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Archive for the ‘inspiration’ Category

Sound Blog – Australia, February 2011: Part 2

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

The second collection of audio ‘holiday snaps’ from my trip to Australia in February 2011

SOUND BLOG – Australia, Feb 2011 by thereverseengineer

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Posted in Audio Clips, Audio Experiments, Field recording, inspiration | No Comments »


 

Trish Keenan – RIP

Sunday, January 16th, 2011

TrishKeenan

In 2003 a review I’d written won a competition on the BBC Collective website. My prize was supposed to be an album by Broadway Project but there was a mix up and I received Broadcast‘s Haha Sound instead. Unfamiliar as I was with both bands I didn’t even realise and happily settled down to listen. A few weeks later I received an email from the Collective explaining that I’d been sent the wrong prize, and should I wish to switch CDs that it wouldn’t be a problem. By this time, however, I’d firmly fallen for Broadcast and couldn’t bear the idea of parting with Haha Sound. Since then I’ve followed their releases closely and caught up with what I missed and I’ve come to know and love a wonderful body of work. It was with considerable sadness, then, that I read about the death of front woman Trish Keenan from complications associated with pneumonia.

Broadcast are often described as an ‘art pop’ band, which I guess fits, but as so often with such pigeonholes it barely scratches the surface of their unique and gorgeous sound. I also remember reading a review in which Trish Keenan’s voice was described as ‘dead pan’. It wasn’t meant in a negative way and I can see where the reviewer was coming from, but again it’s misrepresentational. ‘Matter of fact’ would be a better description, I feel, and the fact of the matter was beauty. It was an unaffected, beautiful lullaby of a voice that contrasted and complimented the lilting, low-fi nature of the instrumentation, which ranged from spine-tingling twinkliness to static-soaked experiments and extended technique. The overall effect was ethereal, warm and soothing.

Broadcast had a genuinely artistic approach to writing music. That is, for all the 60′s psychadelia, 80′s synthwave and 00′s electronica that are evident influences in their music, they sought to originate. For example, Keenan constructed many of her lyrics, particularly for 2005′s Tender Buttons, by mixing up lines and randomly rearranging them, à la William S. Borroughs. The result was sometimes challenging but always poetic. (‘In autosuggested pathways you are caught‘ , ‘Michael, Michael Michael / This is not your saw tooth wave‘.) Meanwhile the band tailored their sound in unique ways – parts of Haha Sound were recorded in a church, for instance, lending the album its deep, penetrating resonance.

My personal favourite moments are Ominous Clouds from Haha Sound and Corporeal from Tender Buttons. The former is almost nursery rhyme-like in it’s gentle dreaminess but self-aware and poignant in it’s message of avoiding the big wide world for a while longer – it’s like she’s giving herself permission (‘I’ve got to find a place / be myself and learn to face / the ominous clouds / But not now, not now not now‘). The latter is a peculiar distillation of the automatic instinctiveness of sex and the inscrutable beauty that it can invoke – it’s like a biology text book rewritten as poetry (‘With and without mind / With or without Darwin / Classify me / The strings of my autonomy‘.)

I’ve been deeply moved, challenged and thrilled by Keenan’s voice over the years, and I’m gutted that I’ll never see Broadcast live (bafflingly they were always one of the bands I decided to ‘catch next time’).

Thanks for the music, Trish.

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Posted in inspiration, music, Perfect Tunes | No Comments »


 

Concert review – Matthew Herbert & The London Sinfonietta: One Day (20/11/10)

Wednesday, November 24th, 2010

Wow. Where to start.

To me, Matthew Herbert is a musical hero and key inspiration, but as with many of my favourite artists I enjoy a mixed relationship with his work. His 90′s microhouse still gets me fidgeting on the dancefloor and his Big Band project was a beautifully realised synergy of politics, creative concept and music. However, his more recent output has failed to grab me. 2002′s Plat Du Jour, created entirely from recordings of food or food related sources, was high on concept but weaker on music. His more song based approach, such as 2006′s Scale, sounds somewhat flat to me.

matthew_herbert

Underlining all Herbert’s work is his fascinating (not to mention obsessive) personal manifesto for music making, which lays down rules about originality and the integration rather than discarding of ‘mistakes’. It calls for strict adherence to an overarching concept which dictates everything from sample sources and sound design right down to track names and tempos. This resonates with me – I love music as a wider artistic statement. If a tune is composed from the ground up with elements that comply to a particular message I appreciate it all the more, even if I do have to read about the concept first. In this way it’s like visual art – it often helps to read the blurb in a gallery to fully appreciate the work.

However, when listening to an album it has to be the music that counts once all’s said and done. If it’s not interesting to listen to then it’s failing as music, however strong the concept. This is where I believe Herbert’s recent recordings have faltered – one can chin-stroke at the ideas behind them but they lack sonic interest compared to his freer, funkier dance music. It’s telling that in my experience he’s always been better live, where one can see the processes involved in the music making – live looping, imaginative sampling (tea cups smashing, newspapers being ripped up), traditional instrumentation and vocals, all adding to a greater whole. One Day (the name marrying the concert with his current trilogy of albums) bridged the gap between concept, creative process and music more fully than any of his live performances I’ve seen to date.

The concert was an interpretation of the Guardian newspaper from Saturday 25th September 2010 – a bold thing to attempt, particuarly given that the whole thing was written in 6 weeks. The ever reliable London Sinfonietta, a jazz quartet (nestled up in the Royal Box), and singer Eska joined Herbert who was front stage at London’s Royal Festival Hall behind his array of machines and keyboards. One Day could have simply misfired, or been pretentious nonsense, but it proved to be witty, thought-provoking, original and hugely entertaining.

Proceedings began with the audience being given a copy of the paper in question, which acted as program and guide. With satisfying forward thinking Herbert had taken out an advert in the Review section that day which acted as a welcome and statement of intent on the night. Before each song a compare led us through the thinking behind the work, directing our attention to the articles that inspired the music and highlighting the links between them. This was very welcome – it would have been an impenetrable experience without. Complimenting the music (some of which was composed from recordings of the paper being produced at Guardian HQ) were projected videos with live sound effects by a foley artist and various on-stage antics such as live cookery and paper cutting.

From the unavoidable rustling of papers to parts that were actually directed by the conductor, audience participation was very much a part of things. We had to jangle our keys during a song about housing and rub credit cards together during a piece about a Sothebys auction. When food was the subject we were encouraged to make paper planes out the adverts we considered to represent the highest food miles. As a finale, the audience were divided into sections and our newspapers acted as instruments – beating, ripping and shaking in time with the music. The participation was great fun and broke down the ‘performer / audience’ barrier somewhat (although it was amusing to see Herbert getting slightly flustered when we continued outside the strict windows he’d composed for!) Most people wore bemused, amused looks – it was kind of insane, but it worked.

The connections Herbert drew between various parts of the paper and the means by which he represented them on the night deftly highlighted the tragedy, absurdity, mundanity and hilarity of popular media culture. One piece had the jazz band somberly covering Status Quo’s ‘In The Army Now’ whilst a video was shown of Francis Rossi and the boys jovially larking about at an army training camp. Meanwhile the audience were directed to articles about World War I gas attacks and there was even something to do with a gas mask on stage, the specifics of which escape me!

It would be too convoluted to detail all the comparisons and contrasts drawn between the Guardian stories, but others included an obituary Vs a zombie video game Vs a dead mothers favourite brownie recipe and a West Bank housing controversy Vs. Middle England domestic bliss. The latter involved volunteers building a wall out of red bricks on which they mounted a window in front of which they erected a lounge scene in which 2 girls watched telly and drank wine whilst the Guardian gardening columnist tended to window boxes ‘outside’. It sounds like chaos but it hung together surprisingly well. It was creaky but fascinating, encouraging one to think and laugh – much like Herberts music.

Speaking of the music, while it had its moments, it was somewhat forgettable for the most part. In fact if this had been a regular Herbert album, my critique of it falling slightly flat would apply. But being allowed into his creative world and the multi-sensory nature of the show took it beyond just music – it was far more a performance art piece than a straight concert. As such it was the perfect demonstration of Matthew Herberts creative intention which itself far exceeds sound, and a performance that refreshed his place on my ‘heroes’ list.

Read Matthew Herbert’s article in the Guardian about One Day, or watch the video.

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Posted in gig review, inspiration, music, Visuals / Video | No Comments »


 

Urban Subversion: London’s Boris Bikes – Fuck Barclays!

Friday, September 17th, 2010

A quickie, not music related but a nifty bit of urban adbusting style subversion.

London has recently been given a load of hire bikes courtesy of major Boris Johnson, the taxpayer and Barclays Bank. One enterprising anarchist edited a row of them outside my office yesterday (Fashion Street, off Brick Lane), and I salute him/her! Matching the font and printing transparent stickers to amend the corporate sponsorship to read ‘Fuck Barclays’ is inspired!

Fuck Barclays - London's Boris Bikes

Fuck Barclays - London's Boris Bikes

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Posted in inspiration, random | No Comments »


 

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