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- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 20:44:49 CST
- Sender: Electronic Music Discussion List <EMUSIC-L@AUVM.BITNET>
- From: Gregory Taylor
- <vme.heurikon.com!gtaylor%heurikon.UUCP@CS.WISC.EDU>
- Subject: Crosspoixting for the millions
- Comments: To: american.edu!emusic-l%heurikon.UUCP@cs.wisc.edu
- Lines: 253
-
- Two - count 'em - two requests to post this bit from a multi-part
- article on rec.music.misc to the emusic list. Okay, but only with
- my abject apologies to those of you poor souls who've had to read
- this more than once.
-
- ______
- Newsgroups: rec.music.makers.synth,rec.music.synth,comp.music
- Subject: A couple of year-end pointers
- Message-ID: <1989@heurikon.heurikon.com>
- Date: 22 Dec 92 22:06:21 GMT
- Sender: news@heurikon.heurikon.com
-
- Well, posting number N straggled in from a cross-reader of rec.music.misc
- and these newsgroups. They'd read this huge rambling 5-part posting I
- do every year on the subject of discs that had passed across my desk
- as a programmer of "Electronic/Experimental/Classical/Ethnic/Improvised
- Conduct for the Discerning Listener Late in the 20th Century" which I
- thought were deserving of wider exposure. This most recent reader asked
- why I didn't post the reviews *outside* of r.m.m., since he thought that
- the Carl Stone and Paul Lansky discs would be enthusiastically welcomed
- by *any* rec.music.*.synth reader who never read *misc because "it was
- too much work." I replied that, since the list was somewhat eclectic
- in content, I'd inevitably get flamed bigtime for daring to mention
- works outside of the narrowcast parameters of the non-misc groups.
- The response was quick: Edit the listing and post it there, stupid.
- Folks should *hear* about these discs. So, properly chastened, I've
- taken the list and excerpted the stuff that might be of interest to these
- groups, appending the rest only as titles at the very end. I hope you'll
- forgive the low-techy discourse; my intent was to pique the interest of
- the rec.music.misc readers, whose style is somewhat different from what
- one reads here. I have, I hope, erred on the side of enthusiasm.
-
- _____begin excerpts______
- Okay. So I don't actually believe in anything approaching a top ten. I
- do, however, end the broadcasting year on my radio show by stringing
- together a number of discs appearing during the previous year which I
- think are worthy of some serius consideration. And given that the territory
- that I tend to traverse is probably of the *.misc variety, you'd wonder
- how it'd be possible to make any judgements on someone free improvised
- on an acoustic guitar (or do you say "...making random scratching noises?")
- next to a CD of someone recycling mysterious bits of the world's popular
- music in a way that radically transforms them anyway. This is, of course,
- mine opine only. These things have lived on my player in peace and harmony
- for quite some time, and I'm quite sure that I'll be spending a lot of
- time with them in the year to come, as well. They are in no order of
- rank.
-
- Carl Stone "Mom's" [New Albion]
- What do you call Carl Stone? He is a composer in that he really puts
- a lot of work into structuring his compositions - in this sense, he kind
- of fits into the Minimalist category's ability to draw worlds of difference
- out of the tiniest perturbations. As a composer, he has a keen ear for
- source material as the beginning point for his own compositions; one
- hears the polyphony of the Ituri Rain Forst, African pop, and the ghosts
- of Balinese music. I suppose that those of you who enjoy Rap's ability to
- create music by sampling from diverse sources and styles would also think
- of what Carl does as the "ultimate" sampling. There is nothing in most
- of his piece *but* samples - but the work isn't in your face, and insinuates
- itself very quietly and calmly. His new disc on New Albion seem to me
- to be his most focused and compelling collection of the odd kind of
- "process" music that only he does. Unfortunately, it's a little difficult
- to explain to folks who've never heard the stuff. Imagine this: you've
- got a recording of a Japanese woman singing Franz Schubert's "The
- Linden Tree" in English, accompanied by only a piano. Rather than your
- average classical voice, the singer's performing style has much more
- in common with the breathy, mannered delivery of someone like Kate
- Bush. So you choose the most interesting sounding fragments of the song
- and you put them in a loop, where each pass through the loop advances
- a little further along in the performance, cutting just a tiny bit off
- the beginning as you go. The piano becomes a box full of vibrating
- strings, and the little idiosyncracies of the singing become the
- "subject" of the song. All the while, the source stuff is still completely
- recognizeable. *That's* the kind of stuff Carl does, and he does it
- better than any other human on the planet. This disc also features a
- marriage of some Pygmy singing and a single somber organ that lit the
- phone lights like Christmas the first time I played it on my show (more
- than one call like "I've never heard anything like that before. It's
- beautiful. Where do I buy it?" is usually a dead giveaway that this might
- be cool stuff, insofar as I rely on my audience to provide a corrective
- to my programming excesses), and some clattery stuff that probably
- started its life as Afropop and no seems like Irish fiddle music played
- by a salsa band. Really different, and *highly* recommended.
-
- P-Model "P-Model" [Polydor Japan]
- I know. I always list stuff that no one else can locate without the
- secret decoder ring. So I feel stupid when one of my selections might
- actually fall into this category. I can comfort myself with the thought
- that Clayton will probably say something about Omoide Hatoba in *his*
- list, and even *I'm* having trouble finding it. Although I am not nearly
- as learned and astute (despite my advanced age) as Al Crawford, I, too,
- harbor a deep and abiding love for synthesizer-based popular music.
- Given the recent fashion in places like rec.music.synth or whatever it's
- now called, I should think this would appeal to the retroid synth-pop
- tendencies of nearly everyone: The Ultravox school of anthemic delivery
- with the occasional "radio transmission" effect, breakneck tempos, lots
- of little static and squiggly things, long whitenoise filter sweeps,
- the ever popular filtered whitenoise percussion effect, and hardly a
- guitar in sight. This is the first album that P-Model released in maybe
- 6 years. Considering their earlier earlier and considerably more
- guitaristic punk roots, this album's abandonment of the samplers which
- predominated on their last disc "Karkador" in favor of the dense and busy
- surfaces (none of that Teutonic stripped-down simplicity here) comes not
- so much as a canny commercial move as it does a clear and simple version
- of some great music. This CD will be a delight to that lurking desire you
- may have to hear some analog synthesizers again. Oh yeah - it's all sung
- in Japanese, with the exception of little phrases (bungee jump, wire
- self, 2d or not 2d) here and these. Bleep Bleep.
-
- Paul Lansky "Homebrew" [Bridge Records]
- Don't you tire even a *little* of the big themes, the grandiose algorithms,
- and the gnawing sense that you often have to hunt pretty hard to find a
- piece of computer music to play for your aunt Mathilda? What if all those
- High Culture computer chops were turned to the task of making music whose
- subversion was "sneaky"? Well, here it is: an entire album of computer
- music made by a highly respected practitioner in the field [I'm not
- sure how long ago, but I think I did a short review of Paul's earlier
- disc on New Albion "Small Talk"] that you can actually like. Paul Lansky's
- "Homebrew" is a collection of 5 pieces of NeXT-generated computer music
- whose roots are solidly in the domain of the "real" world; no
-
- squiggly little cryptohorns careening around what sounds like concert
- halls at lunch-launching speeds or the sounds of the carcasses of
- some immense and protesting animal being dragged across broken glass
- in front of a marching band trained in Tibet here, nosirree. Lansky remains
- solidly committed to making music that originates in the everyday world,
- and his tools are used in a way which "finds" music rather than invents it.
- "Table's Clear" is perhaps the easiest to describe. Paul took a recording
- of his kids making noise with the stuff in their kitchen, added a few
- little side episodes, fed it into the computer, and then sequenced and
- retuned some of the sounds into this huge, cheery wall of Minimalist
- tuned percussion. The repertoire involves rapping on countertops, glasses,
- frying pans, and those rude little farting noises made by forcing air
- through your hands that your parents always hollered at you about. It
- is both simple, humourous, and it manages to evoke a more foursquare
- balinese "kitchen gamelan" kind of ambiance. It's great digital fun.
- The raw material of "Quakerbridge" takes a montage of shopping mall site
- recordings and then feeds them through a bank of tuned filters which
- trigger ghostly clouds of twinkly mandolins and choirs, while clearly
- retaining the original source material (the soundtrack for Moses looking
- across the Jordan River and seeing the Promised Land as a crowded Mall?)
- In another piece, Hannah MacKay's wonderful homey bedtime story
- voice creates this peculiar little poststructural fairy tale
- populated with nothing *but* time phrases and their implied resolution.
- It isn't compelling because of her terrific Sprechstimme technique or
- the great huge wads of high-powered processing Lansky brings to bear
- on her voice (in fact, the whole of "Now and Then" is very unusual in
- light of Lansky's other compositions precisely *for* its simplicity and
- lack of all but the most subtle treatment) - it's the connection.
- "Night Traffic" takes a simple premise - the sound of periodic evening
- traffic processed by the computerin a way that adds a little "chordal"
- material...the passing truck flashes by in D-Minor, followed by another
- couple of tonal masses with four wheels on the pavement. And the piece
- ends with another use of the "filters excited using plucked string
- algorithms" techniques [even *mentioning* or trying to paraphrase the
- method used to make this work makes me cringe. I'm thinking "Gack. No one
- will want to listen to if unless I just stick to the way stuff *sounds.*"]
- on the sound of clapping - producing a kind of hybrid of something like
- Steve Reich's "Clapping Music" with a tuned percussion ensemble. Technology
- with a human face - a smiling face.
-
- The Orb "UFOrb" [Mercury/Big Life]
- Everyone said, "But Greg - you love this boring and drony Eno nonsense.
- Ambient House is just like that, but with drum machines. Besides, this
- is just a case of using all the ideas about recording and mixing that you
- avant-garde composer weenies love so much to do something completely
- different. You're just whingeing because you don't like the form it
- takes." They were right, and being suitably chastened, I followed up
- on the advice of Lazlo several years ago and picked up the KLF "Chill
- Out" CD. Hmmmm. Not bad. Maybe a little heavy on the hokey "found"
- broadcasts and samples from Minny Ripperton, but the electronics here
- are pretty nice and it *did* manufacture this kind of virtual space
- you could just enter and hang out in. So on the strength of that, I started
- venturing a little more seriously into listening to house stuff that was
- *not* quite so ambient. Well, the Orb's "Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld"
- was, as Goldilocks would say, "just right." About as much beat as I was
- comfortable with, some nice textures, and a decent groove." Their new
- release, "UFOrb" is, to my fossilized brain, loads better: it's consider
- ably more in the ambient vein, crosses into some of my favorite territories
- (occasionally summoning the ghosts of that Neue Deutsche Welle stuff
- that I used to like before punk came along - kind of a Tangerine Dream
- with a dollop of self-deprecating humour. Even some pretty tasty dub!)
- for long term "low volume" listening, and it's divinely well sequenced.
- If there are ways of taking the "Music as the soundtrack of your life"
- twaddle that FM stations sell as a way to homogenize stuff to flow into
- the commercials and to subvert the notion by using the stuff *as*
- environment, then this disc has been humming away in the office at least
- as much as Eno's "Shutov Assembly" - or maybe more (and you *know* how
- I feel about the domed one). On the radio in its unnanounced form, it
- actually fades out of Lamonte Young and into heaven knows what, snagging
- the Deadhead and the academic electronic music weenies alike. Finally,
- the domestic American release of this disc (the early editions, anyhow)
- is a terrific bargain, in that it includes a whole bonus disc with the
- full 40-minute "Blue Room" UK single *and* a couple of remake/remodel
- versions *and* their latest single "Assassin" in the bargain.
-
- SPK - "Zamia Lehmanni (Songs of Byzantine Flowers)" [Mute/Grey Area]
- Another disc from the Mute/Grey Area series of releases that gave us
- the Dome albums, but one of quite a different sort.
- One of the generally interesting features of our tendency to group
- work in terms of "genre" for me involves the choices that artists
- make as they simultaneously push against the boundaries at the same
- time as their work moves from the territory of the edge to the center.
- Perhaps the problem is one of emotional limitation, or maybe we're
- thinking of a personal rejection. Nonetheless, I tend to find a similar
- urge on the part of artists on a regular basis - "I'm comfortable with
- the form, *now* what?" The question of how one decides to proceed
- goes from *that* point is, for all intents and purposes, the same kind
- of question that faces someone who plays the blues or jazz players like
- Anthony Davis: "Do I redefine my work by including something else, by
- actually changing what I do, or is it possible that I can identify
- similar patterns in other kind of work and marry them to my own?"
- For Graham Revell of SPK, the answer to that question led him away from
- more orthodox industrial work of the early SPK albums into a brief flirtation
- with more electronic dance work with a female singer, and finally to his
- current work as a soundtrack composer ("Dead Calm" and some of the music
- for "Till the End of the World").
-
- The earlier work of SPK's that seen release is much more solidly in the
- "pounding and screaming" genre of industrial labor honed to a fine
- and taxonomically easy to identify polish by bands like Test Dept.,
- Esplendor Geometrico, and Crash Worship. This rerelease really marks the
- beginning of his plunge into his later work as a "composer"; it borrows his
- singer Sinan (sounding *very* different) and the usual metallic
- suspects and runs the whole thing into a Fairlight for some judicious
- sampling in the bargain. The finished work combines the spare and somber
- sound of ambient industrial work with a set of similar urges found in
- ritual or liturgical acoustic musics in a way that, though a little
- emotionally chilly, is coherent and fully realized. Even though it's a
- reissue, I don't think that there's any work quite in its genre or this
- quality (and I think that the more industrial SPK works may have been
- bettered by some of the newer industrial bands. This is only opinion,
- mind you).
-
-
- The other discs covered in the articles were (again, in NO order of rank):
- Probably, no reviews of them belong here....
-
-
- Derek Bailey "Guitar Solos Volume II" [Incus]
- Arrested Development - "3 ..in the life of" [Chrysalis or Charisma]
- H. Gorecki "Symphony #3 (Symphony of Sorrowful Songs)" [Elektra Nonesuch]
- T-Bone Burnette "The Criminal Under My Own Hat" [Columbia]
- John Harle "Saxophone - Nyman/Bryars/Westbrook" [Argo]
- Various Artists "Sahara Blue" [Crammed Discs/Made to Measure]
- Dome "1/2 and 3/4" [Mute/Grey Area]
- Arvo Part "Miserere" [ECM]
- Bill Nelson "Blue Moons and Laughing Guitars" [Caroline]
-
- --
- The law moves quickly in the rain/and chokes the world with memorials./The
- courts accept the lowest superstition/into evidence. And we embrace quickly in
- the rain,/conceiving a hale infant with hands to wrinkle/the bedsheets toward
- it, wave by trough by wave./Gregory Taylor/Heurikon /Madison, WI/608-828-3385
-