chulki, from the liner notes

This compilation documenting two years of this scene gives a compelling little glimpse into it for those of us far away. The RELAY series ran for four years and this double set documents the final years of the series when they had the funds from government grants to bring in a diverse array of guests musicians. RELAY seems to have been fully hooked into and facilitated by the internet and the documentation of the series can be found on the Manual site covering all of the events including listing the participants, scans of the flyer’s, pictures of various shows and mp3’s of a bunch of the sets. My kind of series. This set documents the concert series warts and all: Mats Gustafsson not fitting in at all with Choi Joonyong and Jin Sangtae (I’d like to hear the story behind this rather unlikely collaboration), Taku Sugimoto’s self-indulgent composition performed by an all star tentet at Nabi, as well meetings that feel like long established working groups: Toshimaru Nakamura with Park Seungjun, Choi Joonyong/ dieb13/Joe Foster as well as local groupings such as Choi Joonyong/Joe Foster/Hong Chulki/Jin Sangtae/Ryu Hankil. Plus a delicious slice of English adding another piece to their small discography. Really all of the pieces are worth hearing barring the Mats track, though of course some work better then others.

2009 perhaps might have led to a slight over-documentation of aspects of the vital Seoul scene, all of the releases featuring Ryu Hankil rather spring to mind. Most of these have been good, but oversaturation can breed discontentment. This set came out in February 2009 and was like a breath of fresh air, something different from what we’d been hearing so far and infectious in its riot of energy and commitment to exploration. Being a compilation it would require a track by track writeup to really go into the music contained, so this will have to suffice. I’ve kept up pretty well with the Seoul scene (though not exhaustively) and based on the recorded material (definitely not to be confused with being there) this is a fine overview, but even more importantly it contains some great music. Their idea of fostering a network of musicians appeals to me greatly as I think it does to all who live in an out of the way corner with only a small number of fellow travelers. This music is truly international and all of the vital regions have embraced that. Tokyo, London, Berlin and now Seoul, this aspect has kept things pushing ahead all the time. I look forward to hearing the further developments from Seoul and where ever else the music breeds.

Actually not just Korean, but certainly music recorded in the years 2007 and 2008 in South Korea as part of the Relay series of concerts and released now on the Manual label as the Relay: Archive two-disc set. These discs capture the best of the last couple of years worth of concert recordings from the series that was organised by the small group of improvisers we have become familiar with working in Korea. Its been a busy day and this evening when I should have been listening to music and writing here I was once again tied up in IHM discussions so I have only managed to listen properly to one of the two discs. I’ll try and get to the other one tomorrow.

Generally speaking there is some fine music on this first disc, capturing the spirit of a time and place that was (probably still is) a real hotbed of creative music. The first of the five tracks here is by the quintet of Choi Joonyong, Joe Foster, Hong Chulki, Jin Sangtae and Ryu Hankil recorded just over a year ago. Trying to tell apart the five musicians here is a virtually impossible and somewhat pointless task. All play electronics of one kind or another, ranging between ticking clockwork sounds and rough scratchy noises. Not being able to tell the musicians apart easily makes it hard to assess the degree of communication taking place, but this is not that important as the end result is great, an edgy on/off, stop/start affair balancing a reasonable amount of silence with blocky, simply defined little structures formed by two or three of the musicians at a time. There is little layering of sounds and no room to hide but the music works very well.

Next up is the trio of Choi Joonyong, Hong Chulki and the German clarinetist Kai Fagaschinski recorded just eleven months ago. The addition of Fagaschinski’s reeds to the electronics duo is an interesting and risky mix that I’m not certain always succeeds. In places as Kai floats long dreamy notes over the stuttering rubble of his Korean collaborators the music has a simplicity to it that is pleasing to the ear but probably doesn’t stretch any of the musicians at all. When Choi and Hong cut loose a little the clarinet seems lost, unable to compete at the same volume or within the same aural palette. Often collisions of different instrumentation like this work very well, but here the differences between the two sets of sounds and the way they are used might be a little too far.

There follows a twelve minute noisy wrestling match of a track by Toshimaru Nakamura and Park Seungjun. Like two fighters just hurled into a ring together the two sets of wild electronic sounds wrench each other about at quite a pace. Compared to much of Toshi’s other music this is physical, muscular stuff that has a playfulness to it that works just about long enough to see the track out.

The fourth track is my favourite though, featuring the trio of Taku Unami, Klaus Filip and Jin Sangtae. To begin with there is a nice sense of balance to this grouping, the mechanical objects ticking and clattering by Unami mix with the jerky electronics of Sangtae and the smooth laptop tones of Filip to great effect. The music is beautifully constructed, like a piece of fifties architecture, not that many dramatic flourishes but where they exist they are perfectly placed to compliment the rest of the work. This sense of designerly (not designer) construction comes from a combination of great timing and a restrained set of sounds used put together. Lovely music that I would have been happy to have heard a lot more of.

The final piece is by the trio of Choi Joonyong, dieb13 and Joe Foster. This one is a little harder to put your finger on. The recording itself is a little more distant and echoey, and the sounds used are a little less predictable, with records spun at wild speeds on dieb13’s turntables sat alongside broad swoops of descending electronic tone (I suspect from Foster) and in a couple of places even suddenly spoken words. Odd rhythmic pulses come and go and digital squiggles are left almost randomly here and there. There is less of a fluidity to this piece, its hard to know where the music is going before it shifts direction. This is a curious piece that begs several listens and yet still doesn’t fully reveal much about itself.

The Korean scene has been as vibrant and creative as any over the past few years and this first of the two discs underlines this. There is a spark of energy to all of these pieces that can be found in most of the work on the Maunal or Balloon and Needle labels. It will be interesting to see where they go next. I’m personally off to bed, but I’ll play the other disc tomorrow.


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28 июн. 2012 г.

Richard Skelton



Richard Skelton is a British musician. Following the death of his wife Louise in 2004, he began to make music as a way of coming to terms with the tragedy. Using a number of instruments, notably guitar and violin, his music has been compared to Arvo Pärt amongst others. His recordings explicitly reference places of emotional resonance, specifically the West Pennine Moors, and the area around the sparsely populated parish of Anglezarke. His album Landings has been compared to Brian Eno's Ambient 4: On Land in its evocation of place and memory. Skelton even goes so far as to include artefacts, such as twigs and alder catkins, from significant places in the packaging of his releases.

Most of Skelton's releases have been issued by his own Sustain-Release label - under a range of pseudonym's including  A Broken Consort, Carousell, Clouwbeck, Heidika and Riftmusic, as well as under his own name - in small editions of CDs with hand-crafted packaging, and often including fragments of poetry. However, some of Skelton's work has attained wider commercial and critical success.

In 2011, Skelton archived the material he had released on the Sustain-Release. A box set of his complete recordings to date, titled *SKURA and totalling 20 discs of music, followed. Skelton announced that future editions of both his music and writing would be released on the Corbel Stone Press imprint. The first release was Wolf Notes, a collaboration with his new partner, Autumn Richardson, under the name *AR. The album was released on January 1st 2011. To date, a number of print works and another musical collaboration with Richardson, Stray Birds, have been issued. Two more music works are scheduled for release in mid-2012.

Until 2010, Skelton lived in Standish, near Wigan, before relocating to the west coast of Ireland.



Richard Skelton - *SKURA
Complete Works, 2005-2011


“I felt very light, completely unmoored, unconnected with everything,” Richard Skelton told Wire magazine earlier this year. Seven years ago, following the death of his wife, Skelton retreated to the West Pennine Moors, composing music alone in an attempt to ground his ever more spectral existence in the tangibility of the landscape. He explored the physicality of his instruments, restringing his violin with progressively heavier gauge strings until he could positively feel each note reverberating through his body. Skelton set up the Sustain-Release label and began releasing albums in beautifully handcrafted packages, often including souvenirs of pine cones or scraps of bark to preserve the essence of the music’s physical origin.

Sustain-Release is now described by Skelton as an “archive” and the entirety of the label’s releases are collected together here in a single set. Standing as a monument to the memory of a loved one, *SKURA is heavily laden with a sense of grief and loss. On the sparse and striking Marking Time, Skelton laments the constant distancing of himself from his past as insistent piano figures are slowly enveloped in shimmering waves of mourning strings. The skeletal arrangements demonstrate a canny appreciation of restraint, affording Skelton the space to explore his themes without resorting to emotional pathos.

That said, of the triplet of albums released under his Clouwbeck moniker, the first, A Moraine, strikes a slightly uneven balance. Paring his palette down to its one essential component, Skelton constructs a gently lulling mass of ambient strings and, whilst certainly a pleasant listen, the overly reserved feel of A Moraine (virtually amelodic, relying solely on subtle, droning harmonies) renders it somewhat anonymous. The latter two Clouwbeck releases are more expansive in their vision, providing an emotional foothold that was previously lacking; Wolfrahm’s a dense knot of strings is haunted by shards of half-remembered melody, and From Which The River Rises is awash with swells of orchestral majesty. These are exquisite recordings: desolate and generously spacious, sounding almost as if they’re drifting directly in from the vast West Pennine Moors.

The story of Skelton’s development as told by *SKURA is one of persistent refinement rather than constant innovation, with the Clouwbeck releases providing a microcosm of this steady progression. Yet the overall sweep of his work is best represented by 2009 album, Landings. Opening with the stark, blustery ‘Noon Hill Wood’, which highlights the power and grace of his metallic, sweeping violins, Landings distils Skelton’s sound down to its absolute emotional core. The record acts almost as a summary of Skelton’s entire output on Sustain-Release – from the intimate, lonely guitar of ‘Scar Tissue’ to the cavernous atmospherics of ‘The Shape Leaves’ – but throughout the musical language is so direct, so uncluttered that nowhere does this large-scale work seem to meander or overindulge. On Landings, and indeed the entirety of *SKURA, it is Skelton’s unflinching sincerity and the understated eloquence of his musical communication which enables him to transform such preoccupations with loss and decay into beautiful, captivating works of steady healing and cautious hope.


*SKURA consists of:


See also other Richard's releases:




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27 июн. 2012 г.

Steve Roden


Steve Roden is a visual and sound artist from Los Angeles. His work includes painting, drawing, sculpture, film/video, sound installation, and performance.

Roden's working process uses various forms of specific notation (words, musical scores, maps, etc.) and translates them through self invented systems into scores; which then influence the process of painting, drawing, sculpture, and sound composition. these scores, rigid in terms of their parameters and rules, are also full of holes for intuitive decisions and left turns. The inspirational source material becomes a kind of formal skeleton that the abstract finished works are built upon.

In the visual works, translations of information such as text and maps, become rules and systems for generating visual actions such as color choices, number of elements, and image building. In the sound works, singular source materials such as objects, architectural spaces, and field recordings, are abstracted through humble electronic processes to create new audio spaces, or 'possible landscapes'. The sound works present themselves with an aesthetic roden describes as "lower case'' - sound concerned with subtlety and the quiet activity of listening.



* - Tracks: 01. Chinati Performance (38:10), 02. Chinati Performance (Rehearsal) (30:58)

See also MOSS project (320 Kbps) and 60 Sound Artists Protest The War compilation (320 Kbps) with Steve's participation.



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Pauline Oliveros - Reverberations: Tape & Electronic Music 1961 - 1970 (12 CD)


"Through Pauline Oliveros and Deep Listening I now know what harmony is. It's about the pleasure of making music." - John Cage


With about 10 other people, mostly strangers, I reclined on the floor of an international hand-drum emporium and closed my eyes. We were all trying to cross the internal divide between "the involuntary nature of hearing and the voluntary selective nature of listening," which seemed like it could mean a lot of different things. To me, it was about trying to experience sounds for what they were, not what they meant. The hum of a refrigerator and the whoosh of traffic gradually drifted away from their mundane contexts, revealing the variety and interconnection of what I was conditioned to hear as generic and separate. It was harder to detach the clock's tick from turning gears and passing time. In the moments when I could, I felt very free.

The occasion was a Deep Listening session with certified instructor Shannon Morrow. Deep Listening is less of a thing you do than a way to do all kinds of things-- perform, meditate, communicate, compose, or just be in the world. It's hard to summarize but easy to grasp: a set of broadly accessible philosophies and practices for heightening your awareness of total sound. It's useful for anyone who wants to develop a musical practice or unlearn conventional sonic hierarchies.

It's also the core of the art of its creator, Pauline Oliveros, the 80-year-old composer, accordionist, teacher, and electronic music pioneer who easily ranks among the most innovative and influential musicians of the mid-20th-century avant-garde, which still strongly governs experimental music today. She wasn't the first to become entranced by the pops and whistles in the nether regions of the radio band. But she was one of the first to do something about it, focusing on frequencies instead of melodies, motions instead of rhythms, processes instead of outcomes.

Oliveros only formalized Deep Listening a couple of decades ago, but her curiosity to hear sound out to its very edges-- plus the ingenuity to pull it off-- has been apparent since she made her earliest works on a new frontier cluttered with magnetic tape, hulking computer rigs, tone oscillators, and primitive modular synthesizers. These are collected for the first time on Reverberations: Tape and Electronic Music 1961-1970, a monumental box set from Important Records.

One advantageous thing about tape music is that the performance is also the recording, so there was no shortage of material for this retrospective, which fills a dozen discs in almost as many hours. While any massive tape music collection will have its share of desultory windshear, the vision and variety of Reverberations are incredible, and feel surprisingly untarnished by 50 years of imitation. In the music, two distinct intelligences, one human and one mechanical, circle each other cautiously but inquisitively. We hear unpredictable occurrences, captured in the moment of discovery, becoming first principles for a new generation.

During the 1960s, in the musically thriving Bay Area, Oliveros counted the likes of Terry Riley, Steve Reich, and Loren Rush as her compatriots. She played accordion in the premiere of In C. She founded the San Francisco Tape Music Center with Morton Subotnick. She was in the thick of the pure electronic phase predating her seminal electro-acoustic work, using natural sounds and raw test signals as fodder for processing systems of her own design, which could be played almost like instruments.

This distinguished her from her contemporaries, most of whom were meticulous cutters and splicers. Her reel-to-reel delay system predicted Brian Eno's, but instead of dreamy melodies, she stuffed it full of splintering tones, working with magisterial patience through the kaleidoscope of possibilities in the particular control system. The music comes off as incidentally imagistic, but the answerless fact of sound is paramount. It's an elaborate magic show of competing frequencies, which apparently can do very weird things if you know what you're doing, as when a harmony swallows its own root notes so that we hear two absences ringing in tune.



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    26 июн. 2012 г.

    TwinSisterMoon & Isengrind



    Solo works of Natural Snow Buildings members - Mehdi Ameziane and Solange Gularte.

    TwinSisterMoon:


    Isengrind:


    TwinSisterMoon + Isengrind ( Natural Snow Buildings):




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    Maps and Diagrams


    Maps and Diagrams is Tim Martin, who grew up in Nottingham listening to his friend's dad's collection of Kraftwerk, Talking Heads and punk records, and developing a love affair with electro and hip-hop. As Maps and Diagrams, Tim has also previously released music for Neo Ouija, Tundra Music, Endorphin, Static Caravan, Expanding Records and Smallfish. In addition to that, he collaborated with many other labels, released tracks on compilations and did remixes. Apart from releasing music, he also co-runs Cactus Island Recordings with Steve Broca.





    See also compilations with Tim's participation:



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    25 июн. 2012 г.

    Charalambides


    Charalambides is a musical group originally from Houston, Texas, USA and lately of Austin, Texas. Formed in 1991 (under the short-lived name Mutual Admiration Society) by Tom Carter, Christina Carter and Kyle Silfer, they have followed in the footsteps of other Texas psychedelic music artists such as the 13th Floor Elevators, Red Crayola, and Jandek. Later members include Jason Bill and Heather Leigh Murray.

    Their name is pronounced "ha-ra-lam-bee-deez". It roots from Greek language and means like "happiness-sprayer". The name of the band derives from the surname of a customer at the record shop where Tom and Christina Carter met.

    Their music contains elements typical of psychedelic music such as reverb, extended instrumental jamming and the use of found sounds. Their sound is closely linked to music labelled as New Weird America, although they existed before this term came into use.

    In addition to several major releases on labels such as Kranky, Eclipse Records, and Time-Lag Records, they have also released many small edition CD-Rs on their own Wholly-Other label, and other small independent labels. Some of which have later been re-issued (Our Bed is Green, and Historic Sixth Ward for example).

    Core members Tom Carter and Christina Carter are divorced but remain together as a musical unit. They have also recorded in their own right, releasing albums on Kranky and Eclipse Records, as well as several small edition CD-Rs. In addition the two have collaborated with numerous kindred spirits such as Loren Mazzacane Connors, Yellow Swans and Robert Horton.




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    Camanecroszcope


    Camanecroszcope is Ah Cama-Sotz and Iszoloscope.

    For Yog-Sothoth is the Gate. He knoweth where the Old Ones came forth in times past and where They came forth again when the cycle returneth. The soul of Azathoth dwelleth in Yog-Sothoth and He shall beckon unto the Old Ones when the stars mark the time of Their coming; for Yog-Sothoth is the Gate through which Those of the Void will re-enter. Yog-Sothoth knowest the mazes of time, for all time is one unto Him.

    O Thou that dwelleth in the darkness of the Outer Void, come forth unto the Earth once more I entreat thee. O Thou who abideth beyond the Spheres of Time, hear my supplication. O Thou who art the Gate and the Way come forth, come forth Thy servant calleth Thee. Come forth! Come forth! I speak the words, I Break Thy bonds; the seal is cast aside, pass through the Gate and enter the World! I maketh Thy mighty Sign! I Trace the pentagram of Fire and say the incantation that causeth O Great One to manifest before the Gate! Manifest! O Great One, manifest!

    And then he will come unto thee and bring His Globes and He will give true answer to all you desire to know. And He shall reveal unto you the secret of His seal by which you may gain favour in the sight of the Old Ones when They once more walk the Earth.

    Hcoriaxiju, Zodcarnes, I powerfully call upon ye and stir ye up O ye mighty spirits that dwelleth in the Great Abyss.

    By Xenthono-Rohmatru, I command you O Aziabelis, by Ysehyroroseth, I call the O Antiquelis, and in the Vast and Terrible Name of Damamiach that Crom-Yha uttered and the mountains shook I mightily compel ye forth O Barbuelis, attend me! Aid me! Give power unto the runes of fire, recieveth such virtue that it shall strike fear into the hearts of all spirits that would disobey!




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    Alan R. Splet - Sounds of A Different Realm



    Alan Splet was considered by many to have been the world's greatest motion picture sound designer. His evocative use of ambient sounds helped revolutionize the way we hear movies. Since he passed away in 1994, many have asked his widow and long time collaborator, Ann Kroeber, to publish work from the couple's vast collection. 

    Ann, and her new company, Sound Mountain, chose The Hollywood Edge to help pay tribute to Alan's legacy and introduce her own innovative recordings. Sounds of a Different Realm includes two CDs of "Unusual Presences" which pay homage to Alan and the couple's long time collaboration with director David Lynch, and one disc of all new recordings titled "Common Sounds Heard in Uncommon Ways" recorded exclusively for this Hollywood Edge release.

    - CDs 1 & 2 Unusual Presences - A tribute to Alan Splet, the first two discs contain sounds carefully selected by Ann Kroeber from the couple's immense body of work, specifically their collaborations with director David Lynch. While many of the sounds can be heard in Lynch pictures, some have been used in recent box-office blockbusters, and others have never been heard publicly before. This unique collection offers ethereal presences, deep bass textures, ambient hums, swirling winds, steamy atmospheres, whirling tones, gaseous presences, industrial pulsing and much, much more.

    - CD 3 Common Sounds Heard in Uncommon Ways - Recorded exclusively for this collection, designer Ann Kroeber introduces a curious world of sound lurking beneath the surface of household items. Ann, using a custom made contact microphone, has captured a unique musicality from the actions of everyday objects. Recording with a standard microphone on one channel and the contact microphone on the other, she has uncovered a new audio dimension unlike anything we've ever heard before.

    These tracks are organic and unaltered, except for a few extraneous noises that have been edited out or short fades added. Should you choose to layer, tweak, twist, speed up or slow down any of the tracks, the end result will be the product of your own creativity and imagination.

    The versatility and rich color of Sounds of a Different Realm will quickly make this CD collection an integral part of your sound effects library, while the freedom and creativity these sounds provide will make this collection a treasured sound tool.




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    Atrium Carceri



    Atrium Carceri is a Swedish dark ambient project by Simon Heath. Atrium Carceri's albums incorporate cinematic themes that help make the sound that much more haunting. The perfect soundtracks to untold horror movies. His four full-length albums have been released by industrial record label Cold Meat Industry.

    Atrium Carceri is typically described as dark ambient, black ambient and ambient industrial music. Similar to projects like Lull and Lustmørd, Atrium Carceri uses synthesizers, sound effects, samples from films and anime, piano and other instrumentation to create "slow rhythms, bitter melodies and complex textures" generally based on themes of desolation, loneliness (especially solitary confinement) and environmental decay.

    Atrium Carceri has been praised by music critics and embraced by a cult audience for its depth of atmosphere. As described by one reviewer, "Heath creates a world where time collapses, where the ancient world of conjured spirits, the physical limitations of being all too human, and the infinite outreach of potential futuretech, all coexist."

    The project name, "Atrium Carceri", means "prison hall" in Latin - however, "carceri" is in the wrong case. The proper name would've been "Atrium Carceris".




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    Jean-Louis Brau - Instrumentation Verbales



    After releasing the first LPs ever published by Isidore Isou, Gil J Wolman, Hidlgo&Marchetti's ZAJ... here is another historical premiere, the first LP ever issued by French pre-situationist Jean-Louis Brau. Jean-Louis Brau (1930-1985) at the age of 20 joined along with Gil J Wolman, Isidore Isou's Lettrist group, creating in this context (the same of Wolman's 'megapneums', Dufrêne's 'crirythmes', Lemaоtre's 'hyperphonies' and Isou's 'poemes ciselants') what he called 'instrumentations verbales'.

    In 1952 he recorded on a lathe the soundtrack to the unfinished film La barque de la vie courante (the first ever recording of experimental poetry). In the same year, with Debord, Berna and Wolman, he gave birth to the Internationale Lettriste, from which he was eventually rejected for his military deviation. After the Indochina war (where he ran a brothel and traded opium), Brau joined the French Army in Algeria, between 1956 and 1958. In 1963, back in Paris, Brau gave birth to a Deuxième Internationale Lettriste together with Wolman and Dufrêne. He also designed an astonishing métagraphic roman: No More.

    He approached everything in an explosive way, creating a body of work which is discontinuous, small and incomplete, in which he sometimes achieved some major results: for example with his sound poetry, as demonstrated by 'Turn back nightingale' (1972), in which Brau makes references to François Dufrêne, on a background of disarticulated drums and pre-punk saturations. Also included on this one-sided LP are 'Elégie Elémentaire' and 'Ataloche Roche', both recorded in 1961 during Isidore Isou's conference at the Musée d'Art Moderne in Paris, as well as 'Instrumentation Verbale' and 'Cantate pour l'interdiction de Mandrake', both recorded in 1963 and first published in Poésie Physique, book with 3 singles (Brau, Dufrêne, Wolman), Achèle, in 1965.

    Edition limited to 350 copies reproducing a page from No More on the front sleeve, as well as an essay by Frederic Acquaviva.




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    Ametsub


    Ametsub had started listening various types of music instantly by meeting pop music in his teens and made this experience clue at the same time through his childhood that he had been playing a lot with art toys and cassette tapes being interested in classic, game or nature sound as being highly fascinated with art like paintings and products. And he had also started making music that only arrange built-in sound by using old computer. After that, he had made many sound works which doesn't use equipment around him at all including strange mix work or making music which is imaged fiction story and had been absorbed in making experimental sound which doesn't handle normally and is full of playful mind feeling questions, existence or safety to sound. As he says "This is exactly my life".





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    Alio Die


    Stefano Musso studied art and electronics in his home town of Milan, Italy, and began performing ambient-electronic music under the name Alio Die in 1989. Characterized by evocative acoustic sounds manipulated and tendered electronically, Alio Die's work builds intimate soundscapes tied to the mystery and majesty of life and nature. His CD "Under an Holy Ritual", released on Projekt in 1992, was received with international acclaim. He subsequently released more than 20 CDs, and collaborated with many well-known artists such as Robert Rich, Vidna Obmana, Mathias Grassow, Nick Parkin, Yannick Dauby, Amelia Cuni, Raffaele Serra, Ora, Antonio Testa.

    Since the late '80s, Stefano Musso has recorded deep, evocative experimental ambient and electro-acoustic soundscapes under the name Alio Die. Combining sweeping electronics with found sound and acoustical treatments which have echoed through the recent works of composers such as Robert Rich, Tetsu Inoue, and Brian Williams, Musso has assembled a rich and varied collection of recordings for such labels as Projekt, Timebase, Fathom, and his own Hic Sunt Leones label. Based in Milan, Musso studied art and electronic composition there, founding Alio Die in 1989 as a live performance act, and eventually self-releasing a debut, Under an Holy Ritual, in 1992. Enthusiastically received in his home country, Holy Ritual expanded Musso's international presence significantly in 1993 when it was licensed by the popular U.S.-based gothic/darkwave label Projekt. The connection brought a crossover audience to Musso's music, and — together with artists such as Asmus Tietchens, Vidna Obmana, Coil, and A Produce — helped ready ears for such mid-'90s dark ambient/isolationist outfits as Lull, Final, Download, and Lustmørd. Musso subsequently released three additional solo albums, including the first full-length — Suspended Feathers — issued by the celebrated, limited-run Amplexus label. A shadowy, cavernous, intensely detailed fusion of acoustical elements, step-and-repeat sample treatments, sparse, echoing percussion, and deep, atmospheric sound design, Suspended Feathers presented Musso at his very best, playing ambient's static tendencies off of shifting melodic and textural passages that suggest movement without sacrificing the music's vague, entropic formlessness. In addition to full-length and compilation appearances, Musso has contributed to releases by Vidna Obmana and Steve Roach, and teamed up with Robert Rich in 1996 to record the full-length work Fissures for Stephen Hill's Fathom label. More collaborative efforts appeared during the new millennium, including Echo Passage with Vidna Obmana in 2000, Apsaras one year later with Amelia Cuni, and Mei-Jyu in 2005 with Jack or Die.




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