Well, well, well
This is a grand start of something
the something being the commercial CD releases on the No Type label, formerly a strictly on-line, downloadable venture. The grand opening with a packed and crammed double CD compilation of serious sound hang-ups is interesting enough, featuring a good scope of free radicals
The basis for this joyous event might be found in the introductory text that No Type offers the hungry reviewers: The Freest of Radicals, through its varied and challenging musical landscape, shatters the hidden face of the recording industry, which too often ignores unconventional artistic developments and hinders so called difficult music.
Indeed the free-flowing under-current of the present has to find its river channel, and the force is so immense just below the surface of contemporeana that it always does, and in this case the river channel is the label No Type and its benevolent benefactor Jean-François Denis, who already set the ultimate lofty standard of electroacoustic creativity and diffusion through the legendary label Empreintes DIGITALes and the distributor DIFFUSION i MéDIA.
Ill give a few impressions of some of the many entries provided. Theyre picked out randomly, and not pertaining to any artistic or other preferences, which means that those not mentioned may be as relevant and urgently in need of ears as the ones actually touched upon.
Le chien borgne is a pseudonym for Guillaume Théroux-Rancourt, who originates in Québec City. His piece, mysteriously titled rho<1 (rho a > rho), has been honored as an opener of the whole set.
He is said to work with analog ambient loops, and there is nothing here that contradicts that. A deep, repetitious calm! rumble shakes your loudspeakers, sort of in a breathing manner, on top of which more lightly pitched layers are applied as with a stroke of a sables hair brush, all in all transposing the here and now into a dreamy, soaring, thoughtful state of arms stretched out in a hovering gesture towards an elusive horizon. I like this a lot; it has a peculiar magic to it and I like to float in this liquid atmosphere a long time.
James Schidlowskys Radio Collision sweeps in helicopterish and duck-worthy, dominating the scenery completely, having you flung yourself in the mountain-birch bushes, torn madly by the magnum-force winds from the hovering machine, spinning slowly around, keeping any intent secret, and all you can do is wait
The massive layer or rather wall of gray sound is compiled of many timbres, some in the sub-spaces, some on high, and eerie fragments of torn messages might be sensed inside this wild but harnessed energy. Dense!
Tomas Jirkus I think Im In Love addresses totally different aspects of the audios, one might say. This is a funkster prankster hopscotch rendition of rhythm and glassy timbral percussion; very beautiful, and somehow
alien; alien like little spheres of undetermined properties bopping and popping in thin-shrilled erotic dances across yellow plains of distant worlds in forlorn galaxies beyond our present scientific perception. Jirkus hectic, yet precise, humdrum plum-picking audio has a shine to it that pleases! It is for long, hypnotic stays, though, and this short sample just gives you an idea of the trances you might encounter on prolonged visits in these worlds.
Cal Crawford doesnt waste any time surprising the listener with what at first appears to be static and interference; something is wrong with your equipment
but as it keeps up you realize that this is it; Crawfords artistic idea! Of course this isnt new. It has been done numerous times since the late 1940s, in various fashions, but since the preceding works on this CD have been one way or another modal, this sharp, diamond-like, pointillist approach cuts its way through your listening like a surgeons scalpel, and it hurts nicely! His piece is called An Objection That Is Immaterial After the Fact. Its like dashing through the celestial night at warp speed, encountering scattered star matter across the void, or like managing a subterranean water tank perforated by neutrino; in any case, its fast, sparse, sharp, scattered and perhaps not so healthy
Towards the latter part of the piece things dense up, as a rippling prayer bead of free flowing thoughts and impressions rush on down, with a murmuring backdrop of serious gestures. Even later on events get loud, like a closely miked forest fire caught at the precise location of a fiery tree stump furnace
Very ingenious electroacoustics!
Julie Rousse lends her electroacoustic voice to the little ones hiding in the semi-conductors and the closed circuits, where they huddle up around their innermost thoughts and dreams, little Terry Rileys of streaming electron organs dappling with the clouds of 1950s Dylan Thomases on the horizons of electric wiring in Rousses piece Une à six idées improvisées. So short is Julie Rousses bell-tingling elves-gleaning that I instantly long for more
So many secrets of the little ones of electricity in this piece; a work worthy of the secretive Hattifatteners of the Moomin Valley!
Magali Babin has recently issued her solo debut on No Type, and this bit petit jardin can be found on that CD as well.
Its French, detailed, microscopic, tingling, trickling and seeping
as little elves and fairies hover in the shadows over at the garden pond and it makes me recall some worlds by Finnish guru electroacoustician Kaija Saariaho. There is a fair amount of deep wood enchantment in Finnish culture, you bet, and this property shines and shivers inside petit jardin. Masterly, how Babin builds this dense atmosphere with sparse means in but a few minutes!
Claudia Bonarelli lives in Sweden, but her name is Italian. They Use Us Back is a strangely recognizable artifact, i.e., it seems to be
There are a number of musical clichés in here, used on the razors edge between the morbid and the pretentious, but its done with a swagger and a jerkily moving hip across the silver screen. You get a beat, you get two
and some sarcastically (?) applied modal strokes of the hand and taps of the fingertips. Its so soft it could well be used for toothpaste commercials
Jon Vaughns Bouncing Ball is a frantic experience to which Ive taken a definite liking. Ill put it on a loud repeat while fixing coffee!
It has beat and insanity and beautifully scraping, vibrating sounds on top of a dump truck of humor, which is exactly what creativity needs to be bearable
Keep on keeping on, Mr. Vaughn, were sitting tight over in Swedenland at Sonoloco, keeping you on loud repeats!
This music twists and turns to get out of that straitjacket of existence, crawling along under barbed wire on muddy elbows, heading for a smashing oblivion! Wow!
Ill halt here, even though I havent even gotten around to the second CD yet, but Im sure these samples will serve the purpose of conveying my deep and sincere lust for this music, as well as my admiration at all this ingenuity and sonic liveliness! The concept is wonderful, the result shining, and well just have to keep the good spirits up so that these kinds of ventures can bloom and flower up ahead!