New release: Emidio Buchinho & Ricardo Guerreiro’s “W​.​o​.​W. – Wand of Watt”

W​.​o​.​W. – Wand of Watt
W.o.W. – Wand of Watt is a collaborative work for electric guitar and computer live-sampling and generative sound synthesis. Each resulting piece explores the conception, installation and live articulation of context-specific situations in which sound is an emerging phenomenon. The generation, capture, amplification, processing and diffusion of sound are entirely taking place on stage, in real-time.

Three different versions of this work were presented. W.o.W. #1 and W.o.W. #2, both commissioned by the Granular association, took place, respectively, at the city of Aveiro, in Espaço Performas, in October 2009 and during the 3rd edition of the Metasonic Festival, at the Goethe Institut, in Lisbon, in April 2010.

The recording now presented documents a private performance of W.o.W. #3, on the 4th of June of 2011, that concluded a four-day artistic residency developed at the Oficinas do Convento in Montemor-o-Novo. Once again, space and the daily sounds of its wide context and common use were determinant to the activity of the musicians.

W.o.W._Wand-of-Watt_EBuchinho-RGuerreiro_RG-EB_perform-live-set
Emidio Buchinho: Concept and composition, electric guitar, devices, microphones, speakers and electronics; production, sound recording and mastering; photography.
Ricardo Guerreiro: Concept and composition, computer programming, sound processing and multi-channel electroacoustic diffusion; production and mastering.

“Transmissions” reviewed by KindaMuzik

Transmissions
Mathias Delplanque maakt industrial. Niet van die bonkmuziek in vierkwartsmaats, al dan niet opgesmukt met metalen gitaren en nihilistische eindtijdlyriek. Hij presenteert ware industriële composities: drie korte en een heel lang stuk opgebouwd uit veldopnamen van machinegeluid.

Zo te horen is de machinerie in het Textielmuseum van Cholet in prima geoliede conditie. Het raderwerk knarst en piept nauwelijks, maar ratelt gesmeerd. En je hoort de olie- of brandstofvaten zachtmoedig pruttelen en borrelen. Zo zachtmoedig zelfs dat je je niet zozeer afvraagt waarnaar je luistert, maar waarom? Delplanque maakt ambient die in weinig afwijkt van het rumoer dat een normale, niet eens al te drukke stadse straat voortbrengt. Moet je daarvoor de oren spitsen?

De Fransman raakt de luisteraar bijna kwijt in een ietwat te loze exercitie in vooral niet opvallen. Voor het zover is, zet hij in het slotwerk van veertig minuten de troefkaart in. Op het Technisch Lyceum Livet in Nantes gaf Delplanque workshops. Hij kwam thuis met een enorme collectie opnamen van de studenten die in de weer waren met een veelheid aan gereedschappen en materialen. En juist met die rijke schakering op zijn palet weet hij pas echt danig raad.

Delplanque maakt van vele honderden samples een symfonie waarin op elk moment de ene machine in conversatie of duet treedt met de andere. In die een-op-een ‘gesprekken’ dwingt hij de focus van het luisteren naar de zeggingskracht van de geluiden an sich. Hier geen breed uitgesmeerde en gedragen wolligheid meer, maar de industriële techniek zelf die het hoogste woord heeft. Deze aaneenschakeling van machinale dialogen in miniatuur blijkt zo veelzijdig dat bovenstaande waaromvraag van tig intrigerende, sprankelende en twinkelende antwoorden voorzien wordt. Steeds weer een klein: daarom, dus. Sven Schlijper

via KindaMuzik

Futurónica 125

futurónica_125
Episode 125 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, October 17th.

The playlist of Futurónica 125 is:

  1. Robert Hampson, Signaux 2 (2012, Signaux, Editions Mego)
  2. Eleh, Reflections On Living Space (2012, The Weight of Accumulation, Important Records)
  3. Robert Hampson, Signaux 1 (2012, Signaux, Editions Mego)

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

Marc Behrens’ YouTube channel

jhicjdcj
A probably never-ending story, and subject to updating, but here is Marc Behrens’ YouTube channel.

So far, some live-performances and documentary videos of installation projects have been uploaded. Check out Behrens’ ongoing exploration of the subjects of mass air transportation vs. mythological creatures who supposedly live in the skies («Clould») or move backwards in time and watch the duo Behrens Heyduck (Marc Behrens and Nikolaus Heyduck) play with plastic waste in 2001 («Plastic»).

“Concret-Sens” reviewed by The Sound Projector

cronica084-2013_520
In recent years there has been a resurgence of interest in the techniques of musique concrète and electro-acoustic composition. A substantial reissue program from Editions Mego and subsequent attention from outside the fields of modern composition has brought particular attention to Groupes Researches de Musicales, Pierre Schaeffer’s influential research organization. Yet, rather than considering the GRM as an organizing principle for diverse and radical experimentation, contemporary music alluding to the GRM too often takes an ideal of its sound and output as a concrete object. Instead of a research facility interested in the nature of recording, the limits of composition and of responses to rapid technological change, it has become a demarcated sound to be replicated and an image of the future divorced from historical change or development.

Regardless of this narrowing of the studio’s work, the GRM did not cease operation after the period associated with its most famous alumni. Directed by Christian Zanesi it still conducts research, runs teaching programs and develops sound processing and representational software. As a graduate of the organization, Emmanuel Mievile forms part of a generation working through these issues of legacy and technology. Unfortunately, the press surrounding his Concret-Sens record sounds suspiciously elegiac for a lost state of musique concrète; of sharp-suited technicians tinkering with unwieldy technology and novel means of recording sound. According to the attached notes the techniques Mieville employs are defined by the framework employed by Pierre Schaeffer and the title is derived from the French adjective ‘concresence’, borrowed from previous GRM director François Bayle’s conceptual work. Similarly, the structure of each piece, electrical outlets, tape and field recordings and granular synthesis, are approaches that echo the preoccupations of those post-war modernists. Wireless transmission, blurring distinctions between recording and manipulating sound, proposing similarities between tape recording and haunting and the studio as musical instrument are all common themes echoed between Mieville and the early GRM output.

Despite this framing, Mieville’s work does possess a distinctive and progressive quality. The three pieces can be placed on a continuum of musique concrète and it is certainly grounded in an appreciation of the original terms of electro-acoustic composition; the technology and the approaches to composition it necessitated and defined. But Mieville possesses enough skill and unusual interests to mark his own contribution to the field. His aptitude with modern recording techniques and concern with acoustics responds to the question of what the GRM represents for this decade. Mieville brings a field recordists’ willingness to concede pace and structure to chance and his preference for dense, continuous tones indicates an awareness of the lessons imparted by electro-acoustic composition to contemporary drone and harsh noise. Mieville’s work is grounded in a theoretical background and that comes through in his techniques. As recognizable sounds meet abstract pulses and snatches of spoken word, notions of subjectivity and objectivity and composed and found sound are drawn out. Much like the relation of software and hardware, the sounds and their origins are sometimes clear and at others completely indistinguishable.

At times there is too little that disrupts the process and challenges the listener. But Concret-Sens is a bold attempt to play with the legacy of the GRM and test those limits against Mieville’s own interests and compositional ability.

Chris Trowell

via The Sound Projector

New release: Mikel R. Nieto’s “The Sound of Underwater Friction Produced by Movement”

The Sound of Underwater Friction Produced by Movement
Mikel R. Nieto’s new release, “The Sound of Underwater Friction Produced by Movement”, is now available in Crónica!

This recording was made in the Mediterranean Sea with a special hydrophone designed to listen to echolocations made by dolphins. Obviously these animal communications are masked by the sound of friction, and personally I found this sound very interesting. Scientists hate it because it affects the listening of dolphins, and a special filter was built to avoid it.

Can we maybe think about this sound as an endangered sound?

In addition, this sound is created by velocity and therefore it’s not yet possible to upload in a soundmap format, much as it happens in e.g. soundwalks. It’s just not possible. I prefer to experiment with this limitation than to hide it. If in a soundmap one could make two markers for a single sound, we could then maybe calculate the velocity of the bodies. And the title of the piece would be so different!

Futurónica 124

futurónica_124
Episode 124 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, October 3rd.

The playlist of Futurónica 124 is:

  1. Marc Behrens, 20 Zonen (2010, 20 Zonen, Auf Abwegen)
  2. Marc Behrens, Irregular Characters (2013, Irregular Characters, Museu Serralves, Soopa)

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