Son of Clay (Andreas Bertilsson);
Face Takes Shape

Son of Clay (Andreas Bertilsson) Face Takes Shape
Komplott escudre02. Duration: 52:18
|
1. Face Takes Shape [4:57]
2. Little Wheel [5:46]
3. Bed On My Back [3:53]
4. New Garden [4:43]
5. NoteBook [5:26]
6. Back Pages Of Mine [2:32]
7. Trapped Like A Rat In A Pack [4:27]
8. Road Turn Purple, You Turn To Me [6:14]
9. Okey Tone [3:47]
10. Two Polar Sleds [5:47]
11. For Astrid [4:45]
|
|
This is Andreas Bertilssons first CD on Komplott, but the latest one I get to hear and I dont think its a disadvantage to approach his art in reversed order. Ive had time to adapt to his music through The Bird You Never Were on Komplott and the recent release Two Abstract Paintings on Mitek. I would have thought that Id meet a somewhat less refined and stylistically a little poorer result on the first CD but no; it seems Bertilsson was ready and fully fledged when the first CD on Komplott hit the stores, because I could indulge in any of these three CDs and still be blown away and kicked around, or, for that matter, soothed and fondled and at the very least feel rewarded and gratified by listening. Bertilsson offers magnificent audio all around.
The beginning of the beginning (first bars of Face Takes Shape; the title track) could be the resounding passage of a rickshaw in Quetta or a black bike in Amsterdam. Its a rattling, mechanical noise in motion at moderate velocity through a lane or an alley: - you dont have to be blind or a bat to notice the sound bouncing off of walls and a cobbled street.
Pretty soon synthesized or otherwise electronically produced sounds appear in layers, while the rickshaw rattling keeps cobbling down the path. You can almost smell the sewage.
The modal, very tonal organ-like protuberances contradict the dry, un-dimensional musique concrète rickshaw element and the clicking, ticking electronic nano discharges, and those well accustomed Western church room properties sweep the entire expression away into a collected gesture of fate and tradition, which surprises me in this latter-day Bertilsson audio.
The majestic reference to old and mighty traditions slowly retreats into the ambience of the present, soaring and wheezing with all its potentiality, choice by choice on ahead, throwing its incantation net across the thought-forms, slowly shaping the sign of the times and the prerequisites for the future.

Uncle Paul Zimmerman and Lusse the Cat
(Photo & photo & photo: Ingvar Loco Nordin. Painting: Sune Karlsson)
Little Wheel pulls me into a tempting minimal fairytale; Dylan Thomas fern and old lichen sages in forest meadows. This beautiful stretch of electric organ mimicry reminds me a lot of Terry Riley and his album Shri Camel, with pieces like Anthem of the Trinity, Across the Lake of the Ancient Word and Desert of Ice. Like Rileys music, Bertilsson talks in dreamy, hovering tonalities, slightly bent out of shape, into blue notes that wobble and slide, like distant figures in mirages above hot asphalt roads, or like the tilting white sails of sailing boats far out on a ocean horizon in the haze of summer. There is something lustful and tempting, yet dreamy and distant and submerged about this music; a withheld and absentminded eroticism on the periphery of consciousness, painted in thick oil on canvas.
Little Wheel also conveys a transpiring feeling of age and time; vast temporal distances and some kind of insight, a too-late, all too-late kind of sensation
as you feel and sense human beings of old through a veil of sorts, which divides the here-and-now from the there-and-then, but in an elusive feeling of closeness nonetheless. Its like a music of Atlantis or Pompeii, filtered through time, reaching you in these uncertain modal structures of wave upon wave of recognition and regret and longing
I once wrote a poem about these feelings, named after an electronic piece by Gilius van Bergeijk. Its quite fitting here, so Ill include it:
On Time & Death
Beyond the rustling filter of Time
past figures move
vague in dissolving memories
or clearly outlined in the mind
of someone
who doesnt want to forget
who cannot forget
while faces, voices, movements
take on a painful sharpness of contours
and were all headed
for the assembly points of the Past
for further forwarding
to the wild forests of Oblivion
but if someone still in his flesh
thinks about us one minute
we live this minute
in shuddering triumph
and everything that has existed exists
and everything that will come into existence exists
and we raise our hands
in someones thoughts
and cry: Here I am! Here I am!
and Always is a vibrating cosmic Now
with an expanse without meaning
and all nows in the Now are illusionary positions
in the void of the Now
which embraces all that has happened
all that happens
and all that will happen
simultaneously
but also all that didnt happen
and wont happen
not to mention all that almost happened
almost happens
and almost will happen
and which is the fuel and the propellant
of all nows
in this big, generous NOW!
In the membrane towards emptiness, an airplane is moving
stubbornly on a north-easterly path:
Its relation to me is like the forest hikers
to the mycelium deep below the moss
Such indifference scares me
Way on high, up in the dress codes,
in another time, another existence,
it drags its desolate sound
across sensed topographies,
and the sound is transmitted down
through the strata
like a spill-over from another universe,
and there is only the dark and the cold,
and a sound of propellers
finding its way down through a crack in the heavens
setting my eardrums in motion,
where I lie on my back in the night
with the quilt pulled up under my chin,
listening:
Hoping to get to know oneself
is presumptuous:
Paint a picture to hold on to
is what a man can do
and the saying that time is the healer of all wounds
is just a cynical laconism,
when the wounds are so numerous
and the time so short
|
|
In Bertilssons timbres of Little Wheel I can feel benevolence rippling across the cracks of decades, the rifts of centuries and the voids of millennia, bridging the bottomless pits between past and present; a love that conquers everything:
If I speak in the tongues of men and angels,
but have not love,
I have become sounding brass or a tinkling symbol.
And if I have prophecy and know all mysteries and all knowledge,
and if I have all faith so as to remove mountains,
but have not love, I am nothing.
And if I dole out all my goods, and
if I deliver my body that I may boast
but have not love, nothing I am profited.
Love is long suffering,
love is kind,
it is not jealous,
love does not boast,
it is not inflated.
It is not discourteous,
it is not selfish,
it is not irritable,
it does not enumerate the evil.
It does not rejoice over the wrong, but rejoices in the truth
It covers all things,
it has faith for all things,
it hopes in all things,
it endures in all things.
|
|
I had no idea I would be sent into the cities of Atlantis and Pompeii by Andreas Bertilssons music, nor did I envision myself turning the pages of the Bible to find those words of love but its amazing how strongly you can be influenced by music, when youre receptive and sensitive and allow your feelings and associations to guide you.
Bed On My Back brings crunchy, grating and rasping events into focus, like flocks of sea horses rising through the currents, exchanging dire messages in spiraling, meandering expressions, light seeping down from the closest star.
Bed On My Back is a very attractive piece, presenting a sound world that I dont think Ive heard before, at least not to this extreme extent. These little grating screws, seeds of alien tree forms, bore deep inside the soundscape, in a churning, dark chocolate kind of way. This is probably the sounding equivalent of a chocolate box, if it was left undisturbed. Wonderful but the piece is much too short. This idea could be developed and extended into a full-length CD all by itself, in chocolate bars!
New Garden is introduced in a soundscape environment, i.e. an ambient outdoors milieu, and the character of the music is reminiscent of a Trinidad steel band
or, after a while perhaps more of a midday restaurant beat lost in a hall of sonic mirrors. The rhythms are intricate, bouncing and reflected in each other and this really swings. This is perhaps as close as Bertilsson gets to music in its downgrading significance but that doesnt make it unpleasant. This is an ear-catcher, you bet you, but unusually secular, so to say

NoteBook is a sprawling, uneven sequence of randomness, but with a stumbling recurrence of a beat that holds it together. Yes, meager means! Perhaps not the most interesting of Bertilssons pieces, but with a fluent simplicity that calls for some attention; dark twists and turns way down in the garlic and sesame oil cracks the chopping-board in your kitchen; your nose in low-level flight over the tomato-wet surface, homey and smelly!
Back Pages Of Mine first of all had me take a break from writing, heading out into the other room listening to My Back Pages by Dylan but now Im back at the Mac, collecting my Son of Clay thoughts once again.
Bertilssons Back Pages commences in the most delicate ripple of soft timbres in the upper pitches, as was he fingering some kind of touch controls lightly, gaseous dreams rising like smoke around you, and this ambient streetscape, perhaps in India; the hawkers under the trees, small fires lit, incense carried in the warm breeze to your nostrils; darkness deep in the alleys
cow dust hour closing down. Yes, Back Pages Of Mine seems to serve as a precarious precursor to a night raga on the loom, Pandit Pran Nath raising his hands and his voice through the Rajasthani evening
The peace that this Bertilsson tune evokes is filled with anticipation, never explained nor understood and thats not necessary.
Trapped Like A Rat In A Pack is some title! Dark, bent, sculptural sounds sometimes springy, Jack-in-the-box-like twirl and twist inside an imaginary metallic chamber, short echoes; like down a well. Some kind of procedure seems to be going on; some kind of work, something being jacked up, put in place. This is one of the most refined pieces on the CD, reduced and stripped bare; indeed ascetic.
Bertilsson applies a method of reduction that goes farther than most things Ive heard in electroacoustics, with some few exceptions. Im thinking of s few entries by Luc Ferrari, for example. Andreas Bertilsson creates this enclosed, murky chamber of defiant activity, which nonetheless gives the impression of being important, or at the very least determined and stubborn, like I remember my son at age eight setting booby traps for me all over the apartment! Theres a dirty trick somewhere in this music!
Road Turn To Purple, You Turn To Me is another weighty title! Light, chatter-box kind of discharges open the ambience of a small sphere, as were you traveling inside a soap bubble moving on up across the backyard - and some jackdaw obtrusions amplify the backyard scenario, maples and all. However, after a while an accordion or its electronic shadow; who knows! paints a harmonious and all but hilarious backdrop for the murky, quirky chatterbox practices that never give in or give up; a completely absurd sound world so we like it! Its a cool, smooth little investigation!
Okey Tone, on the other hand, gets into position and moves ahead like a sidewinder in the desert outside Windhoek, slithering across minimal dunes in a passage that has you almost nauseous.
The music jots and scribbles the tiniest little remarks of tones across a backdrop of a slightly wobbling drone, sounding a bit like some kind of toy instrument. The dreamy aspect is here again, like so often in Andreas Bertilssons music; a gluey film of surreality that refracts your view of whats sensible
Two Polar Sleds has a tingling ring to it that associates to bells or wind chimes; gamelan timbres spreading concentrically in exquisite air compressions that reach your tympanic membrane in poetic pleasure, lighting up inside your brain like rotating golden Buddhas.
This is a very sensual piece of music that could be extended for the longest time. I think Ill even transfer it to my hard drive and prolong it for the duration of a whole CD. It is senselessly beautiful! It has the ring of gamelan and bamboo. Yep, I know, that has nothing to do with polar environments but I follow my own inklings, and they brought me rotating Buddhas!
The last piece on this CD is called For Astrid. I suppose the Astrid referred to is Astrid Svangren, who has designed the cover of the CD.
The beginning makes me think of Philip Glass (Openings) or perhaps Steve Ingham (Forging) pieces that made a deep impression on me in 1986, when I first heard them through radio broadcasts from an organ festival. Andreas Bertilssons work has the same lofty, trans-real property, shamanistically transporting the listener through more attuned levels of consciousness, towards a possible state of bliss.

Tibet December 2004
(Photo: Zoë Smith)
A kind of sad insight permeates these solar flare organ timbres, like the compassionate facial expression of a bodhisattva looking back at his unruly disciples before he leaves for the mountains, rising above the temptation and the futile grasping of Samsara.

|
|