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[idm] Re: squaremeter mini-retrospective [was: in high rotation - squaremeter]

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◇ merged from 2 subjects: in high rotation- squaremeter vs brasilia · squaremeter mini-retrospective [was: in high rotation - squaremeter]
2002-10-19 19:48Albers, Brian RE: [idm] in high rotation- squaremeter vs brasilia
2002-10-19 20:40anton [idm] Re: squaremeter mini-retrospective [was: in high rotation - squaremeter]
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2002-10-19 19:48Albers, BrianI frequently enjoy the "soundscapish" aspects of Brasilia. Are the Squaremeter releases as
From:
Albers, Brian
To:
'CynMusic@aol.com '
Cc:
'idm@hyperreal.org'
Date:
Sat, 19 Oct 2002 12:48:14 -0700
Subject:
RE: [idm] in high rotation- squaremeter vs brasilia
permalink · <69F4F66624E7FB4AB1225022C68BF156013BBE12@ccbex2pre.premiereradio.com>
I frequently enjoy the "soundscapish" aspects of Brasilia. Are the Squaremeter releases as rhythmic as Brasilia (especially the latter half of the cd)? Or are they a lot more ambient? I'd call the Squaremeter stuff slightly less rhythmic, but certainly not totally ambient. Actually, the first major distinction I would make is that the Squaremeter songs are generally much longer and fleshed out than Brasilia. Certainly culled from the same pallette of sounds. I'd venture to guess that if you do in fact like the more "soundscapish" qualities of Brasilia, then the Squaremeter stuff will be right up your alley. Also check out Aleamapper from Richard Devine.
2002-10-19 20:40antonAlbers, Brian wrote: > I frequently enjoy the "soundscapish" aspects of Brasilia. Are the
From:
anton
To:
Date:
Sat, 19 Oct 2002 16:40:15 -0400
Subject:
[idm] Re: squaremeter mini-retrospective [was: in high rotation - squaremeter]
permalink · <3DB1C32F.3010901@nezzwerk.com>
Albers, Brian wrote:
quoted 4 lines I frequently enjoy the "soundscapish" aspects of Brasilia. Are the> I frequently enjoy the "soundscapish" aspects of Brasilia. Are the > Squaremeter releases as rhythmic as Brasilia (especially the latter half > of > the cd)? Or are they a lot more ambient?
technically, "brasilia" is credited to panacea, not squaremeter. i do think though that among his early glitch efforts ("14id1610s" on ant-zen and "sincecore" on mille plateaux), this installment of "architettura" series is the most successful, since it is tied to a particular visual representation that works perfectly with the music (does anyone rememeber that brazilian art exhibition in guggenheim last spring, when they had a short film on oscar niemeyer with the music by philip glass, although panacea would have been a lot more appropriate). however, ever since "kopyright liberation" has been released on hands, his style changed dramatically. after early efforts when glitch was nothing more than a study, a contrived, artificial complex yet tedious rendition, he abandoned all rhythms and started anew with cold bass-heavy ambient waves punctuated by sparse arrythmic clicks that instead of filling the space acquired the outlining, shaping quality, creating sort of calder-like sonic mobiles with their smooth organic curves and metallic precision. starting with "kopyright liberation" he continued with this style, gradually adding very minimal, very deep rhythmic waves to the initial dark eerie ambient. on his two latest full-lengths ("parsec" and "the bitter end" on hands) this evolution is all the more obvious - hypnotizing, heavy pulsating soundscapes with very few carefully placed skips and glitches and processed vocal samples. there also were 12" split with needle sharing on hands, another joint work with xingu hill (xhm2 "this anxious space" on hymen with fantastic packaging), and "panacea shares needles with tarmvred" on ad noiseam where some of the samples from "14id1610s" (which in itself was a huge sample bank from ant-zen) found their place in both panacea's and tarmvred's tracks. it would be appropriate to mention that those that got to see squaremeter live (last two big dates were "forms of hands02" and "maschinenfest02") will remember it as one of the most memorable performances - slowly building intense sonic attacks, bass resonating from the walls, contrasted by precise imperfections of skips and clicks, intensified by the lighting. needless to say, most of the material mentioned above was reviewed on "seven" throughout the years... -- anton seven.editor http://www.nezzwerk.com/seven icq://2623520 --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org