Futurónica 107

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Episode 107 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, February 7th.

The playlist of Futurónica 107 is:

  1. Radial Chao Opera, 02 (2012, DVE KÉT, Sonoscopia)
  2. Two White Monsters Around a Round Table, Minnows Darted Into His Ears and Eyes and Under His Nostrils, Looking For Sustenance (2012, Undefined Frontier, Sonoscopia)
  3. João Filipe / João Guimarães, The Crack in Space (2012, João Filipe / João Guimarães, Sonoscopia)
  4. Radial Chao Opera, 05 (2012, DVE KÉT, Sonoscopia)
  5. Two White Monsters Around a Round Table, La Mort Blanche (2012, Undefined Frontier, Sonoscopia)
  6. Radial Chao Opera, 03 (2012, DVE KÉT, Sonoscopia)

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

“No End of Vinyl” reviewed by The Sound Projector

No End of Vinyl
Pure I believe was this electronic extremist who did stuff for Mego and attained notoriety for sampling the run-out grooves of vinyl records to create his very austere digital music. He’s still milking the “end of vinyl” concept apparently, since on No End Of Vinyl (CRÓNICA 079-2013) he’s enlisted ten prominent electronica creators to contribute tracks (some of them remixes) based on the theme. Even the sleeve itself is cleverly overprinted with concentric circles on black card, so that it looks like an idealised vision of microgrooves. Hereon, @c – slow and increasingly menacing fragments of gurgly broken sounds; Christoph de Bablon – remix of the original ‘The End Of Vinyl’ to produce a boring and pompous synth tune; JSX with his ‘Biological Agents’ and a decent piece of techno-stealth dredged from the sewers of Paris; cindytalk hurling buckets of digital water over a cliff in slow motion; Goner’s remake of a Pure track, using too many effects and gimmicks until incoherence dominates; and Opcion – an effective object lesson in “less is more”, with chilling desolate tones. We also have the very interesting Arturas Bumšteinas, whose ingenious ‘Opera Povera’ was probably constructed from classical music on vinyl, and exhibits a painstaking craft that is notably absent from the other auto-piloted submissions. But Rashad Becker is also memorable with his strangely rotating and colliding elements, spinning in layers like a wall-sculpture made of 100 bicycle wheels; and Pita, whose solo work I don’t seem to have heard for a long time now, and whose ‘This & That Edit’ has the kind of purity of form that Terry Riley would adore, plus a clarity of tone that’s like spring water on an otherwise rather sludgy-sounding comp. All of these contributions show us possibilities, ways of opening out an idea through remaking and refitting. Yet very few of them really reflect the vinyl-ness of records, apart from a few audible samples of crackles and clicks which surface in some of the contributions, and the digital “identity” is very much up front – processed, artificial, impossibly “perfect”. There’s a double-edged irony to all of this, since (as the label webpage indicates) the original release of fourteen years ago was full of millennial uncertainty about the future of media carriers, and recorded music in general; it was asking the question “will vinyl die?” and weeping a solitary tear as if every CD being pressed were another nail in the coffin. Now of course, the way the tide is turning in favour of vinyl and analogue media again, it seems the question is whether the digital has a future. Ed Pinsent

via The Sound Projector

“No End of Vinyl” reviewed by Skug

No End of Vinyl
DJ Pure greift sein erstes, komplett digital produziertes und 1999 auf Mego veröffentlichtes Album »the.end.of.vinyl« wieder auf. Dazu hat er zehn KünstlerInnen eingeladen, die Stücke von damals neu zu interpretieren. Entstanden ist – abgesehen von der erfrischend ironischen Auseinandersetzung mit der eigenen Arbeit – ein überraschend zugängliches Album, das auch trotz der Vielzahl an ProtagonistInnen über die gesamte Spielzeit den Spannungsbogen aufrecht erhält. Was die Stücke zusammenklebt, ist vor allem der bedrohliche Sound im Hintergrund, der wie eine dunkle Gewitterwolke über allem hängt und uns zu verstehen gibt: das kann jederzeit über uns hereinbrechen. Auf solidem Niveau – wenngleich auch nicht unerwartet – legt es Pita streng an, rashad becker verspielt und Christoph de Babalon pflegt wie eh und je den Breakbeat. Opcion hingegen überrascht bei »“end“end“« mit einer durchaus charmanten Endlosrille, und Cindytalk’s »Miyamizu« gelingt es, sich durch Intensität und ganz ohne Beat von den umliegenden Stücken abzuheben. Mit »Never Ending Vinyl« setzen Current 909 vs. Pure einen würdigen Schlusspunkt für dieses Release – gegen »diese« Clap und »diese« digitalen Gewitterwolken ist noch immer kein Kraut gewachsen. Chris Sperl

via Skug

“M.M.M.M.”, an installation by Pedro Tudela and Miguel Carvalhais, opens next Monday

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“M.M.M.M.” is an installation created by Pedro Tudela and Miguel Carvalhais, with the collaboration of Lia, for the temporary exhibits room of the Puppet Museum of Porto.

“M.M.M.M.” was inspired by the Puppet Theater of Porto and its museum. The installation evokes the movements and memories of the puppets exhibited, using sounds collected through the manipulation of puppets, sets and scenic objects. These sounds feed five software modules and speakers distributed by the room, filling it with the sounds of the puppets and of the actors that bring them to life.

The sole visual element of the installation is a visual projection, conceived by Austrian artist Lia, with graphic elements that suggest string puppets and are stimulated by the sounds projected into the room.

“M.M.M.M.” opens next Monday at 18h00 at the Museu das Marionetas do Porto. The museum celebrates its first anniversary with this installation and a with a brand new exhibition, “O Segredo das Flores”.

MMMM-lia

Follow the event for more information.

Simon Whetham live in Porto

simon whetham
Next wednesday, January 29th, we will be very honored to welcome Simon Whetham for an unmissable solo performance at Porto’s Passos Manuel. Simon has so far released two albums in Crónica, “Mic.Madeira” (with Hugo Olim, in 2011) and “Never So Alone” (in 2013), as well as the wonderful “Crossovers” compilation, available as a free download.

Simon-Whetham-520

More information on the event.

Futurónica 106

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Episode 106 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, January 24th.

The playlist of Futurónica 106 is comprised of pieces from “Phonon”, a project of Hugo Paquete for the Institute of Viral Sonology with contributions by Anton Mobin, Chris Black, Dezroy Adam, Evan X Merz, Hugo Paquete, Irad Lee, Jaime Casal, Miguel Carvalhais, Nathalie Fougeras and RMEDL. “Phonon” is available as a free download from Modisti.

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