Gintas K’s “Lėti” reviewed by Felthat

The work of Gintas Kraptavicius who works usually under moniker Gintas K since 1994 opens up a entirely different universe tingling with variety of references and influences. Since he has been working in a diverse fields of modern composition, sound art and sound installation, film music, granular synthesis, electronic music that is positively problematic to be defined and classified under one file, quite naturally you might experience a richness of  all this.16 years after his first album with Crónica based in Oporto, Portugal he is coming back with an electronic array of tracks. A synthedelic tableau – a script of gentle melodies and subtle granular squelches and minimalistic but not necessarily involving repetition and all the aspects of minimal music characteristics, he slowly navigates towards a narrative that is both pleasant and in some form keeps the dramatism of every day discoveries as an open form to the listener. That is probably a note to a listener to participate in the whole listening process more openly. A set of 11 tracks that are both a pleasure to listen as well as something to ponder on when it comes to the work of a composer that blends so many fantastic elements into an opaque calleidoscope.

via Felthat

New release: Bruno Duplant’s “Sombres Miroirs”

a polished and reflective surface gives us the stable and sincere image of a subject
the subject here is the world today both planet, nature, humanity, civilizations, individuals
and possibly, probably the one of tomorrow, dark in my eyes & embittered in my heart

a kind of orchestral mise en abyme of these mirrors
with its moments of tension, implosions, explosions, choruses of mystical lamentations
hope & despair in ever-recurring successions

the art of combining sounds and silences
during a time previously defined here
as an echo to these dark mirrors
dark ages

Sombres miroirs is the continuation of the work Élégie du temps présent published by Granny records in 2021. A third part of this triptych will appear soon, Insondables humeurs.

Sombres miroirs is now available as a limited-release CD, download or stream.

New release: TAMTAM’s “Eleven Songs”

At the beginning of 2019, Cartsten Seiffarth at the Singuhr Projekte invited TAMTAM to develop a sound installation for the great hall at Berghain. This resulted in the work Eleven Songs – Halle am Berghain, which understood the installation space as an instrument. One consequence of this is that the individual pieces are not transferable to another medium. Nevertheless, TAMTAM prepared two of these eleven songs for a digital release in a two-channel format.

For Morton is a spectral drone made of precisely composed electric contrabass legato strokes. The piece sits like a static color in space, a pure atmosphere, while Tempelhofworks with the material that led to the version set in the installation space. For this release, TAMTAM mixed a new version of Tempelhof that preserves the installation’s tone but is compatible with a two-channel mix while creating links to TAMTAM’s previous release in Crónica, A100 (156~2020).

Eleven Songs is now available for streaming and download through Crónica.

Bruno Duplant’s “Sombres Miroirs” reviewed by African Paper

Der französische Komponist und Mehrfachinstrumentalist Bruno Duplant bringt mit “Sombre Miroirs” Ende des Monats ein neues Album und somit den zweiten Teil der im vorigen Jahr mit “Élégie du temps présen” (Granny Records) begonnen Trilogie heraus. In zwei auslandenden Soundscapes kreist Dupont wie beim Vorgänger um den Zustand der Welt – “planet, nature, humanity, civilizations, individuals” – und bringt in einem von soghaften Spannungsbögen, plötzlichen Eruptionen nicht selten harscher Art und evokativen Klangen geprägten “orchestral mise en abyme” eine pessimistische Sicht zum Ausdruck. Das Album erscheint auf CD und als Download bei Crónica, die bereits seine gemeinsame Arbeit mit Rutger Zuydervelt herausbrachten. Der abschließende Teil der Trilogie, “Insondables humeurs” soll ebenfalls dieses Jahr erscheinen.

via African Paper

Morten Riis’s “Lad enhver lyd minde os om” reviewed by Vital Weekly

Somehow this sounded like a familiar name, but I couldn’t find anything about him that I had written earlier. Morten Riis is from Denmark, where he works as a composer, sound artist and researcher. Amongst the things he does are large scale sound installations. He recorded the music on the cassette using homemade synthesizers and modified four-track cassette recorders. It is not said how the cassette recorders are modified, but perhaps it is a bit of nerd thought here. There is nothing significant scale about the music on this cassette. The sixteen pieces are pretty brief, ranging from one minute and thirty seconds to three minutes. That gives the cassette the idea of a sketchbook. None of these pieces sounds as if they are worked out, but rather a quick pencil drawing that happens to be quite detailed if you look/listen closer. Riis has that fine quality of a lo-fi musician in his music, with grainy textures, rough ambient, and mild noise. I guess the difference is that where many of his peers indulge in longer pieces, Riis keeps his music short. Another difference might be his use of synthesizers rather than field recordings or heavily treated sound sources. As such, he offers quite some variation in his music. Loop-like, drone-like, a bit louder, or a bit quieter. This tape, these sixteen pieces in about forty minutes, is a great sketchbook. (FdW)

via Vital Weekly

Bruno Duplant’s “Sombres Miroirs” reviewed by Vital Weekly

The man has many releases to his name, and it is tough to put his music into one particular genre. There are times when I would have said that his music fits the world of ambient music, with a penchant for the lo-fo approach, but this work is something different altogether. There is no evidence of it, not on the cover of the information, but it sounds as if Duplant conducts a small ensemble. There seem to be wind and string instruments. There might also be some electronics. They are all used to playing some heavily controlled music, which has a very modern classical feel. Maybe Duplant played all of these instruments himself? Maybe this is all from an orchestral sample pack? I really have no idea. The title translates as ‘dark mirrors’, and Duplant says about the album, “a polished and reflective surface gives us the stable and sincere image of a subject. The subject here is the world today, both planet, nature, humanity, civilizations, individuals and possibly, probably the one of tomorrow, dark in my eyes & embittered in my heart”. That may explain some of the grim characters of the music. With everything under control, there is also a lot of tension buried in the music. Perhaps that is how Duplant sees the world? Dark and on the surface civilized, but beneath the pavement, there is unrest. I have no idea if that is the idea behind this orchestral suite that comes in two parts of exactly twenty-one minutes. While I may not be the biggest fan of contemporary classical music, I found this a pretty exciting release. Maybe because it raised many questions while sounding beautifully dark and ominous. (FdW)

via Vital Weekly

Morten Riis’s “Lad enhver lyd minde os om” reviewed by Silence and Sound

Le nouvel album de Morten Riis s’apparente à une oeuvre fantôme, objet sonore construit autour de sensations auditives et de variations émotionnelles échappées d’un au-delà déconstruit, traversé de granit éclaté et de poussière concentrée. 

Lad enhver lyd minde os om flotte au dessus de surfaces disloquées prêtes à s’évaporer, formes chancelantes à l’abstraction corrosive. 

Morten Riis travaille la matière avec minutie, plongeant l’auditeur dans un oeil du cyclone aux courants regroupés sur eux-mêmes, vestiges de narrations passées et de lambeaux d’humanité dérivant dans un trou noir à la puissance ambient extatique. Absorbant. Roland Torres

via Silence and Sound

Morten Riis’s “Lad enhver lyd minde os om” reviewed by African Paper

Der in Dänemark lebende und als Klangkünstler, Komponist und Wissenschaftler tätige Morten Riis bringt sein erstes Solo-Release seit 2009 heraus. “Lad enhver lyd minde os om” wurde auf selbstgebauten Synthies produziert und mit modifizierten 4-Spur-Rekordern aufgenommen. Es erscheint digital und – mit Bonusmaterial – auf Tape bei Crónica, das Artwork basiert auf der Fotografie “Interior #12″ (2010) von Trine Søndergaard mit freundlicher Genehmigung der Künstlerin und der Martin Asbæk Gallery.

“Lad enhver lyd minde os om (Let every sound reminds us of) wreathes around our conceptions regarding a sense of togetherness, perishability, the inherent sensuousness of objects and potential poetic statements coupled with humans’ belief that through language and representation we can control everything around us. The album is composed on homemade synthesisers and modified 4-track cassette recorders, thus creating a music-technological poetic that underlines the specificity of media and the human-object participatory democracy that creates what we normally conceptualise as an artistic expression. It is a slow process in which several melodic elements are layered to create an expression in which the individual voices vanish in myriads of noise and textures. Behind the often-chaotic roaring sea of tape mediation, melodic structures emerge, like sunken forgotten memories in our minds.”

via African Paper

Gintas K’s “Lėti” reviewed by Inactuelles, musiques singulières

   L’artiste sonore et compositeur lithuanien Gintas K sort, seize ans après son premier disque chez Crónica, l’excellent label portugais consacré aux musiques électroniques et expérimentales, Lèti, « Lent » en lithuanien. Onze titres de musique électronique à la fine granulation : regardez bien la pochette !

   Clochettes, touches de synthétiseur : un clapotis, un tintinnabulement enchanteur, c’est “Bells”, surprenante vignette pastorale qui s’enfonce dans la touffeur des herbes électroniques. Vous y êtes ! Et ce n’est pas une “Hallucination” (second titre) désagréable. La musique gonfle, fait des bulles, danse imperceptiblement. De la musique pour des toiles d’Yves Tanguy. De petites toiles arachnéennes. Ce qui n’empêche pas l’envol de “Various”, synthétiseurs grondants et dramatiques, toute une cavalerie grandiose jamais pesante en effet, du Tim Hecker micro-dentelé, avec une belle stase onirique à la respiration sous-marine. Superbe travail !

 Avec “Variation”, la musique devient borborygmes, boursouflures minuscules du matériau sonore : surgit un monde étrange près de s’engloutir. “Atmosphere” est au contraire saturé, débordant d’événements sonores qui  se ralentissent, s’étalent autour de virgules ironiques sur fond de drones poussiéreux. Pas le meilleur titre, selon moi, ventre mou de l’album. Je préfère “Savage”, granuleux en diable, crapaud sonore pataugeant dans une bouillasse électronique vaguement monstrueuse, dont émerge une poussée formidable, pustuleuse de bruissements métalliques serrés, qui retourne à la vase lourde. “Guitar” ? Souvenir énigmatique d’un instrument fantôme, réduit à des griffures courtes, espacées, accompagnées de gribouillis balbutiés !

   L’un des meilleurs titres de l’album, le miraculeux “Nice Pomp”, est d’une délicatesse confondante, ce qui n’exclut pas une belle force. Le foisonnement électronique est travaillé en couches à multiples facettes qui s’estompent avant un finale hoquetant. “Query”, à l’énigmatique beauté transparente, se charge peu à peu de poussées cascadantes d’orgue avant de retourner à un calme bucolique parsemée de fleurettes sonnantes : Gintas K est le maître de ces petites pièces précieuses ! L’avant-dernier titre, “Ambient”, s’inscrit parfaitement dans cette esthétique raffinée. Il associe jeux d’eau et nappes synthétiques légères, créant une sorte de jardin japonais sonore, apaisant et nimbé de mystère grâce à son chemin de drones amortis.

   Le “Bonus Sound” conclut ce parcours par un hymne ambiant somptueux, feuilleté de frémissements, à la magnifique granulation électronique.

   Indéniablement un grand disque, subtilement ciselé !

via Inactuelles, musiques singulières