{"id":39757,"date":"2015-11-18T17:03:48","date_gmt":"2015-11-18T15:03:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/modisti.com\/core\/?p=39757"},"modified":"2015-12-31T16:47:24","modified_gmt":"2015-12-31T14:47:24","slug":"vital-weekly-1007","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/vital-weekly-1007\/","title":{"rendered":"Vital Weekly 1007"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/modisti.com\/core\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/11\/Vital-Weekly-1007.jpg\" alt=\"Vital Weekly 1007\" width=\"485\" height=\"270\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-39758\" srcset=\"https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/11\/Vital-Weekly-1007.jpg 485w, https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/11\/Vital-Weekly-1007-300x167.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 485px) 100vw, 485px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>COPPICE &#8211; MATCHES (CD by Category Of Manifestation)<br \/>\n ANTHONY PATERAS &amp; ERKKI VELTHEIM &#8211; ENTERTAINMENT = CONTROL (CD by Immediata)<br \/>\n THYMOLPHTHALEIN &#8211; MAD AMONG THE MAD (CD by Immediata)<br \/>\n GALERIE STRATIQUE &#8211; R\u00caVES DE BETON (2CD, private)<br \/>\n PIETRO RIPARBELLI &#8211; VACUUM (CD by Dirter Promotions)<br \/>\n LANDSCAPES OF FEAR (2CD compilation by Gruenrekorder)<br \/>\n INSTINCT ANIMAL &#8211; DAZZLING DARKNESS (CD by Silken Tofu)<br \/>\n TZII &#8211; THE BLACK PILE (CD by Silken Tofu)<br \/>\n DB\/MZ &#8211; THE LIGHT TO COME (CD by Silken Tofu)<br \/>\n BRUITAL ORGASME &#8211; EXPERIMENT IN FUNCTIONAL BACKGROUND MUSIC (LP by Silken Tofu)<br \/>\n FRANCK VIGROUX &#8211; CAMERA (LP by Cesare)<br \/>\n FILIPE FELIZARDO &#8211; VOLUME IV: THE INVADING PAST AND OTHER DISSOLUTIONS (2LP by Three:four Records)<br \/>\n CDR\/TOPGEAR (12&#8243; by Adaadat)<br \/>\n RUTGER HAUSER (CDR by Adaadat)<br \/>\n TVAM &#8211; PORSCHE MAJEURE\/WE LIKE FIRES (7&#8243; by Static Caravan)<br \/>\n BUG \u2013 SEDIMENT (2CDR by Attenuation Circuit\/Brainhall)<br \/>\n BRETT CARSON &#8211; QUATTOR ELEPHANTIS (CDR by Edgetone)<br \/>\n LONA KOZIK &amp; CHRIS GOLINSKI \u2013 SPELAEOLOGY (CDR by Edgetone)<br \/>\n KEITH KELLEY ASK NOT \u2013 A GRAND APPARATUS DISCARDED (CDR by Edgetone)<br \/>\n ROYAL HUNGARIAN NOISEMAKERS\/NOISESCULPTOR &#8211; SPLIT (CDR by Unsigned Label)<br \/>\n BRAMBLING &#8211; FRINGILLA MONTIFRINGILLA (CDR by The Slightly Off Kilter Label)<br \/>\n MICHAEL FAIRFAX &amp; BARRY WITHERDEN &amp; PAUL KHIMASIA MORGAN &#8211; FOOL&#8217;S GOLD (CDR by The Slightly Off Kilter Label)<br \/>\n LOVVER &#8211; X (cassette by Klanggold)<br \/>\n SONOVO &#8211; A LINE HAS TWO SIDES (cassette by Klanggold)<\/p>\n<p> COPPICE &#8211; MATCHES (CD by Category Of Manifestation)<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.vitalweekly.net\/1007.m4a\">Vital Weekly 1007<\/a><\/p>\n<p>tracklist for Vital Weekly 1007:<\/p>\n<p>0000 Tune<br \/>\n0014 Pietro Riparbelli &#8211; Deserto Meraviglioso<br \/>\n0322 Galerie Stratique &#8211; Ville Engloutie<br \/>\n0629 Coppice &#8211; Bramble<br \/>\n0935 Instinct Primal &#8211; Denudation Of Bodies<br \/>\n1240 Anthony Pateras &#038; Erkki Veltheim &#8211; Entertainment = Control<br \/>\n1548 Thymolphthalein &#8211; It Doesn&#8217;t Kill You, It Stops You Living<br \/>\n1857 DB\/MZ<br \/>\n2207 Rutger Hauser<br \/>\n2515 Tzii &#8211; The Black Pile<br \/>\n2824 Fairfax &#038; Witherden &#038; Morgan &#8211; Second Movement<br \/>\n3131 Brambling &#8211; The Male In Spring&#8230;<br \/>\n3438 Tune<\/p>\n<p> By now Coppice, a duo of No\u00e9 Cu\u00e9llar &amp; Joseph Kramer, made quite some impression on <br \/>\n me with their various releases (see Vital Weekly 882, 892, 921, 991 and 996) and it <br \/>\n seems they continue to explore their very own brand of improvised music, musique <br \/>\n concrete and drones. They collect and play instruments with bellows, such as prepared <br \/>\n shruti boxes and pump organs, which they process using tape techniques. Their music <br \/>\n is shaped in the studio and in concert and whatever finds it&#8217;s way to a release is <br \/>\n usually a combination of both, recorded in concert, studio and at home. What is great <br \/>\n about this music is that there is this drone like sounds, coming from instruments with <br \/>\n bellows, but it&#8217;s never easy to recognize. Maybe in the opening piece &#8216;Held Cascade&#8217; <br \/>\n and in the closing piece, &#8216;Caper&#8217;, this is very clearly the case, but in the other <br \/>\n five pieces this is not always easy to hear. There is quite a bit of processing going <br \/>\n on, I should imagine, to arrive at the feedback like piercing sounds of &#8216;Bromine&#8217;. <br \/>\n Nothing here sounds static, as Coppice scans surfaces of their instruments in a varying <br \/>\n amount of spaces (small ones, bigger ones) and all of the irregularities of the surface <br \/>\n become alive in this music. It adds a great element to the music; there is this massive <br \/>\n sound, drone like but very direct; there is occasional noise, as in &#8216;Discharge Form&#8217;, <br \/>\n which also uses the sound collage form, but there is also the element of improvisation, <br \/>\n such as in &#8216;Bramble&#8217;, in which the instruments sound as bellows, but also with the <br \/>\n elements of repetition to go along. It is all within these thirty-four minutes lots of <br \/>\n variations in how they generate their sounds and how they produce these results. It is <br \/>\n a most fascinating album, I think, another highlight in their short career so far. <br \/>\n Limited to 100 copies only. (FdW)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/categoryofmanifestation.com\">http:\/\/categoryofmanifestation.com<\/a><\/p>\n<p> ANTHONY PATERAS &amp; ERKKI VELTHEIM &#8211; ENTERTAINMENT = CONTROL (CD by Immediata)<br \/>\n THYMOLPHTHALEIN &#8211; MAD AMONG THE MAD (CD by Immediata)<\/p>\n<p> Both of these releases come with beautiful covers and inside there are a 24-page\/16-<br \/>\n page booklets of talks\/interviews\/conversations between the performing musicians. I am <br \/>\n not sure if I heard of Erkki Veltheim (violin) before, but Anthony Pateras (piano) is <br \/>\n someone whose music found it&#8217;s way to these pages before. Sometimes in a modern classical <br \/>\n setting, but usually firmly based within the realms improvised music. In the 24 page <br \/>\n booklet the two artists discuss the &#8216;difference&#8217; between both composed and improvised <br \/>\n music, as well as a whole bunch of other interesting topics, and it&#8217;s interesting to <br \/>\n read about that and listen to their &#8216;Entertainment = Control&#8217; piece, which might very <br \/>\n well be something that is composed (as in written down in a score) or improvised. They <br \/>\n themselves don&#8217;t see it this way and it&#8217;s a more fluid thing. The piece I think is <br \/>\n beautiful: it is very minimal with its open strings on the violin and Pateras playing <br \/>\n very sparse notes in a very repeating way, but without much sustain. This is not <br \/>\n minimalism in the Steve Reich\/Philip Glass sense of the word. To use the word &#8216;fluid&#8217; <br \/>\n again: the music sounds like water coming out of a tap, dripping nervously. It must <br \/>\n have been quite an endurance test for these two players to play in this way. It is <br \/>\n a work that changes a lot actually over the course of fifty minutes. It has a great <br \/>\n spacious character and once you are sucked into this nervous hectic playing, these <br \/>\n repeating phrases, you will discover the beauty of it, and it unfolds in quite a <br \/>\n majestically way. I played this release a couple of times in the past few days and <br \/>\n every time found something new in it. I expect this to happen again whenever I play <br \/>\n this next.<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 The other release seems to be the farewell release of Thymolphthalein, the quintet <br \/>\n of Anthony Pateras (piano, Wurlitzer, modular synthesizer) with Natasha Anderson <br \/>\n (contrabass recorder and electronics), Will Guthrie (percussion, drums), Jerome <br \/>\n Noetinger (tape machine, electronics) and Clayton Thomas (double bass). Before they <br \/>\n just had one record on Editions Mego, &#8216;Ni Maitre, Ni Marteau&#8217; (see Vital Weekly 767) <br \/>\n and in the booklet one can read Pateras conversing with the other members, some more<br \/>\n general description of what this group was about and diary notes from Pateras, which <br \/>\n altogether makes an interesting read, providing some insight in this group. <br \/>\n Thymolphthalein was all about organising improvisation, but without being overtly <br \/>\n composed or improvised. I quite enjoyed their previous release, and this new one seems <br \/>\n to be very much along similar lines. Quite vividly played music that uses a lot of <br \/>\n improvised sounds &#8211; especially from the sides of the pianist, percussionist and bass, <br \/>\n while the electronics, while tapes provide a more musique concrete\/electro-acoustic <br \/>\n approach to the music. Sometimes the music has a very acoustic angle such as in the <br \/>\n title piece, which leans most towards free jazz, but I favour those pieces that combine <br \/>\n acoustic and electronic generated sound. It&#8217;s here where the music picks up with most <br \/>\n vividness, bouncing and leaping around, scratching, hitting, quiet, loud, dynamic, <br \/>\n flat; sometimes it sounds like someone has treated the tape with a pair of scissors, <br \/>\n cutting up things further, but then, I suspect that this is not the case. If this is <br \/>\n the final statement of Thymolphthalein, then it&#8217;s surely a most fitting tombstone. <br \/>\n An excellent release. (FdW)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.metamkine.com\/\">http:\/\/www.metamkine.com\/<\/a><\/p>\n<p> GALERIE STRATIQUE &#8211; R\u00caVES DE BETON (2CD, private)<\/p>\n<p> From Canada hails Galerie Stratique, also known as Charles-Emile Beullac, and this <br \/>\n is fourth release, in fifteen years. He calls himself a sound hunter and his music <br \/>\n is all about applying concrete sounds to electronics, and perhaps vice versa. There <br \/>\n is a small booklet inside &#8216;Dreams of Concrete&#8217;, as the title translates, in which <br \/>\n he explains his influences, a list of stuff (which includes gongs, clay bells, <br \/>\n metal bowls filled with some water, but also a Commodore 64, drum machines, effect <br \/>\n pedals and roll paper towels. To Galerie Stratique everything is music. There are <br \/>\n twenty-one pieces on the first CD, which is the main thing in this package. On the <br \/>\n other disc, &#8216;Archives Volume 1&#8217;, there is a bunch of ambient lullabies from his <br \/>\n earlier days, that weren&#8217;t good enough for his previous releases, but now, polished <br \/>\n and refined, are. What I like about the first disc is the simply approach Galerie <br \/>\n Stratique has going per piece. Twenty-one songs in forty minutes that equals, say, <br \/>\n two minutes average per track. That makes that all of this is short and to the point. <br \/>\n A few bangs here and there, feeding them through a modular set-up and play around <br \/>\n with these sparse elements for two minutes is sometimes really enough. To be concise <br \/>\n is not easy, but Galerie Stratique does things very well. Each piece is made with <br \/>\n quite some imagination, and also the variation is well considered on this album. <br \/>\n An excellent mixture of electronic tunes, melodic, witty at times, and a majority <br \/>\n of more abstract pieces, that quirky, sad, uplifting, alien and sometimes tedious. <br \/>\n With such a variety that is likely to happen.<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 The bonus disc contains also forty-one minutes, but then ten pieces, so here all<br \/>\n is a bit longer and we are promised more ambient like music. That&#8217;s what we get <br \/>\n indeed. Lots of synthesizers, a bit of drum machines and it seems there is a lot <br \/>\n less of electronic processing of acoustic sound material. There is a more minimal <br \/>\n approach towards composition here, with synth washes being an obvious connection, <br \/>\n but it&#8217;s not exclusively like that. Galerie Stratique also plays out some harsher <br \/>\n tones and tunes such as in the fifth piece (no titles for the pieces on this bonus <br \/>\n disc). When he employs a rhythm, I must say I am a little less interested, but <br \/>\n luckily those tracks are kept to a minimum. In general this is all a bit different <br \/>\n than the first CD, and even while there is a bit of variation in these pieces, I am <br \/>\n also inclined to think it&#8217;s perhaps a bit superfluous, but surely fans would <br \/>\n disagree with me. (FdW)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: &lt;<a href=\"mailto:galerie_stratique@hotmail.com\">galerie_stratique@hotmail.com<\/a>&gt;<\/p>\n<p> PIETRO RIPARBELLI &#8211; VACUUM (CD by Dirter Promotions)<\/p>\n<p> Sometimes, in the past, he called himself K11, but these days Pietro Riparbelli <br \/>\n refers to his own name when doing music releases. Gruenrekorder, Cold Spring, <br \/>\n Gerauschmanufaktur and others released his work and he sometimes works with other <br \/>\n people such as Michele Ferretti in Zone Demersale. I am not entirely sure, but the <br \/>\n name change may also have caused a small shift in his music; maybe I am just not<br \/>\n aware of everything he ever did. In the works I heard from him so far, heavily <br \/>\n processed field recordings play a very big role, which end up into very dense <br \/>\n masses of sound. On this new release it seems that the field recordings are still <br \/>\n there, and maybe even processed, but also, at times, very much unprocessed, but <br \/>\n there is also room, much room in fact, for rhythm. Rhythm out of a box, and played <br \/>\n in a very minimal way. There is just a slow, minimal beat, set onto the field <br \/>\n recordings and drones. Sometimes the synthesizers do a bit of an arpeggio sound, <br \/>\n which makes all of this a bit more cosmic, but throughout the mood of the music <br \/>\n is quite dark and very atmospheric. Maybe a bit too dark for my taste, but perhaps <br \/>\n that&#8217;s also due to the stark, minimal rhythms used, the extended reverb that <br \/>\n Riparbelli puts on, which makes it all a bit too cathedral like (to avoid the <br \/>\n word &#8216;gothic&#8217;) for my taste. But I&#8217;m sure there are people out there who love <br \/>\n such a majestically formed minimal rhythm &#8216;n drone music quite exciting. <br \/>\n Riparbelli plays his music quite well, and it&#8217;s made with great care for detail, <br \/>\n but just not always excites me. (FdW)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.dirterpromotions.com\/\">http:\/\/www.dirterpromotions.com\/<\/a><\/p>\n<p> LANDSCAPES OF FEAR (2CD compilation by Gruenrekorder)<\/p>\n<p> Another &#8216;no expense spared&#8217; release here: a large box and inside two CDs and <br \/>\n a folded poster that looks like a map on one side and explanations on the other <br \/>\n side. Much like the recently reviewed &#8216;Grenzen&#8217; compilation (Vital Weekly 1003)<br \/>\n this compilation also deals with borders, but in this case limits itself to <br \/>\n borders between countries, sources of conflict between them, refugees, big <br \/>\n data and such like. A compilation, another one. Here we find such composers <br \/>\n as Sebastian Thewes, Tim Gorinski, Public Demand, Katharina Mayer, Ali Chakav, <br \/>\n Linda Franke, Achim Mohne, Stephanie Glauber\/Miriam Gossing, Zo-on Slows, <br \/>\n Alisa Berger, Axel Pulgar, Lena Ditte Nissen, Tzeshi Lei, Renate Boden and <br \/>\n Random Supply. To be honest, none of these names mean much to me, but that, <br \/>\n of course, says nothing about the quality of the music. Lots of field recordings, <br \/>\n as is expected from this label, of open fields with planes overhead. Some of <br \/>\n these pieces are more conceptual in approach and use a variety of computer <br \/>\n treatments. Nothing too spectacular I think, but there aren&#8217;t any weak brothers <br \/>\n either. Let&#8217;s take a look at some of the highlights. Linda Franke&#8217;s piece is <br \/>\n a choir of singing and a repeating speaking voice, which is an excellent <br \/>\n change for a while, after all the field recordings, and so is the Glauber\/<br \/>\n Gossing piece dealing with text and sound, or purely text as in the case of <br \/>\n Nissen. It&#8217;s these pieces, interestingly enough all of them by women, which <br \/>\n makes this compilation quite interesting, something that goes beyond the more <br \/>\n regular sound pieces, field recordings and laptop processing, which many of <br \/>\n the others do around here. I was puzzled by the large map on one of the sides <br \/>\n of the insert, which at times I seemed to look at with more interest than <br \/>\n I was actually giving the music. That might not be the way these things <br \/>\n should be done. (FdW)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gruenrekorder.de\">http:\/\/www.gruenrekorder.de<\/a><\/p>\n<p> INSTINCT ANIMAL &#8211; DAZZLING DARKNESS (CD by Silken Tofu)<br \/>\n TZII &#8211; THE BLACK PILE (CD by Silken Tofu)<br \/>\n DB\/MZ &#8211; THE LIGHT TO COME (CD by Silken Tofu)<br \/>\n BRUITAL ORGASME &#8211; EXPERIMENT IN FUNCTIONAL BACKGROUND MUSIC (LP by Silken Tofu)<\/p>\n<p> Last weekend I was in Belgium and, alright there was a bit of beer involved, <br \/>\n I got a whole bunch of releases handed by the owner of Silken Tofu, with the <br \/>\n instruction &#8216;to play, maybe review, listen and see for yourself&#8217;, but I&#8217;d <br \/>\n like to think there is no such thing as a free lunch, so I will hope to go <br \/>\n through most of these over the next few weeks. Looking at all the covers, <br \/>\n one notices that the colour &#8216;black&#8217; is something most of these musicians love. <br \/>\n Somewhere in the back of my mind, and I forgot to ask (beers involved, I told <br \/>\n you), if Silken Tofu regards themselves to be an industrial label. I rather <br \/>\n randomly picked the CD by Instinct Animal to play first. This is the musical <br \/>\n project of Jan Kruml, who calls his music &#8216;ambient\/dub\/experimental\/field <br \/>\n recordings&#8217;, and who sometimes works with Per Ahlund (Diskrepant) as Stendahl. <br \/>\n In a nice silkscreened black cover with silver carton sleeve, we find nine <br \/>\n tracks of dark ambient music, even when the start is a bit gothic (dramatic <br \/>\n orchestral samples, reverb), but as the release evolved and I got more and <br \/>\n more into it and found it lesser to be on that dramatic gothic side. There<br \/>\n is quite some variation in the music here; bits of dubby\/ethnic rhythm in <br \/>\n &#8216;Glacial&#8217;, which also may use the dripping of ice, more industrialized forms <br \/>\n of synth washes with choral humming, Test Dept like drumming in &#8216;Awake II&#8217; <br \/>\n and an excellent quiet poetic piece with female voices whispering in German, <br \/>\n French and English (it seems) in &#8216;Denudation Of Bodies&#8217; with sparse piano <br \/>\n notes. As said all is dark, all is atmospheric, but given the amount of <br \/>\n variation of approaches here, this is a most enjoyable release. The music <br \/>\n of Instinct Primal is rather &#8216;musical&#8217; and not as abstract as some of his <br \/>\n peers. Great start!<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Tzii has been reviewed before, but Jliat wasn&#8217;t that positive back then. <br \/>\n This new work seems to be less noise based. There is just one, close to thirty-<br \/>\n five minute piece on this disc, which, certainly in the early minutes, up to <br \/>\n say sixteen minutes remains very quiet: it keeps building and building with <br \/>\n small synth sounds, a bit of reverb and every now and then another sound, <br \/>\n another effect is added to the roster. Then a sudden break, and the piece <br \/>\n have arrived in noise territory, albeit more considered noise than I expected. <br \/>\n It has a somewhat &#8216;live recording&#8217; feeling to it, with some of the more abrupt <br \/>\n additions of sound here and there. Beyond the twenty-two minute mark there is <br \/>\n a bit of mechanical industrial rhythm and what seems vocals and voices from <br \/>\n tapes, which ends with &#8216;you&#8217;re a slave&#8217;, so perhaps all of this politically <br \/>\n motived? Quite simple and direct, this music, quite good to be honest.<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 DB stands for David Bengtsson and MZ for Magnus Zetterberg; I don&#8217;t think <br \/>\n I heard their music before. The six tracks are all untitled and information <br \/>\n is sparse anyway on this release. With the third piece we arrive in firm noise <br \/>\n land, but it&#8217;s not their aim to be an all-noise duo, I think. Their sound is <br \/>\n electronic throughout, dark obviously, and there is refined sense of minimalism <br \/>\n in these pieces. Things move rather slowly in these pieces, but I am not <br \/>\n entirely convinced by their music. The minimalism doesn&#8217;t work always here; <br \/>\n it is too sparse perhaps, or too thin, and ultimately there is a some sounds<br \/>\n together, such as in the fourth piece, but which doesn&#8217;t seem to bring on an <br \/>\n intense composition, or finely woven atmospheric drones or such like. It all <br \/>\n remains a bit too distant, cold and alien, but that might very well be the <br \/>\n intention of the musician, to create something that is just not very easy to <br \/>\n relate to?<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Last Saturday, a few hours before I got this bunch handed, I witnessed <br \/>\n from quite a distance actually, the concert by Bruital Orgasme, a duo from <br \/>\n Brussels, of whom I previously reviewed a cassette release in Vital Weekly <br \/>\n 861, which I thought worked quite well in terms of old school industrial <br \/>\n noise. The concert was quite nice, with lots of scratchy records, electronic <br \/>\n bleeps, an amplified spinning wheel and when things exploded in the second <br \/>\n half into a harsh noise wall, it was time to retreat to another room. <br \/>\n Despite that noise the concert made me curious about this record though. <br \/>\n Not unlike the previous release and certainly not unlike the concert, <br \/>\n the record follows the same compositional built up: first there is a whole <br \/>\n bunch of skipping sounds from ancient and well worn out pieces of vinyl, <br \/>\n which receive treatments of electronics and effects and towards the end of <br \/>\n side one a bit of noise, whereas on the other side the noise bits are much <br \/>\n more present, but unlike the concert there isn&#8217;t just one long blast of <br \/>\n noise. Here Bruital Orgasme is more playful (although that might not be the <br \/>\n correct name for it) with their noise, and it is well balanced. No doubt <br \/>\n the fact the listener has a level of control over the noise, and no control <br \/>\n at all in a concert situation makes this all the more enjoyable. Okay, <br \/>\n so maybe the concert situation isn&#8217;t my cup of tea, but I definitely enjoyed <br \/>\n what I heard on record. The rest to follow next week! (FdW)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.silkentofu.org\">http:\/\/www.silkentofu.org<\/a><\/p>\n<p> FRANCK VIGROUX &#8211; CAMERA (LP by Cesare)<\/p>\n<p> Some time ago I received in a short period of time various releases by either <br \/>\n Franck Vigroux, or those that he released on his own label, D&#8217;autres Cordes. <br \/>\n His most recent collaboration with Mika Vainio I didn&#8217;t receive. His label <br \/>\n didn&#8217;t release &#8216;Camera&#8217; and it&#8217;s perhaps also something of an oddball in <br \/>\n his more electronic career. The eight pieces on this release are played by <br \/>\n Michel Blanc (percussion), Matthew Bourne (electric and acoustic piano), <br \/>\n Bruno Chevillon (double bass), with Vigroux himself on electronics and guitar. <br \/>\n I assume that seeing &#8216;composed by Franck Vigroux&#8217; on the cover means that he <br \/>\n actively scribbled down a few notes with regards to how things should be <br \/>\n played, but it might also very well be that Vigroux took a bunch of recordings <br \/>\n by these people and he plays around with them, using studio techniques. I must <br \/>\n admit: I am not sure about this. It could be either of these two approaches. <br \/>\n There is at times quite a modern classical feel about these pieces, especially <br \/>\n when the piano strums few chords, majestically, and a bow is used to play the <br \/>\n double bass. The guitar and electronics in return bring you back into the land <br \/>\n of noise, with some well-placed beeps and distorted noise patterns. There is <br \/>\n some strong interaction between these players, and within this music, regardless <br \/>\n of how it was made. Lots of tension between the notes, the players and the way <br \/>\n the whole thing is played out. A powerful release indeed, but it suffers a bit <br \/>\n from the vinyl, I think. Or perhaps my copy is just a bit crackly? I don&#8217;t <br \/>\n know but it somehow interrupts the fine flow of the dynamic music. (FdW)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.cesare-cncm.com\">http:\/\/www.cesare-cncm.com<\/a><\/p>\n<p> FILIPE FELIZARDO &#8211; VOLUME IV: <br \/>\n THE INVADING PAST AND OTHER DISSOLUTIONS (2LP by Three:four Records)<\/p>\n<p> This is the fourth release by Lisbon based guitar player Filipe Felizardo, who <br \/>\n turned thirty this year and coincidently this is also the thirtieth release by <br \/>\n Three:four Records. Felizardo&#8217;s previous three releases were released by Clean <br \/>\n Feed, Wasser Bassin and Three:four, so &#8216;Volume IV&#8217; is his second release for <br \/>\n the label, and therefor (?) a double LP. Felizardo plays electric guitar and <br \/>\n has a self-built amplifier. There is no mentioning of effects and based on what <br \/>\n I hear, and since this double album is an introduction for me, he might not use <br \/>\n any effects. Felizardo moves around the amplifier to generate feedback if need <br \/>\n by and need for that seems in demand quite a bit here. Felizardo let&#8217;s his six <br \/>\n stringed beast howl on end and much of this sounds pretty dark and grim. Maybe <br \/>\n grim is not the right word, but dark it is. Much of the higher frequencies have <br \/>\n been filtered out by Felizardo and one hears the low end rumble of him playing <br \/>\n his tunes. It&#8217;s not music people have a word for, I think. Blues might be the <br \/>\n one that comes close, but it might also just not cover it, entirely. There is <br \/>\n a distinct personal howl around this music, of desolation, of open landscapes, <br \/>\n heat and sand perhaps, but with that personal touch &#8211; we can not guess what it <br \/>\n means for Felizardo, but we can make it our own drama; in fact it&#8217;s quite easy <br \/>\n I should think to find something personal in this, grief, sadness, loneliness. <br \/>\n None of this, you might have guessed is strictly blues, as Felizardo has a few <br \/>\n tricks up his sleeve to make it sound quite different and alien, such as &#8216;Ain&#8217;t <br \/>\n Gonna Get Outta This Floor No More&#8217;, with it&#8217;s more percussive guitar approach. <br \/>\n Maybe a double LP all a bit long for so much sadness, but it works fine in <br \/>\n smaller quantities. (FdW)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/three-four.net\">http:\/\/three-four.net<\/a><\/p>\n<p> CDR\/TOPGEAR (12&#8243; by Adaadat)<br \/>\n RUTGER HAUSER (CDR by Adaadat)<\/p>\n<p> People around me who try to engage me in a conversation about football or cars <br \/>\n know already: I am not in the least bit interested in both. Yet while there <br \/>\n are more football haters, when it comes to cars, even the ones who tell me they <br \/>\n are not interested, tell me Topgear is a great show, &#8216;it&#8217;s very funny and you <br \/>\n don&#8217;t need to like cars&#8217;. While even women tell me this, I very much don&#8217;t like <br \/>\n to watch some biased, xenophobic, chauvinistic males bashing another countries\/<br \/>\n foreign cars\/people\/women\/men (sissy&#8217;s like me probably). Maybe I told this <br \/>\n before, in an earlier review of his work, but it&#8217;s an all-important message, <br \/>\n me thinks. So there you go and I like to thank DJ Topgear for allowing me to <br \/>\n review a TV show, and while the label does not mention it, Simon Petre might be <br \/>\n a big fan of the show. He lives in Tokyo, and calls himself a &#8216;suburban freeware <br \/>\n electronica geek, occasional MC and Korean flute player&#8217; and no doubt he met CDR, <br \/>\n Hakaru Tsunematsu, over there. You can find more on him and his many monikers in<br \/>\n Vital Weekly 1004). I started with the CDR side, first on 33 rpm, which sounded <br \/>\n great until I found out I had to play this at 45 rpm, of course speeding things <br \/>\n up a few notches more. It continues from his previous release but seems a bit <br \/>\n more organised here. Maybe for these two pieces, and CDR took some consideration <br \/>\n while recording towards such notions as composition? It&#8217;s still a piece of <br \/>\n breakcore and comes with the usual chaos, but there is also a rhythm pattern that <br \/>\n returns in both of the pieces on the record. DJ Topgear on the other side is <br \/>\n even more organised: his beats may be broken up, but on top he waves quite coherent <br \/>\n synthesizer\/sequencer sounds. Fast music, ultra fast, and it must be an age thing: <br \/>\n but this is way too fast for me. It&#8217;s great music, there is no doubt about that, <br \/>\n drill &#8216;n bass, drum &#8216;n break or whatever core, but I found it hard to bounce around, <br \/>\n pretending to dance.<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 On CDR we find Rutger Hauser. And yes, that sounds like strangely familiar to <br \/>\n the Dutch actor of the same, and recently Adaadat released a 7&#8243; by Masters, with <br \/>\n a title that was exactly like the actor. Maybe there is a bit of fascination for <br \/>\n our Blade Runner over there at Adaadat HQ? Rutger Hauser started in 2013 as a duo <br \/>\n with John Harries (of Sleeps In Oysters) on drums and Jamie Coe on bass\/pedals, <br \/>\n but soon expanded with John Klaemint Hofgaard on guitar, Lisa Busby (of Fingers <br \/>\n In The Gloss and Sleeps In Oysters) and Ian Stonehouse on &#8216;playback media&#8217; and <br \/>\n Rose Dagul (of Rhosyn, Foals, 2:54, Ghold, Chad Valley) on cello. While many of <br \/>\n the releases on Adaadat seem to deal with electronics and rhythms, Rutger Hauser <br \/>\n is electronic at times, but it&#8217;s also very rock like, and very improvised. It&#8217;s <br \/>\n the strangest of combinations maybe, but funnily enough it also works quite well. <br \/>\n &#8216;Playback media&#8217; should be understood a vinyl spinning and CD skipping, which <br \/>\n provide an already chaotic background for the cello\/drums\/bass to either bring <br \/>\n more chaos to the table, or try to, in various configurations, bring order to the <br \/>\n music. All of that makes one hell of a bumpy ride, as one can imagine. Sometimes <br \/>\n they rock like punk, but with someone having a radio in the background, while in <br \/>\n other instances everybody is on a free rollercoaster ride. This is fifty minutes <br \/>\n of high-tension music, with lots to explore and even more to enjoy. Rutger Hauser <br \/>\n seems an exciting new band. (FdW)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.adaadat.co.uk\">http:\/\/www.adaadat.co.uk<\/a><\/p>\n<p> TVAM &#8211; PORSCHE MAJEURE\/WE LIKE FIRES (7&#8243; by Static Caravan)<br \/>\n Behind TVAM is one Joe Oxley and in Vital Weekly 992 we already reviewed an USB <br \/>\n device in an ancient video box by him; now it&#8217;s time for a lathe cut, edition <br \/>\n of 100 copies, 7&#8243; single with two songs. Oxley calls his music &#8216;post-internet, <br \/>\n motivational slime punk&#8217; and his influences reach from Big Black to Boards Of <br \/>\n Canada. It&#8217;s not, as I thought of the first release, a rock band with electronics. <br \/>\n Here the music seems to be electronic but also with quite some guitars. &#8216;Porsche <br \/>\n Majeure&#8217; is the more electronic of the two pieces. Vocals pushed towards the back, <br \/>\n hard rhythm up front and a guitar wailing about, but more towards the end. There <br \/>\n is, certainly at the beginning, some more esoteric voice work, but it&#8217;s mostly a <br \/>\n heavy electronic sound. &#8216;We Like Fires&#8217; is also driven by hard rhythm and sequences <br \/>\n while Oxley (I assume) singing, even when his voice is pushed a bit towards the <br \/>\n back in the mix. The guitar plays an all-important role here, even more than on <br \/>\n the other side it seems. It&#8217;s not difficult to see the Big Black reference in <br \/>\n this respect, actually in both of these songs. Quite a pop blast for a grey <br \/>\n Sunday afternoon. (FdW)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.staticcaravan.org\">http:\/\/www.staticcaravan.org<\/a><\/p>\n<p> BUG \u2013 SEDIMENT (2CDR by Attenuation Circuit\/Brainhall)<\/p>\n<p> Bug is a Swiss duo of Andreas Glauser (manipulated electronic tools, organ) and <br \/>\n Christian Bucher (drums). Glauser is an artist, musician specialized in sound <br \/>\n performances. With his partner Julia K\u00e4lin he runs the Brainhall label that <br \/>\n released this double cd. Bucher is a classically trained percussionist, but he <br \/>\n did also studies in jazz and improvisation. They joined their forces for some <br \/>\n very smash in the face noise music. The noises produced by Glauser on his organ <br \/>\n and mixer are very raw and often extremely distorted. Bucher adds massive <br \/>\n percussive patterns and structures. The first cd counts 10 of their noise attacks. <br \/>\n The second cd captured them in a live performance. They are more into producing <br \/>\n over the top noise, full of a bombastic energy, then musical structures. This I <br \/>\n experienced as the weak spot of their uncompromising and courageous undertaking. <br \/>\n How overwhelming the noise may be, the structures they built are not equally <br \/>\n impressive. On the live cd they prove however to be tight and communicative <br \/>\n unit. Hope this is a promise for the future (DM)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.attenuationcircuit.de\">http:\/\/www.attenuationcircuit.de<br \/>\n <\/a><\/p>\n<p>\n BRETT CARSON &#8211; QUATTOR ELEPHANTIS (CDR by Edgetone)<br \/>\n LONA KOZIK &amp; CHRIS GOLINSKI \u2013 SPELAEOLOGY (CDR by Edgetone)<br \/>\n KEITH KELLEY ASK NOT \u2013 A GRAND APPARATUS DISCARDED (CDR by Edgetone)<\/p>\n<p> Drummer Chris Golinski and pianist Lona Kozik present their first work, titled <br \/>\n \u2018Spelaeology\u2019, named after the scientific research in caves and similar <br \/>\n environments. They choose the title as an metaphor for their search for the <br \/>\n \u201cunderworld of traditional musical approaches\u201d. Kozik seems to play some kind <br \/>\n of prepared piano, if not she choose for a percussive way of playing the piano. <br \/>\n They develop their ideas in three very determined improvisations and play with <br \/>\n timbre, colour and texture. In \u2018Discovery\u2019 also melodic elements are explored. <br \/>\n \u2018Return\u2019 has parts of long sustained abstract sounds changed for percussion <br \/>\n dominated parts, playing all kind of patterns. Their playing is very fresh <br \/>\n and self-conscious. They create a rich and full grown sound world of their <br \/>\n own, with many engaging passages passing by.<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Ask Not is an improvising unit led by Keith Kelly (soprano, tenor saxophones, <br \/>\n clarinet, flute), with Ari Chersky on guitar, Shaun Lowecki playing drums and <br \/>\n cymbals and Doug Stuart on upright bass. Plus Brett Reed guesting on vibes. <br \/>\n Their music is a melting pot of influences but in the end their music is <br \/>\n dominated by jazz elements. Although they develop interesting and complex <br \/>\n structures, the music didn\u2019t really make an appeal on me. Their interactions <br \/>\n are not sounding very spirited and urgent to me. I guess it is better to catch <br \/>\n them live on stage on the right moment. <br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Brett Carson is a new name for me. He composed a very interesting work, <br \/>\n performed by his ensemble Quattor Elephantis: Robert Lopez (drums), Mateo Lugo <br \/>\n (electric guitar) and Scott Siler (vibraphone, percussion). Carson himself <br \/>\n plays keyboards in a prominent role. His thoroughly constructed compositions <br \/>\n and fine arrangements evoke memories of Zappa and progrock, but absolutely <br \/>\n not in a retro manner. Very intelligent structures and complex rhythms are <br \/>\n woven by Carson and performed excellent by his ensemble. A joy. (DM)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.edgetonerecords.bandcamp.com\">http:\/\/www.edgetonerecords.bandcamp.com<br \/>\n <\/a><\/p>\n<p>\n ROYAL HUNGARIAN NOISEMAKERS\/NOISESCULPTOR &#8211; SPLIT (CDR by Unsigned Label)<\/p>\n<p> &#8216;God save the Noise! Noise save the God!&#8217; it says on this five track release, <br \/>\n which may or may not be the result of two people having a split release. <br \/>\n The font is not easy to read, so hop over to the bandcamp to know more about <br \/>\n this. So there are three pieces by Royal Hungarian Noisemakers and two by <br \/>\n Noisesculptor. The final track by the first is a live piece, while the other <br \/>\n four may be remixes of each other\u2019s work. The word &#8216;noise&#8217; should not be <br \/>\n taken too literal. Obviously this is all quite experimental music, and most <br \/>\n of the times quite abstract at that, but it&#8217;s not your usual over the top <br \/>\n howling noise. It would seem to me that both of these projects like their <br \/>\n laptops a lot and that whatever finds it&#8217;s way inside these laptops is <br \/>\n stretched out and treated with lots of sound effects, effectively creating <br \/>\n some cold computer drone music; pieces follow the curve of the input, so <br \/>\n it never remains static, but at the same time it&#8217;s also very computer like. <br \/>\n Nothing is done to hide that fact, which is of course just another way at <br \/>\n looking at these things. It&#8217;s a choice, I guess, but maybe also an easy one. <br \/>\n The live piece by Royal Hungarian Noisemakers at the end, with the help of <br \/>\n Bass O-Matic is the most noisiest cut around here, but even then it&#8217;s all <br \/>\n well under control. It&#8217;s not the world&#8217;s greatest release by (unsigned) <br \/>\n artists, but it works quite all right. (FdW)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/havizaj.bandcamp.com\/\">http:\/\/havizaj.bandcamp.com\/<\/a><\/p>\n<p> BRAMBLING &#8211; FRINGILLA MONTIFRINGILLA (CDR by The Slightly Off Kilter Label)<br \/>\n MICHAEL FAIRFAX &amp; BARRY WITHERDEN &amp; PAUL KHIMASIA MORGAN &#8211; FOOL&#8217;S GOLD <br \/>\n (CDR by The Slightly Off Kilter Label)<\/p>\n<p> Two works of improvised music, both involving Paul Khimasia Morgan. On <br \/>\n the disc where he works with Dan Powell, who plays guitar and electronics, <br \/>\n they call themselves Brambling, a small songbird. Morgan himself plays <br \/>\n zither and amplified objects and I&#8217;m sure there is a fair of electronics <br \/>\n floating around the place. Between September 2012 and March 2013 they <br \/>\n recorded a couple of times together and the results can be heard on this <br \/>\n sixty-five minute disc. That made me think there is perhaps not a lot of <br \/>\n editing going on, but maybe that&#8217;s also because it sounds rather unedited. <br \/>\n I must admit I am not particular blown away by these four long duets. It <br \/>\n is too much in the area of noise, or rather an extended use of sound <br \/>\n effects, which makes that all of this sounds very much the same. Lots of <br \/>\n delay. There is also quite an amount of hiss in this music, which doesn&#8217;t <br \/>\n add an aesthetic thing, at least not for me. The sound has lots of room <br \/>\n for improvement, but I am not sure if that helps the actual music. It&#8217;s <br \/>\n all a bit messy, noisy and without too much control, and none of I thought <br \/>\n lead up to something engaging to hear.<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Two sets where recorded in Wiveliscombe, Somerset in the spring of 2013, <br \/>\n by Michael Fairfax, at home and all in one go. Fairfax studied musique <br \/>\n concrete in 1972, and then did both visual and sound art. With Matt Saunders <br \/>\n and Barry Witherden he had a trio called Tapes + Ashes, and with Barry <br \/>\n also the duo Gimlet-Eyed Mariners (see Vital Weekly 817). Witherden, also <br \/>\n present here, is also a music journalist, writing about jazz. No instruments <br \/>\n are mentioned on the cover, but I should think there is a fair amount of <br \/>\n electronics, laptops, tapes and maybe the odd acoustic object. These two <br \/>\n pieces are not free renditions of the Stone Roses&#8217; classic of the same <br \/>\n name. These two pieces are shorter (in total) than on the other release, <br \/>\n but also a bit unformed. I can see why people have a &#8216;no edit&#8217; policy, <br \/>\n but there is something to say for some good ol&#8217; editing: weed out the <br \/>\n passages that don&#8217;t work. It&#8217;s simple as that. Having said that, I must <br \/>\n also say I enjoyed this release way more than the other one. It moves <br \/>\n through interesting bits of improvised electronic sounds, some squeak <br \/>\n on the zither and has an occasional spooky atmosphere. This is dark and <br \/>\n gloomy, but then originated in the world of improvised music. Spacious <br \/>\n improvised music that works quite well, except for those bits in which <br \/>\n they loose their game a bit. Worth checking out. The only room for <br \/>\n improvement is the cover artwork! (FdW)<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/slightlyoffkilterlabel.blogspot.com\">http:\/\/slightlyoffkilterlabel.blogspot.com<\/p>\n<p> <\/a><\/p>\n<p> LOVVER &#8211; X (cassette by Klanggold)<br \/>\n SONOVO &#8211; A LINE HAS TWO SIDES (cassette by Klanggold)<\/p>\n<p> Many releases by Klanggold are in the digital domain, and it&#8217;s certainly <br \/>\n worthwhile checking their site for these. The two releases here, at this <br \/>\n moment, are on cassette and both by people I haven&#8217;t heard of before. <br \/>\n Behind Lovver, it is said by the label, are a post-rock guitarist and an <br \/>\n &#8220;avant-garde sound-mangler &amp; noise maker&#8221;. They don&#8217;t discuss or talk a <br \/>\n lot, but just play and on their joint cassette, the music is rather calm <br \/>\n and yet also orchestral. The noisemaker provides a rhythm pounding below <br \/>\n the waves that are no doubt courtesy of the guitar player. Apparently both <br \/>\n tracks (one per side) where played live, but shaped in the studio for <br \/>\n this release. &#8216;Cloud Logic&#8217; is the more guitar\/rhythm-oriented piece on <br \/>\n the first side with its sustaining guitar bits while &#8216;Sermon&#8217; on the other <br \/>\n side has a more abstract feel to it. A bit of crackling on the contact <br \/>\n microphones and drones that are more alien, at least until the rhythm <br \/>\n becomes more apparent. This music could serve well in a chill-out room, <br \/>\n although a bit short to relax.<br \/>\n \u00a0\u00a0 Sonovo was apparently quiet for seven years and now return with two <br \/>\n short songs on what we used to call a cassingle in the old days (which we <br \/>\n used to send out spoken word letters!), with in total has twelve minutes <br \/>\n of music. Andreas Usenbenz plays microkorg, samples and loops and on <br \/>\n the title piece there is also a field recording from the Peace Park in <br \/>\n Hiroshima. Both of these pieces are quite minimal in approach: once it <br \/>\n has found it&#8217;s groove it stays in there and very little changes. There <br \/>\n are more changes in &#8216;Serious Colors&#8217; than in the title piece, but rather <br \/>\n below the surface of the beat (on both sides). Interestingly &#8216;Serious <br \/>\n Colors&#8217; has a somewhat lighter tone than the other side. It&#8217;s all a bit <br \/>\n too brief for me: I quite enjoy these pieces but it&#8217;s short to form an <br \/>\n opinion on this project or the music. I also don&#8217;t understand why this <br \/>\n wasn&#8217;t any longer: after seven years of absence one could expect some<br \/>\n more compositions to be ready? I&#8217;d love to hear them! (FdW)<br \/>\n Address: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.klanggold.net\/\">http:\/\/www.klanggold.net\/<\/a><\/p>\n<p>\n \u2022<\/p>\n<p>http:\/\/www.vitalweekly.net<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>COPPICE &#8211; MATCHES (CD by Category Of Manifestation) ANTHONY PATERAS &amp; ERKKI VELTHEIM &#8211; ENTERTAINMENT = CONTROL (CD by Immediata) THYMOLPHTHALEIN &#8211; MAD AMONG THE<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":521,"featured_media":39758,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[22],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-39757","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-publications"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/39757","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/521"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=39757"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/39757\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/39758"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=39757"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=39757"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/modisti.com\/15\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=39757"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}