Radere Live in Boulder (MP3)

Over at percussionlab.com, Radere (aka Carl Ritger) posted a live set he performed at this year’s Communikey festival in Boulder, Colorado. Opening with shimmering guitar and cloud-break choral effects, the piece builds in density and intensity, as if the soft-focus sounds are slowly brought into stark relief, and their fractured surfaces are revealed for all their grizzled imperfection, and yet in turn those imperfections come to urge their own sense of wonder. In other words, it’s downright fractal.

I’d interviewed Ritger for a story about Communikey in advance of the festival (“Ghost in the Machine”), and was glad for the opportunity to, belatedly, hear his set. The brief descriptive note at Percussion Lab, and at Ritger’s soundcloud.com/radere account, note that he used “Guitar, pedals and laptop” and that he performed material from two of his releases, A Season in Decline and Lost at Sea, I’m Never Coming Back.

However, like as with any good music, repeated listens brought questions, and so I asked Ritger to discuss the performance a little more thoroughly.

Marc Weidenbaum: What was the equipment you used?

Carl Ritger: The primary element in all of my performances is the guitar, which I run through a constantly evolving array of pedals and processing stages. This particular set was one of my last using my laptop as a processing tool, actually. I had my guitar patched into a preamp, an overdrive, and a variety of delay pedals before hitting the soundcard. From there, the signal went through a bunch of granular effects and things of that nature, resulting in the swelling drones that you hear in the recording. The laptop was also running a few layers of field recordings and textural elements, which were culled from several releases, including stuff I’ve done for the labels Full Spectrum and Basic_Sounds.

Weidenbaum: What was the performance space?

Ritger: I performed at the Communikey headquarters during the festival, which was located in the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art. It was a beautiful space with nice hardwood floors and plenty of natural light. Plus, a bunch of my friends from around the country were in the audience, including some I hadn’t seen in years. It was a really nice vibe.

Weidenbaum: What was your aesthetic goal?

Ritger: A lot of that material was produced during a pretty weird period in my life. I was pretty isolated, so I found my aesthetic shifting from quieter, minimalist place to a louder, slightly more abrasive sound. I guess in a sense, working with distortion and feedback more deeply provided a level of catharsis that more subtle forms couldn’t provide me with. The core of what I’ve always been interested in — signal processing, drones, minimalism — was still intact, but the volume was always inching upwards. I actually played a show out here in Boulder shortly after my relocation and the promoter was worried they were going to get their first noise complaint! I would never have imagined being faced with that sort of situation during a performance even just a year ago.

Track originally posted for free streaming and download at soundcloud.com/radere and percussionlab.com. More on Radere/Ritger at falsereactions.tumblr.com and twitter.com/crtgr.

Apparat’s ‘Breaking Bad’ Season Ender (MP3)

Both the German electronic musician Apparat and the music supervisors for the American TV series Breaking Bad found an interesting balance of licensing and scoring for the final episode of the recent season. The episode, which aired October 9 and closed out season 4, featured the Apparat song “Goodbye” — and yet it wasn’t the full song. It was an instrumental version, lacking the vocal of Soap&Skin (aka the Austrian singer Anja Plaschg). And because Plaschg’s vocal, despite its seeming transparency in the original, was lacking, the piece took on an entirely new meaning — Apparat’s steady if growing pulses serve as a grounding counterpoint to her slowly rising singing. In the absence of that singing, the Apparat instrumental takes on a greater sense of gravitas.

Apparat, aka Sascha Ring, subsequently posted the instrumental track at his soundcloud.com/apparat account for free streaming and download:

The full version of the song, with Plaschg’s vocal, can be heard in this video. It’s from Apparat’s recent album, The Devil’s Walk, on the Mute label. In a funny turnaround, the video to the full version of “Goodbye” makes use of pre-existing footage, in this case from the 1928 film Spione, or Spies, by Fritz Lang:

More on Appart at apparat.net and at mute.com/apparat.

Bridging the Biological Environment and the Built Environment (MP3)

Bird song and voices, rumbles and flanging noise. The first two are discernibly “natural,” discernibly part of the biological environment. That’s a term employed to attempt suggest in a non-judgmental manner a distinction from the built environment. As for the latter two, these deep bass rumbles and that distinct quavering sinusoidal affect, they are seemingly “artificial,” a peculiar (and seemingly self-contradictory) term routinely employed to mean made by a human — but there are many sounds in between them as well, sounds that blur the lines, and help the collection of sounds become a self-contained whole.

The collection is titled Nadir. It’s a single-track release on the netlabel Modisti by the Greek musician who goes by Melophobia. The sounds that blur the line between biological and built are numerous. For example, fast forward to the 17:30 point — are those footsteps or a percussion instrument or an electronic ping? And following immediately thereafter, those soulful male voices: is the echoing a communal call’n’response, or the side effect of the structure in which the singing occured, or perhaps an after effect added by the musician?

More details on the release at modisti.com, where it’s downloadable and streaming, for free.

The Top 10 Posts & Searches from October 2011

Of the top 10 most popular posts of the past month, October 2011, eight were drawn from the Downstream department of freely and legally downloadable MP3s: (1) a consideration of Richard Devine’s collection of field recordings of consumer technology such as printers and so forth (“An Alan Lomax of Lost Technology”), (2) a gloss on urgent information flow by Soundmutations (“A Series of Glitchy Twitchy Switchbacks Through a Steady Stream of Low-level Pulses”), (3) a live recording of a feedback-laden performance by Dave Seidel, aka Mysterybear (“Upload Through the Red Door”), (4) Sara Pinheiro‘s fragile arrangement of avian sound (“The Sonic Trajectories of Birds”), (5) Neil Wiernik‘s submerged pianism and balanced play between foreground and background (“More Than Haze for Haze’s Sake”), (6) the “glitchstep” of Biting Eye, aka Ben Bridges (“What’s in a Genre?”), (7) a casual field recording (related to the image shown up top) by Richard Thomas, CCO of the great RjDj and Inception apps (“45 Seconds of Unaugmented Reality”), and (8) an interview with Kid Koala (“Music for Drawing”).

And, for reasons that are always beyond me when it occurs, not one but two entries in this site’s automated Saturday compendiums of the prior week’s twitter.com/disquiet feed: (9) October 8 and (10) October 15.

The most popular searches of the past month were, in descending order: the truth about frank, autechre, 11-Sep, app, fernando pessoa, film, film scores, framework, lique, mp3, muller, music, OUTRA-G, raymond scott, sexby, tangerine dream, alan morse davies, 2009, 4’33 field recordings, aairria.

William Fowler Collins, of Generation Drone, Live (MP3)

It will be interesting to read retrospective impressions, a decade from now, about the generation of musicians who gave themselves over to the drone — a generation of musicians who dispensed with the recognizable and memorable sequences of melodic elements of their recent predecessors, and instead distinctly favored a tonal bliss (and seeming stasis) whose unique properties divulge themselves only through close listening, deep patience, and side-by-side comparison.

There will be vast amounts of music to be revisited, ranging throughout genres, from doom metal gongs to rural country ambience to everday noises derived from the realm of European free improvisation. No doubt the work of William Fowler Collins will be considered. Perhaps drone scholars will focus on the recording of his live performance at the On Land Festival in San Francisco from 2009. An MP3 of it was posted earlier today for free download at the website of the record label Root Strata (rootstrata.com), which sponsored the concert series, and it is already circulating widely. (It’s enclosed in a Zip file and housed on the mediafire.com service.)

I was at the concert. In my review at the time, “On Land Festival, Opening Afternoon,” I noted how Collins, who performed solo, “evoked his adopted home of the southwest by producing rich, feedback-intense approximations of Ennio Morricone soundtracks; he patiently limned the delicate no man’s land between abstraction and melody.” As heard in the MP3, the concert was even darker than description at the time suggests. When the sound of a lap guitar arises, it’s as if a whole world of hurt has been unpacked from a single chord from an old Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys recording. When waves of feedback waft up, it’s like the the entire Neil Young catalog has been set afire. And on the occasion when rhythm dares to present itself, as a nascent chugga-chugga, the failure — the determined failure — to resolve into a deeper, more trenchant phrasing reveals the piece as an especially maudlin vestige of doom metal. The sense of ritual, of ceremony, makes a very strong impression.

Track originally posted at rootstrata.com. More on Collins at williamfowlercollins.com.

He has a new album, The Resurrections Unseen, out on the Type label, and it is streaming freely at soundcloud.com:

More on the new release at typerecords.com.