The Complex Silence series is an effort by the TimeTheory netlabel and musician-curator Phillip Wilkerson to engage musicians in long-form compositions that explore the titular aesthetic. The sound on the four entries thus far is at once quiet yet dense, understated yet nuanced, singular yet rich. The latest, Complex Silence 4, is by Dave Seidel, whose contribution takes the Golden Ratio as its starting point. Its two pieces, “Meridian Transit” (MP3) and “Solar Midnight” (MP3), are super-slow drones — their beat, such as it is, proceeding at a gap of several seconds. What’s complex about the unassuming simplicity of Seidel’s pieces is the variety intrinsic in those seemingly ordinary drones — there are numerous overlapping waves in each track (to my ears, even more in “Meridian Transit” than in “Solar Midnight”), which means that when played loud, the room fills with overlapping patterns. It’s a bit like staring for a long while at some massive cliff and slowly making out the striations that have occurred over vast periods of time.
Get the full release at archive.org. More on Seidel at mysterybear.net. More on TimeTheory at archive.org, jon7.net/timetheory, and myspace.com/timetheorynetlabel. More on Wilkerson at phillipwilkerson.net and phillipwilkerson.blogspot.com.
This week, the Disquiet.com MP3 Discussion Group returns to collectively given a listen to two albums released this year by the duo Mountains: Choral (cover at left — on the Thrill Jockey label) and Etching (cover below — and which Mountains self-released). Mountains is Brendon Anderegg and Koen Holtkamp, and they traffic in a rich and unique realm of drone-music, in which rural guitar atmospheres and acoustic elements mingle amid lush, beautiful harmonic fields. A previous Mountains album, Sewn, was one of the top-10 albums of the year on Disquiet.com in 2006 (
Participating in this week’s MP3 Discussion Group are: Julian Lewis: “I write much of
Listen in quick succession at least twice through — not just to, but through — the relatively brief (just over three minutes) track “The One Substance” off The Ontology of Noise (
