“Positions” reviewed by whisperinandhollerin

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‘Positions’ finds Tellinga exploring space. Not outer space, but physical space, and the relationships between sounds when created within certain spaces. Yes, it’s all relative, and ‘Positions’ is concerned with the interactions of sound and performers, performers, sounds and audience or listener within the dimensional space of rooms. The way sounds resonate, reverberate or otherwise differ within the confines of walls and ceilings, spaces with and without people, are all integral to the tonalities and atmospheres of the five pieces collected here.

A lone voice issues for a shrieking note in an empty room… unidentifiable instruments vibrate against one another to forge unsettling half-chords.

Modulating trombones create long, low, swelling drones, eerie and affecting. At times strangely like whale song, others like building fear chords, the album’s first piece is ominously atmospheric and alien-sounding.

‘Truth, exercise for a listener’ is a truly ambient work. An improvised work recorded with handheld devices, the distant ripple of chatter, the creak of a door hinge, clatters and scrapes, and long, slow trombone drones drift through the air like a fog horn in sonic slow-mo. At times, you feel like saying to the people talking ‘can you be quiet, I’m trying to listen to the music’, but of course, that’s the challenge the piece presents the listener, and this is a participation exercise on multiple levels.

The success of ‘Positions’ lies in the fact that it can be appreciated from many perspectives, and while it is thought-provoking and theory-driven, it’s also interesting on a sonic level.

via whisperinandhollerin

“Modular Works 2015Q1” reviewed by Vital Weekly

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I know I get into deep trouble doing what I am about to do now: review a download only release. It will spawn mails that scream ‘me mine me mine too’, or ‘what has Jos Smolders that I don’t?’ (let’s see how many got this last sentence, and immediately mailed me when they read the caption ‘download by Cronica’ and ask ‘I me mine download too now’ – I’ll mail this sentence back to you). Smolders has more than just great music. I first met Jos Smolders early 1987 when his band THU20 played at V2, and so was my troupe, Kapotte Muziek. Being slightly older, he came across like a teacher, and spoke those words which rang until this day: ‘all of this noise you people produce is interesting, but when on earth will you start composing music with all of this noise’. That was a most important lesson, and over the years I often sat next to Jos, discussing the nature of a musical composition we’d be working on (as IMCA, then THU20, Wasm, but countless others also). But Jos being Jos, being much more into the future of music business hardly believes in the future of music being distributed on physical formats and rather has 96-bit audio on a website than 16 bit on shiny silver disc or black platter and hence his music is hardly reviewed in these pages. That is a shame, as when in the mid-80s Vital was a concern on a piece of paper, Jos was very much involved in writing (and spoke those other immortal words: ‘great magazine, though hard to read the language; what is it, English?’ Improvements may take some time or simply never happen) and always was keenly interested in where Vital went next, certainly when it came to the digital domain. Following his career with reel-to-reel machines and later computer technology, Smolders these days occupies himself with modular synthesizers, which seems like the new laptop (‘have modular, will travel’)? I see them everywhere these days and a lot of the times I want to ask these players: ‘when will you actually start to compose music with these modules?’ The modular synthesizer seems very much a tool for some mindless improvisation; flick on and off switches for any amount of time. Since 2014 Smolders has quarterly releases of works he composed in the three months before, using his modular set-up and this continues in 2015. Cronica Electronica from Portugal released these four pieces, composed by Smolders when he was working on remastering old work by Pierre Henry (see Vital Weekly 975), who is someone which is major source of inspiration for Smolders, along with Robert Hampson of Main; in fact three titles refer to the latter. These pieces are heavily edited I’d say, and culled from various sessions of expert knob-twiddling, but the true beauty is in the fact that Smolders actually composes music with these materials, and not have some machines producing sounds. There is the addition of field recordings, a squeaky chair in ‘For RH (Light)’ for instance, in a most fitting tribute to Henry or the field recordings of ‘TomTomTomTom’; that piece may seem the least composed but oddly enough the one that sounded more like the ‘old’ Smolders (say the collaboration he did with Yiorgis Sakellariou from a few years ago). Not an overtly long release, but one of great beauty. (FdW)

“Modular Works 2015Q1” reviewed by Touching Extremes

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The metaphrasis of musique concrete presented by Jos Smolders in this short cycle of rather recent compositions has the merit of expressing carefully selected concepts with logical precision. Repeated plunges into the realm of impenetrability also reveal many of its attractive features. The three movements of “For RH” (about time that someone dedicated a work to the great Robert Hampson) escape right away from the quasi-mysticism typical of similar releases: successions of variable acoustic environments halfway through “mildly unsettling” and “utterly absorbing” warrant the listener’s continuous focus. Smolders is able to camouflage luminescent outbursts and menacing crescendos under a patina of corrupted resonance while retaining a sense of scrupulous analysis of the sonic spectra. Heteromorphous electronics are dignified by intelligently applied subsonic enhancements and endless reverbs; a few presences from the real and the natural world are effectively placed in the mix, following the genre’s finest traditions without “cheap replica” smells. The final track “TomTomTomTom” is an impeccable specimen of fairly abstract cinema for the ears where the composer’s hand is even more visible. Coordinated propagations, constant changes in the dynamic perspective, perceptible pulses, spectacular glissando and field recordings (comprising gorgeous birds) leave us practically without questions. One can’t decide if remaining silent and start the “vague reminiscence of what just happened” game, or reiterating the experience as soon as possible. Massimo Ricci

via Touching Extremes

“Positions” reviewed by ATTN:Magazine

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The trombones at the top of Positions droop like aged oak trees, hunched under the insistent weight of centuries alive. The drones curve solemnly; sepia memories of passing spitfires, fanfares pointed downward to rattle through the ground and the buried dead, swarming into a microtonal smog of weariness and withering vibrancy. Their tones are noble and bold, yet their pitch wavers with weakness. It’s a sad situation to perceive. Time hasn’t been fond. I loiter beneath the three trombones and watch them stagger above me, retreating and advancing perilously. I wait for them to collapse over my head.

And now it’s me on the advance. “Truth, Exercise For A Listener” carries me through a venue as trombone and double bass emit low hums like static portions of electric fences. I step right in front of them; I wander between the conversations of half-listeners; I venture outside where the drones are a peripheral presence largely obfuscated by traffic noise. My soundscape pivots upon these two constants, and I understand my own movements only as a proximity to these two players (how the reverb respires, how the instruments bob and recede amidst the other sounds that grace the venue). In an inversion of the first piece, space navigates sound rather than vice versa.

With these first two pieces – both quarter of an hour long – Tellinga erects a spectrum upon which I traverse. On one end: sound as sculpture, as protagonist, as centre of the room. On “Three Modulators, For Basses”, I return to examining sound in the same manner as I would a painting in a gallery – reducing all of sensory data to the role of marginal experiential padding in order to grant greater focus to the object in front of me. In this instance, I hear three double basses hyperventilating as the bow surges back and forth, uncomfortable in their proximity to one another, rubbing eachother raw with harmonic friction. Echo (and by extension, space) form an absent backdrop against which these three pillars of sound are erected. For the other pieces, the focal point disperses. The instrument becomes a sound of equal prominence to the scuff of feet on bright gallery floors, or the sibilance of audience voices that rebounds into the vast space between my head and the ceiling.

I don’t know whether the whistles and extended breaths of “Positions, For Those Involved” are figments of deliberate performance or unexpected acts of focal hijacking, seizing the social rituals of the live show (in which the crowd remains quiet and still, leaving the performers to pronounce themselves upon the pale sonic canvas) in order to slip into the guise of performer. My field of listening contracts and expands as I readjust my understanding of what I should be listening to. Should my experience revolve around the sonic objects I deem to be deliberate acts of performance, or are the reverberant dog barks that infiltrate the space of equal importance? Who exactly qualifies as “those involved”?

via ATTN:Magazine

“Positions” reviewed by nitestylez.de

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Released earlier this month via the Porto, Portugal-based imprint Cronica is Martijn Tellinga’s debut album “Position” in which the artist, who’s also been a part of the great experimental project Zona Fumatori which has released one CDr named “Enteng” via the Staalplaat-related label Stichting Mixer in the early 2000s, explores experimental territories as well albeit these are of organic, largely unprocessed nature instead of being based on electronic knob fiddling. The opener “Three Modulators, for trombones” immediately reminds us of large cruise ship horns echoing and clanging through Hamburg’s harbour – yep, we are located not far away from that area -, “Truth, exercise for a listener” combines Field Recordings of audience and background noise, wind, deep bass drones and general chatter with tenderly played trombones before surprising the listener with off-kilter pipes throughout the compositions last quarter whilst “Branching Into Others, for a large instrumental field” serves layers of deep, bewailing lugubriousness and heart-felt melancholia.”Three Modulators, for basses” transfers the approach and composition of the opening track into the musical world of double basses to a more agitated, unsettled and partly even disturbing result and the final “Positions, for those involved” is a fragile structure built of Field Recordings, echoes and droning frequencies from a far distance – without any real instruments involved. An interesting one for sure.

via nitestylez.de

Futurónica 149

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Episode 149 of Futurónica, a broadcast in Rádio Manobras (91.5 MHz in Porto, 18h30) and Rádio Zero (21h GMT, repeating on Tuesday at 01h) airs tomorrow, September 18th.

The playlist of Futurónica 149 is:

  1. Jos Smolders, TomTomTomTom (2015, Modular Works 2015Q1, Crónica)
  2. Jos Smolders, Through the Looking Glass (1997, Tulpas, Selektion)
  3. Jos Smolders, For RH (dark) (2015, Modular Works 2015Q1, Crónica)
  4. Jos Smolders, For RH (debris) (2015, Modular Works 2015Q1, Crónica)
  5. Jos Smolders, Prélude à l’Après Midi d’un Phone (1996, A Fault In The Nothing, Ash International)
  6. Jos Smolders, For RH (light) (2015, Modular Works 2015Q1, Crónica)
  7. Main, Heuristic III (2002, Tau, K-RAA-K)

You can follow Rádio Zero’s broadcasts at radiozero.pt/ouvir and Rádio Manobras at radiomanobras.pt.

New release: Jos Smolders’s “Modular Works 2015Q1”

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Crónica is very proud to present the new release by Jos Smolders “Modular Works 2015Q1”, available today as a free download from Crónica or Crónica’s Bandcamp.

I composed these works during the first months of 2015. They are clearly defined constructions, built in a modernistic fashion. The sounds have a character of their own (objets musicales) but I force my will onto them and thus create a composition. In the months before this production I had been restoring and mastering 10 albums of the music of Pierre Henry. That, as always, had a great influence on my state of mind as a composer. The theatrical approach of Henry is clearly audible in these works. I started with a certain mood in my head and worked from there. First collecting the initial sounds (objets sonores), reworking and editing them and in the mean time placing them in a timeline. Three of the works are dedicated to Robert Hampson, because I admire his electro acoustic works very much and because he can be such an inspiring conversationalist on the subject of Musique Concrete. — Jos Smolders, Tilburg, July 2015

Playing with sound and music for 30 years, co-editing Vital Magazine and founding THU20, a supergroup of the Dutch experimental underground, Smolders has been a significant contributor to the electronic music community. In addition to his work as a sound artist, he founded EARLabs.org in 1998, eventually turning it into a website dedicated to the fledgling netaudio scene, which combined aspects of online magazine, online label, mastering services and social media functionalities in a revolutionary way. A writer, editor, sound designer, composer, producer and pioneer, Jos Smolders uses his broad experience to perfect and polish the sound of artists including Pierre Henry, Jim Jarmusch, Jozef van Wissem, Merzbow and Scanner.

Marc Behrens remasters Hans Ludwig Jacoby, aka “Boche”

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Marc Behrens remastered the entire catalogue of musical works by his friend Hans Ludwig Jacoby, aka “Boche”. He recorded music from the mid 1980s until 1991. Boche’s “Beats” CD, featuring 27 tracks, was just released on Entr’acte and is now available. You can listen to three tracks here and order the CD in Entr’acte.

“Modular Works 2015Q1” reviewed by The Wire

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In the recent surge of modular synth use, the hardware and the process occasionally overtake the music. Lost is the power of modular systems as tools for composition. In this latest installment of his continuing Modular Works series, Dutch underground maven, Vital Weekly contributor and longtime mastering engineer Jos Smolders corrects this imbalance.
Smolders made this set of four pieces under the influence of the Pierre Henry box set he had recently mastered, and the French auteur’s specter looms large, both in the patience of these compositions and flair for dramatic development. The restrained use of concrete sound and extended field recording excerpts creates an organic dialogue with the carefully crafted synth figures. Matt Wuethrich