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From:
david turgeon
To:
microsound ,
Date:
Sun, 22 Dec 2002 19:29:54 -0500
Subject:
[idm] top demos of 2002
Msg-Id:
<5.1.0.14.0.20021222173219.01ec25e0@www.electrocd.com>
Mbox:
idm.0212.gz
howdy ho, 'tis the season for top 10 of the years but quite honestly, i've been interested in so few commercial releases this year, i probably wouldn't say much of interest in that particular arena. in fact, many of the most interesting releases i've heard this year were demos, so i figured i would put together a list of my favourites of the year, along with some comments. only unsollicited demos included, all in alphabetical order. don't be surprised if you see some of these folks issued on CD by no type next year... if you are interested in contacting one of the artists below, please email me & i'll forward your message directly to them if i can. (i just don't want to give out email addresses without their permission.) === 1. l'artificiel _le paradoxe abrutissant_ (canada) this demo from quebec city came with no explanations, so i figured it was probably (yet) another 'abstract' release, but it turned out to be a rather riotous drill n bass record with cheesy videogame/trance melodies! surely i didn't expect this to be my bag, but l'artificiel puts so much work in his songs as to make them very interesting once you decide to listen intently. something about it is almost 'prog' because themes vary so much through a single song. of course, it's quite groovy & easy to listen to casually too, so you can always put it in the background as well. i still don't know what to think of this, & the 12-track demo has a few weak spots especially towards the end, but some of the tracks are just really cool, & the beats are actually VERY competent, not to say expert. 2. coin gutter _the promise of lomonosov_ (canada) to be true, the first track makes it all worthwhile. it is so bold & succesful, you just want to listen to it over & over again. the rest is powerful & evocative. the duo isn't as inventive when they make more 'drony', less evolving material, but they pull it off quite well still. i've ranted enough about this canadian duo so you should know by now that i like them, so much that no type will release many of these tracks on the upcoming coin gutter full length, to see the light of day in early 2003. 3. diskette (USA) chris coady from baltimore offers a 6-track demo that sounds quite dry, & is not always easy to approach for that reason. but it's quite a singular piece of music nonetheless--most usually in the field of random-influenced beats & minimal melodies. track 3 detracts from this with a beatless melodyscape, but it turns out to be the most accessible & engrossing of all. 4. eto ami _course_ (USA) i saw this mentioned in someone else's top 10, & i will chime in with a recommendation. nice, complex material from this US-based duo. the variety is appreciated, & some of the tracks are really well done. this might shine better with a little weeding out the weaker tracks though, because right now it all seems a bit undirected which is a shame because the potential is obviously there. 5. johannes helden _fri_ (norway (if i remember well)) it's very hard to impress me with an ambient CD. you're more likely to put me to sleep. johannes helden's music might be 'background music' in a sense but it's also quite the kind i like. the aesthetic is very static--hiss, radio noise & other such 'hushed' sound phenomena make up the ambient threads contained herein. the structure of course doesn't reinvent the wheel, but it's suitably well accomplished & serves the sounds well. a very nice thing to listen to, that is unobtrusive without being bland. 6. holzkopf _shooting at the sun with bullets_ (canada) jake hardy is definitely onto something. this brave composer from saskatoon is working quite hard to put a new face to noise, & he does so by mixing the new & the old in quite a personal, powerful way. i liked his demo from last year _only a bad harvest can save us_ (now issued on the dainty deathy label), but this is different: beats & noise, used in a way that is not so far off from loud metal/grindcore, or even bands like the dead C. needless to say, it's difficult but intense--in fact, the intensity itself might just make it easy for most listeners to overcome the difficulty! supposedly this is about the boredom of suburban life. i can relate, & i think i saw that in it too... 7. andrey kiritchenko _bees & honey_ (ukraine) this 5-track demo is... quite pretty, if a bit derivative of work heard elsewhere (one thinks of oval & everything that came after.) of course this is not a bad thing in itself because kiritchenko is talented enough to make the music shine through. & believe you me, 'bees & honey' are conveyed... it's all quite pastoral in fact, you can easily imagine the landscape which these songs are aiming to allude to. it's pretty, yes. 8. metaxu _rumors of war_ (italy) metaxu is the duo of maurizio martusciello & filippo paolini & this is to become their second album (first eponymous one released on plate lunch.) of course martusciello is not unknown, he's part of z_e_l_l_e with nicola catalano (one CD out on line/12k) & has released a mini-CD with métamkine some years back. _rumors of war_ is, as its title implies, a somewhat (geo)politically-inspired album, with its titles all referring to tragic dates & places in recent human history, from '28061914 sarajevo' to, you guessed it, '11092001 new york'--dates & places which prefigured, or embodied episodes of war. the music is suitably sordid, with beautiful strings providing the feeling of tragedy, & a gentle clickscape in the back forming the rhythm. at times this all sounds very pretty in fact, but the composers are twisted enough to add an edge to their music; so you can sometimes hear gun clicks, people screaming, war broadcasts, but only in certain highly strategic, fleeting times. in a certain way this recording plays with the expectation, & even the temptation of war, as if to show we humans are stupid enough to find beauty even in the worst horrors. for that reason, it's a highly disturbing project but it's in my CD player all the time. if all goes well, this will be released on no type sometime next year. 9. mixel pixel _22 songs_ (USA) this demo from NYC is, well, electronic videogame ROCK. well, the indie kind of rock. i spent my teenage years listening to pavement, sonic youth & pixies, & then pretty much abandoned this lot for the world of electronic music, but this speaks to me in ways i wouldn't have thought an indie rock record could speak to me after all these years. truth is, rob (the main guy behind mixel pixel) is extremely genuine about his art, & his most recent tracks ('silver sparkle amps', 'desert falcon', 'body automatic'...) are far more than just 'interesting': they're positively awesome! although the comparison might seem strange, i think i like mixel pixel for the same reason as i like pram: mysterious, slightly absurd lyrics, well-dosed melancholy in the music--oddball instrumentation & amazing song construction. & it's completely infectious. basically, this CD-R lives in my CD player. 10. n.kra _digital_ (USA) starting with a strict videogame rendition of the US national anthem (in case you wonder--i always skip this one), this CD goes on to many twists & turns, including short noisy IDM tracks, intense drony parts, & assorted weird shit. everything is delineated very sharply which highlights the changes & the quickness of most of the tracks. what draws me to this demo, despite its imperfections (i.e. it sometimes gets a bit tiresome) is that it's quite unlike anything i've heard before: what strange demons, what bizarre muse is n.kra listening to? & who knows... 11. joerg piringer _vokal_ (austria) 'yet another microsound experiment' is what it could have been--the composer mentions that it was made exclusively out of recordings of the human voice, with no synthetisers & other instruments used. interestingly, there is another recent CD around this concept: the surprising _original instrument_ project on kracfive records (featuring colongib, octopus inc, kettel & miragliuolo, & highly recommended around these parts...) while _original instrument_ maintains a certain 'IDM' (i'm using the term loosely) framework, piringer's demo is far more abstract, though perhaps not as bizarre... i believe this is to be taken in the context of experimental poetry, in which context it's a great, thought out, diverse & complex project even as it's mostly the product of seemingly simple repetitions, layering & processing (& making a 70+minute album interesting is no mean feat in itself!) so far as microsound experiments go, this is for sure one of the more involving i've heard all year. 12. dick richards _demo 01_ (canada) when i want some great minimal 4/4 beats, i immediately turn to dick richards. there's an affinity to maurizio (of basic channel fame) in his music & that's just what i love about it: the groove never lets down, no matter how sparse the beats & basslines. surely this 10-track demo is not ALL stellar, but many of the tracks have quickly grown to be favourites around these quarters. nice surprise also with the more subdued track _twfstmx1_, very sexy yet subtle. the best track is probably _klaus kinski is solid_ that has a perfectly timed 'woosh' arriving just midway through the song, bringing in the spark of genius that makes it all work. he's released a CD this year with the raum...musik label, _amanecer_, which is quite nice, really. === so that's that. hope this list was enjoyable, & that the artists not included aren't iffed by not being included. this is, after all, only my own measly opinion. happy holidays to all, ~ david --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org