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[idm] %array | September 2000

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2000-09-11 23:17[idm] %array | September 2000
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2000-09-11 23:17"Christopher Murphy" <chris@fallt.com> (by way of "Lance @ Inaudible" <lance@inaudible.com>)%ARRAY | SEPTEMBER 2000 ::..:::::::::::.....:....::::............:..::..:........:::::....
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Mon, 11 Sep 2000 19:17:54 -0400
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[idm] %array | September 2000
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%ARRAY | SEPTEMBER 2000 ::..:::::::::::.....:....::::............:..::..:........:::::....::....:: NEWS Dust Theories. Dust Theories is an ongoing visual work by Fallt designers Fehler to complement an audio installation by sound designer and composer Kim Cascone currently showing at Chicago's DeadTech Gallery. Inspired by Cascone's theory of 'residualism' - which he defines as "the process of removing a signal until all that's left is its ghost-signal or the artifacts thrown off by the original signal" - the Dust Theories visuals utilise low-memory components to create pages which load quickly and dynamically using a minimum of server-side memory. Fehler are currently developing a web-independent audio-visual version which will incorporate randomly looped audio fragments sourced from Cascone's recent 'Parasites' CD. To view the Dust Theories work in progress, check out: http://www.fallt.com/dust :::::::::: Fallt accepting credit cards. Fallt are pleased to announce that we are now accepting Credit Cards. In response to demand from subscribers, ordering is now simpler as all Fallt products can be ordered direct from us by web; email; phone or fax. Pimmon's Assembler CD is now in stock (limited to only 1000 copies worldwide) and pre-ordering is also now available on forthcoming projects, including the invalidObject Series. For further details, check out: http://www.fallt.com/orders :::::::::: Call for entries. Fehler have been invited to contribute (.mp3) samples to an audio installation in Dublin's ArtHouse Space. The piece titled 'mp3 (abode)' is being curated by sound artist Loftus and is described as follows: An old upright piano in a large dark space, one light, and a seat. The sounds received will be collected and stored in samplers. They will be from all around the world and from every aspect of life and will inhabit an old upright piano located in the basement of Arthouse. Visitors to the building will be able to play the instrument and these 'recitals' will be broadcast... For further information or to contribute samples, check out: http://www.arthouse.ie/exhibitions/abode/ab.htm ::..:::::::::::.....:....::::............:..::..:........:::::....::....:: REVIEWS Kim Cascone | Parasites [Anechoic] Kim Cascone follows up his 'Pulsar Studies' on fals.ch and an earlier set of 'Parasites' on the Ritornell compilation 'Maschinelle Strategeme' with a further twenty 'Parasites' on his own recently-formed Anechoic label. As its title suggests the 20 tracks might be regarded as organisms; indeed, Cascone states that they are released with the intention that they "travel and mutate into various forms". The opening track '1ParasiteForDeleuze' does indeed sound alive and at just over three minutes it displays perhaps the greatest compositional and structural development of all the tracks. This is audio which - rather than being alive - seems to occupy some pure or abstract mathematical space in which hissing particle flows trace out smooth or folded geometrical surfaces and shifting fields. Each of the subsequent tracks exhibit some unique characteristics and, though similar, are by no means identical. They follow each other in rapid succession some of them just a few seconds long. Sequencing seems secondary, in fact, the CD could be played randomly every time or dipped into for just one or two tracks chosen by chance. Perhaps, like some of the more rarefied aspects of pure mathematics, these unreal spaces are a route to understanding some deeply hidden features of our normal acoustic environment. Whatever, 'Parasites' is also appreciable on more levels than the purely conceptual. As far as Cascone's stated purpose is concerned, only time will tell how far they travel and where they lodge. [GM] :::::::::: Microstoria | Improvisors & Vert | The Köln Konzert [Sonig] Two live glimpses captured on Mouse on Mars' Sonig label. Microstoria's live set, recorded in the Autumn of 1998, heralds their third studio album 'Model3,Step2' which is scheduled for release in October 2000 on Sonig. 'Improvisors' is unlikely to contain any real surprises: four of the tracks are "alternative versions and reconsiderations" of tracks which originally appeared on 1998s '_snd'; with the balance generated as live laptop improvisations. The sleeve's barely-there quality - with depictions of tiny artefacts made from detritus and knotted thread - make it a ready metaphor for the music contained within. It would be a mistake, however, to dismiss this unassuming document so lightly. Popp and St Werner's music is both engaging and affecting; consisting of amniotic drones (softened by a lack of high frequencies), stutters, and plaintive refrains. It possesses a random quality that truly allows it to live and breathe and its overall effect is contemplative and, at times, even melancholic. Vert's 'Mewantemooseic' is undoubtedly one of the highlights of the Sonig catalog to date, largely due to its effortless grooves composed from frenetic beats and samples. 'The Köln Konzert', in contrast, is centred around sparse acoustic piano often pared back to a one or two note refrain. The sleeve notes state that it is inspired by Keith Jarrett's record of the same name. A work with which I am not familiar except, that is, for the first five notes from which Vert constructs the fifteen minute 'Part One'; Jarrett's main theme which is used in 'Part Two' and 'Part Five'; and a further eleven notes which are used in 'Part Three'. (Only 'Part Four' is entirely original to Vert.) Jarret's themes are taken by Vert, edited, reconfigured and subjected to all manner of electronic treatments. He adds effects, scrapes and concrete sounds and lets them gnaw freely at the edges. He also reprises Jarrett's themes in various synthesized forms with the main theme finally played out on a toy music box. 'Part One' impresses the most; sparse and hypnotic it breaks down into a comfortable groove before returning to the original piano figure atop a volatile sonic compound which finally, and inevitably, ruptures. In comparison parts three and four sound rather weak with the result that, although the whole work is coherent and shows plenty of variation, it doesn't quite hold the attention at the same level throughout. It is, however, an ambitious exercise, deftly executed and well worth investigating. [GM] :::::::::: Tone Language | Patience is the Key [Korm Plastics] Tone Language are Lee Norris (better known for his work as Metamatics on Clear) and Japanese brothers Ichiro and Kenji Taniguchi (frantic-sampling-meets-spacious-flotation duo Reflection). The fruits of their collaboration as Tone Language is the aptly-titled 'Patience is the Key' which features twelve slow motion tracks of post-Oval glitch. Comparisons could certainly be drawn with Oval (circa 'Do While') and there are undoubtedly similarities, but Tone Language, if anything, allow their melodies to unfold at a far smoother and sedate pace. Like the embers of a dying fire each track crackles and glows, unfolding gently and elegantly. The opening track 'Ocean' hovers atop a distant beat that always seems tantalisingly just beyond grasp while 'The Robot Sparrows' underpins a hesitant rhythm with the softest of basslines that smoulders gently but insistently. The ease with which Tone Language's works unfolds is mesmeric; by only the fourth track 'A Plants Day in Stages' hours seem to have elapsed yet only minutes have passed. This is music to get effortlessly lost within: warm, absorbing and perfectly formed. [CM] :::::::::: Tetsu Inoue + Taylor Deupree | Active/Freeze [12k] The results of a long anticipated SF/NYC collaboration, 'Active/Freeze' might initially be perceived as a measured study in cold, hyper-minimalism; repeated listening however reveals a warmth and depth which can be all-too-easily overlooked. In contrast to the title's implied iciness 'Active/Freeze' is predominantly shrouded in a shimmering equatorial heat. 'Remote/Beauty' features a condensed melody which bristles with the evening whine of a thousand cicada while the midi-overload of the title track 'Active/Freeze' wouldn't sound out of place in the humid tropical soundscapes of Mouse on Mars' 'Iahora Tahiti'. Equally, 'Interior/Tone' sounds like a hyper-condensed version of Microstoria-axis glitch whose trademark pops and clicks have been steadily reduced to create a distilled concentrate of extreme potency. The integration/contrast between the pixel-precision rhythms that Deupree, in particular, is renowned for and the painstakingly formed DSP melodies of Inoue render 'Active/Freeze' captivating to witness. This is the sound of two artists enjoying a vibrant exchange of ideas which, one hopes, we might enjoy again. [CM] :::::::::: Thilges 3 | Saumarkt [Thilges] The third in a Series of ten 3" CDs, 'Saumarkt' arrived form Berlin's Musique Korrekt packaged within an intricate series of layers which, from the outset, presented a mystery. Just who is Thilges 3? Or perhaps, more accurately, what is Thilges 3? This much is evident... A padded envelope marked with a sticker bearing the URL http://www.thilges.at contains the following: a (semi-) official-looking 'Bank Austria' credit/debit form overprinted with pricing for the Series; an A6 photocopied sheet with instructions on subscribing to the Series; and, finally, a 3" CD strikingly packaged and printed in Cyan, Magenta and Black, bearing the cryptic ref. no. 'isrc at-h66-99-th303'. According to the audio that lies at the heart of the package, Thilges 3 create rhythmic, glitch and hiss-laden compositions not dissimilar to Pole¹s mesmeric grooves. Over the course of one event-filled track, the trio unravel a variety of sonic inflections underpinned throughout by the ever-present metronomic foundation of a single static-soaked dub. At 20 minutes and 58 seconds, just as the tempo and pace are beginning to escalate, the track... CUTS ...as if in mid-recording. Whether this interruption is by intention or mere accident is, for once, irrelevant as the mystery of Thilges 3 once again descends upon the ensuing silence. Is this package some elaborate marketing ploy, designed to ensnare the unsuspecting listener into subscribing? Whatever, I hope further installments find their way to me via Musique Korrekt as I, for one, am truly hooked. [CM] ::..:::::::::::.....:....::::............:..::..:........:::::....::....:: 740 CHARACTER ASCII ART This month's ASCII Art - 'lllytttr' - is courtesy of an impromptu two day collaboration between Eva-Lucy Mathieu and Ross Murphy. This is the first in an ongoing series of random ASCII exchanges that Fallt designers Fehler are utilising as source material for their forthcoming design of Stephan Mathieu's website (http://www.bitsteam.de). yxd.lllllly,y.,-x¥Éа-- - irrueioruotifuigguhgihggggggjj k.<-yaÖÄÄÖ#ÖÄÖAaÖÄAQäQAA_QÖ_AAQ:ÄÄ.Öq:QAÄÖQ QÖÄÖÖÄÖ############## tttr;t5jiut32abbnvg hgjbbvffgbvgkh tkikyhihnkjkhhykkh gdfvfcghe ¥ghrfy uyer ty7f4et78643frewueyweyuuuuyttiuiuttyv±!@#$^&^ %U* ::..:::::::::::.....:....::::............:..::..:........:::::....::....:: PLAYLIST Each month we ask one of our contributors to share their current playlist with us. This month we are grateful to Saarbruecken-based musician Stephan Mathieu for his contribution. Walter Marchetti | Nei Mari Del Sud [Alga Marghen] Oval | OvalProcess [Form and Function] Geeez'N'Gosh (aka Atom) | My Life With Jesus [Mille Plateaux] Akira Rabelais | Eisotrophobia [Unreleased] Isang Yun | Isang Yun [Con Legno] Will Oldham | Ode Music [Drag City] Francisco Lopez | Untitled #92 [Mego] Christophe Charles | Undirected/Dok [Ritornell] Autopoieses | La Vie Á Noir [Mille Plateaux] Brian Wilson | I just wasn't made for these times. [MCA] ::..:::::::::::.....:....::::............:..::..:........:::::....::....:: ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Thanks to all those who contributed to this month's issue of %Array, in particular Gordon McEwen, Stephan and Eva-Lucy Mathieu, Ross Murphy, Taylor Deupree and Eric Benndorf. ::..:::::::::::.....:....::::............:..::..:........:::::....::....:: (UN)SUBSCRIBE %array is published monthly by Fallt and emailed to subscribers. If you would like to unsubscribe please contact us at: unsubscribe@fallt.com and we will remove your from our subscriber list. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org