2008-05-15

Aaron Dilloway : Rotting Nepal [Blossoming Noise LP]





Wolf Eyes man Dilloway presents a more subtle side of his noisenik persona with this recording made (as the title suggests) in Nepal circa 2005. Made up of carefully manipulated bursts of shortwave samples and static alongside the kind of power electronics dementia you’d expect from such a man, Rotting Nepal is actually a far more eloquent and sophisticated noise statement than anyone could have expected. This is excruciatingly limited and comes on 140g red marbled vinyl. edVery desirable inde.


Rotting Nepal

Aaron Dilloway : Radio Nepal 1-2-3 [Hanson Records]



Aw shit! And you thought Alan Bishop was the only one propagating foreign culture for his own personal gain! Hawhahawhahw I'm just kidding of course. I don't really give a shit about the so-called ethics behind the process of recording the sounds from afar and releasing them over here in America with no royalities being paid to the original artist. Mainly because I know if somebody recorded one of my performances from over here in the motherland, I really wouldn't care what they did with it. But then again I don't perform. So I don't really have to ever worry about such a situation. And that debate is getting into nerdy Wire "letters to the editor" turf. AND to be fair to Aaron Dilloway, these are just CD-Rs of various radio stations from over there in Nepal, so it's not like any one individual is being ripped off. Maybe you can make a case for Dilloway's Nath Family recordings, but those guys were hustlers anyway so my heart ain't bleeding just yet. But what am I trying to stir up trouble for? Let's just enjoy the sounds, Jack.
The three discs that comprise the "Radio Nepal" set (packaged and sold individually but you get a deal if you order all three from Hanson direct) each consist of one 45-minute track spliced and diced with all sorts of transmissions from a shortwave radio somewhere within Dilloway's reach in Nepal. It doesn't make any sense to talk about them in seperate terms since they're really three of a perfect pair, and since I listened to them all consecutively I can scarcely remember which disc contained what sound. A couple things are immediately striking upon listening to the recordings, the first of which being the surprising amount of English content on the stations being picked up. Not just in terms of the music (obviously I would expect American pop music to make it to the airwaves of countries not located on this continent) but the DJs and commercials as well...in particular this one astonishingly lame ratio station ad set to the tune of Tina Turner's "Simply the Best", wherein the radio station in question predictably claims to be...simply the best. Beyonce's "Crazy in Love" makes a brief appearance, so too does the Prodigy's "Breathe" (which I actually got pretty stoked for since I haven't heard that song in an eon but it didn't last beyond the opening few bars) and a Snoop Dogg song which I can't identify right away but can tell you that he's namechecking the Neptunes, if that's of any help. Oh yeah and there's a great part where Terry Jacks' "Season in the Sun" barely comes through the shrubbery of static, something that also plays a pretty integral role in all three discs. In fact, at times it's hard to believe that Dilloway isn't intentionally manipulated the pops and buzzes of the radio because they're sometimes so prolonged and so aggressive that they're not at all unlike an Aaron Dilloway solo set. They can also get pretty cosmic too, inflicting mass amounts of long-form bwoops and disruptions upon the songs they're supposed to be transmitting. What else is good? Well there's this bit that's too funny to not be purposely comedic...it's a jazz tune playing which gets interrupted by a supposed newsflash in which astrologists have been instructed to keep watch for any movement on Mars and that they'll be going to an interview with some space professor for his comments but until then they'll go back to the song...which they do for two seconds until the interview cuts in and the interviewer talks about being with the professor in a dark room with an arched ceiling and that's all we get to hear before it cuts out again. What the fuuuuu? Okay maybe you had to be there but I thought it was funny. Oh, and of course, I can't forget the main attraction of the disc which is, despite coming in shorter supply than I would've liked, the folk and pop songs native to the Nepali people and their radio stations. Well there's a pretty good mix, from dance-y pop songs that play on those foreign TV stations where you can text message in your vote to the video you like the most, to slow and deliberate tabla/guitar/flute/vocal sessions like all gathered around the hookah and such, to gentle acoustic female pop numbers which I would surely hate if they were in English and signed by Sarah McLachlan or something (do you have her in the U.S.?), to near-raucous instrumental jazz numbers, to funky Bollywood jamming...all seperated and often paired up with advertisements I could never hope to understand and the frequent, unsettling bursts of static that are in abundance throughout all three volumes. Safe to say that your average World Music Listener would not find much comfort in the harsh white noise cuts strewn about here but it's practically par for the course when you're shopping from Hanson and I'm sure some people wouldn't even notice it. Sometimes I envy some people.

(review from Outer Space Gamelan)


Radio Nepal Vol 1

Radio Nepal Vol 2

Radio Nepal Vol 3

I'm back

After a few months hiatus, this babyblog is kicking again, so without further ado, let's go for a new wave of mutated and experimental sounds... thanks for those of you who stayed during all this time, and welcome to new readers.

2007-11-28

Dark Demos

Hi, everybody...

No, the blog isn't dead, just caught up in a tangled mass of irl issues. Anyways, I should be able to upload some new material real soon. In the meantime, I invite you all to check another blog i created, Dark Demos, which is dedicated to the demos and sel-released material i received over the years...

2007-10-17

Thomas Köner : Unerforschtes Gebiet [Die Stadt 2003]

First released a wonderful picture disc in 2001, this record was re-released in 2003 with the addition of "Les Soeurs Lumière". Another trip in the polar areas...

  • Unerforschtes Gebiet 1
  • Unerforschtes Gebiet 2
  • Les Soeurs Lumière
Unerforschtes Gebiet

Thomas Köner : Zyklop [Mille Plateaux 2003]


A great ambient album by Thomas Köner... here's what Dusted has to say about it (they said it so well, what can I add ? Other Köner material will follow soon...

"Zyklop, the latest release from electronic composer/sound artist (and half of the techno act Porter Ricks) Thomas Köner presents itself not only as a great piece of experimental electronic work, but also as another chapter in the interesting relationship between music as sound art and vice versa. Taken as an effort on par with both the works of those composers invited to join such events as the Whitney Biennial (which saw Forcefield and Stephen Vitiello, among others, set up shop), and those producers who perform at Tonic on a regular basis, the five pieces spread across these two discs come across as catering to a wealth of different tastes and aesthetics. True enough, the music contained herein could easily cater to both the high art set and the avid Wire reader, although these are two segments of the consumer public that find themselves closer and closer with each passing day. Regardless, Köner’s latest work is successful at catering to both sensibilities – the aural and ideological.

The first disc of this set is taken directly from a performance originally done for Radio France in 2002 entitled “Une Topographie Sonore: Col De Vence”. Although it seems daunting both in length and thematic scope (a 60 minute treatise on the connections in naturally occurring sound topography), the piece itself is truly a work of sustained, slow motion beauty. Composed of sounds heard many times before in soundwalks or field recordings of this nature, “Topographie” relies on the sounds of birds, insects, precipitation and winds as much as artificially generated tones and drones. However, each specific sound or series is treated as a slide to be carefully examined, as part of a larger puzzle whose interconnections reveal themselves gracefully over time. Subtle ambient pulses wash through the piece, rising to a genteel swell before lowering into the sounds of distant winds. Similarly, a recording of the fauna found commonly in nature coasts gracefully into extended mechanical buzzing. The whole piece undulates carefully, seeking not to mine obvious collisions of sound that can occur from such natural and synthetic juxtapositions, but rather attempting to point out an almost dialectic understanding of the relations between various environments, both those generated by the human and unseen hand. The 60-minutes contained herein glide and cascade, using every sound and silence to great affect – in all, simply beautiful.

The second disc of this set is probably the more instantly accessible of the two, as it contains four shorter pieces culled from live performances around the world over the past couple of years. The ideas and sounds here are much more direct and focused. “Des Rives” mines the streets for its source material, highlighting the traffic and hustle-and-bustle of the daily city life on what could be any block in any metropolis. It’s a neat summation of the tired repetition that occurs from the daily commute, or a way of looking towards the mundane for inspiration. “Tu, Sempre” is less overtly referential, relying on a series of shifting drones and odd rhythmic clicks to build a rather ominous mood. The track builds carefully on this idea, using human voices as another element to aid in the shifting dynamics until its climax in a glorious fog of sound. There are also two versions of the title track contained herein, both using similar ideas and elements to spin complementary takes on each other. The version from Minneapolis is the quieter one of the two, trading off on swells of sound in contrast to an arrhythmic thumping that gradually ebbs and flows. The second version, recorded in Frankfurt a couple of weeks earlier, relies less on a sense of the laconic and more on pure manifestations of sound. Whereas the other version traffics mostly in subtlety, the source material is given the ability to rise in greater swells with a more enveloping and vivid sonic palette.

Köner’s greatest strength is his ability to gradually build on subtleties until the end result is all encompassing and powerful. Indeed, what sometimes starts as a trickle develops with great ease into sonic flow that never feels forced or unnecessarily busy. Zyklop thus comes across as the work of a highly skilled and patient producer and artist. Although I personally am unable to describe what takes something from the realm of great music into excellent art, I do know that this is a shining example of those very same intangible factors."

  • Une topographie sonore : Col de Vence
  • Des Rives
  • Zyklop (1)
  • Tu, Sempre
  • Zyklop


Zyklop

2007-09-21

V/A Atomic Weight [Iridium 1996] (re-up)


finally uploaded again with a fixed link... sorry for the dealy, i didn't check the comments for a while... anyways

Here's another one, the sister record to "Document 02-Sine". By the time Dorobo published this compilation, on its sublabel Iridium, minimalism in electronic was widely accepted. And as we can hear, Dumb Type really have refined their sound ("Passport Control" remains one of my all-time favourites). The tracklisting is :

  • Dumb Type : White out
  • Ryoji Ikeda : What's wrong
  • Dumb Type : Passport Control
  • Dumb Type : Trans-Limit
  • Dumb Type : Counter-Invention
  • Ryoji Ikeda : Test no. 1
  • Ryoji Ikeda : Abstructures
  • CCI Sound System : Mind Implosion (edit version)
  • Yoshio Ojima : Discomposure
  • -
Atomic Weight

2007-09-05

Interzone 47

Shameless self-promotion here. I host two radioshows on a french independant radio every sunday from 9 to 11 PM (tou can listen to it live here). Once every two weeks, it's an electro-industrial & post-punk show called Signal Bruit that you can find on my other blog, Rusted Noise. The other one, Interzone, is an experimental & idm show, so i'll post the links here from now on, if you're interested in checking it. For the moment, it's in .ogg, as the radio software only accept this format, but as they just changed it, it will be on mp3 for the next issues. Anyways... enjoy
  • Greg Davis : Arche / Somnia
  • Andrey Kiritchenko : Illusion of Safety / True Delusion
  • Dreath Ambient : A Cocktail of Chemicals / Drunken Forest
  • Main : Maps 3 / Maps
  • Philip Jeck & Janek Schaefer : Song for Europe / Song for Europe
  • Ab Ovo : Un jardin si secret / Strates
  • Hervé Boghossian : Corrosion sourde / Mouvements
  • Nobukazu Takemura : Icefall / Scope
  • Ken Ikeda : Mist on the Window / Mist on the Window
  • Jeph Jerman : Albuquerque Hotel Room / VA On Isolation
  • Opitope : Mist on the Sea / Hau
  • Alva Noto : Haliod Xerrox Copy 2. (Air France) / Xerrox vol. 1
  • Komet : Gate / Saat
  • Steve Roden : Jellyfish so like the Moon / Four Possible Landscapes
  • Yannick Dauby : Low Valley 3 / Low Valley
  • Nurse With Wound : July 24 / Shipwreck Radio 1
  • Zoviet France : Rydin / Mort aux Vaches - Feedback
  • Oloolo / Holzer : BCE / ST
  • Esther Brinkmann : Trans / Der Übersetzer


Interzone 47

2007-08-31

Davide Balula : Pellicule [Active Suspension 2003]


And this time, let's read to what almost cool has to said about this really great folktronica record...
"Davide Balula is a French artist who has managed to carve out sort of a unique genre for himself, mixing folk and indie rock music along with manipulated found-sound and lots of electronic manipulation. It's never done in a way that's obvious and many times not even expected, making for a release that keeps you guessing which way it will turn while not being so drastic that it scares you away.

  • Eburn (9V)
  • Puis décongèle
  • En jet de soude
  • Des Files
  • Pour une flaque...
  • Lorsqu'il n'est plus
  • Iris em Arco
  • Um so piolo
  • Maan
  • Viens, va-t-en

Pellicule

AGF/Delay : Explode [AGF Producktion 2005]


Not much time for description today, so let's the over-efficient Boomkat take my place here...
"AGF/Delay marks a further coming together of Finland's Abtye Greie and Vladsilav Delay, more or less shunning the respective styles and genres with which they are generally associated, AGF/Delay instead takes the day-to-day snippets of modern culture which we all unconsciously hoover up (glimpses of news stories, half-heard conversations on the bus etc.) and distils it through a musical filter which takes in dub, electronica, microscopic emissions and even chamber music. As they are dealing in recollections and memories the subject matter on show is quite hazy and often untethered, lending a frosted-glass atmosphere to proceedings. Greie's blunt but considered vocals drift lazily in and out of the mix throughout, evoking those of Michaela Melian's recent 'Baden-Baden' all the while complemented by Delay's sparse production which is just as happy to throw down industrial clicks as it is 80's power ballad atmospherics. All in all a discordantly bijou record that even finds at one point Mr Delay edging closer to the deep House glides of his Luomo project and AGF consenting to stop narrating and start singing"
  • Introduction
  • Do Protest
  • Explode Baby
  • All lies on us
  • A Distant View
  • Causing a Taifun
  • Restrict
  • Break Doors
  • Useless
  • Recorded
  • Slow
  • Distributor
  • From Morning on
  • Out-troduction


Explode