11/28/13

New Release! Somewhere Between Here And A Warm Place | Richard Ginns And Clearance Sale! 20-40% OFF!!




Somewhere Between Here And A Warm Place | Richard Ginns

1. Calm (11:12)
2. Unfading (7:18)
3. Brighter Later (5:12)
4. Fallow (8:08)
5. Somewhere Between Here And A Warm Place (11:23)





Richard Ginns (b. 1982) Currently living life in Manchester, England. My work is inspired by art, nature and photography, which evoke feelings of nostalgia. Using experimental recording processes, Richard fuses guitar, acoustic objects and field recordings to tape cassette whilst capturing natural mistakes and incorporating 'chance' elements within the recordings. Away from music, I work, drink a lot of tea and spend time with my beloved family, encouraging friends and my incredibly supportive girlfriend Laura Cleveley. 

All sounds were recorded in autumn 2013 direct to a 4-track tape machine 'Somewhere Between Here And A Warm Place' explores change, journeys, new locations, and searches the sounds around us. Polaroid images scanned onto insert card.

All music by Richard Ginns / $10 / ANALOGPATH019 / 4 page insert is included / cdr Limited 100


   Official website ANALOGPATH

11/2/13

Coming Up Next, Richard Ginns | Somewhere Between Here And A Warm Place



Somewhere Between Here And A Warm Place | Richard Ginns

1. Calm
2. Unfading
3. Brighter Later
4. Fallow
5. Somewhere Between Here And A Warm Place





VERY SOON.

10/27/13

New release! Felix Gebhard | Im Merzbau




FELIX GEBHARD | IM MERZBAU

01. Im Merzbau
02. Ab Hannover
03. Zurück Vom Alten Haus
04. Flussfahrt (Leine)


'Im Merzbau' contains four tracks revolving around Felix Gebhard's hometown of Hannover, Germany and the art of Kurt Schwitters - one of that cities' most famous sons.
As a tribute to Schwitters all four tracks are collages, often improvised on the spot, then carefully edited into their final forms.

The title track 'Im Merzbau' is an acoustic translation of childhood memories of afternoons Gebhard spent in Kurt Schwitters' Merzbau - or rather the reconstruction by Peter Bissegger from 1981 that is shown at Sprengel Museum Hannover. The piece is based on recordings made of the reconstructed Merzbau, as well as around the site of the original one - Schwitters' house at Waldhausenstraße 5 in Hannover, that was destroyed in 1943. These recordings act as the piece's beginning and end and are connected by slow-shifting soundscapes, created with electric baritone guitar and several electronic and acoustic sound generators. 
'Im Merzbau' was conceived in celebration of Kurt Schwitters' 125th birthday, June 20, 2012, and was performed live at Oberdeck, Hannover, on that day. 
Recorded fragments of that performance ended up in the final version of the piece.
'Ab Hannover' and 'Zurück Vom Alten Haus' are about leaving or going to Hannover by different modes of transportation. 'Flussfahrt (Leine)' is an imaginary boat trip on the Leine river that crosses Hannover.

$10 / ANALOGPATH018 / Photo card is included / cdr Limited 100





Official website ANALOGPATH


10/16/13

EVENT // TEN YEARS ALIVE ON THE INFINITE PLAIN. No-Neck Blues Band / Loren Connors & Tom Carter / Suzanne Langille & Cammisa Buerhaus




Sun, October 20, 2013 - 8:00pm
ISSUE Project Room, 22 Boerum Place, BrooklynAs part of Ten Years Alive on the Infinite Plain, ISSUE is pleased to present the No-Neck Blues Band, one of the most enigmatic, mysterious, and defiantly anti-commercial groups to emerge from 90s New York. Loren Connors, known for his singular adaptation of Delta bottleneck and ancestral blues, is paired with Tom Carter, whose electric guitar work weaves immensely stacked, long-form drones and psychedelic melodies. The iconic and otherworldly songwriter and vocalist Suzanne Langille performs a collaborative set with Cammisa Buerhaus, performing tonight with vocal manipulations, damaged tape loop, and shortwave radio.

Ten Years Alive on the Infinite Plain– a two-month festival celebrating ISSUE Project Room's 10th anniversary– revisits seminal past projects and initiates new relationships with over 60 artists working across disciplines of sound, dance, performance, and literature. Presented as a series of 24 evenings of provocative double billings, Ten Years Alive blurs the boundaries between divergent disciplines and practices and celebrating the vibrancy of the Brooklyn experimental arts community.

Initially based on guerilla impulse and a dissatisfaction with the early 90’s post grunge diaspora, the No-Neck Blues Band (NNCK) emerged in 1993 on New York’s lower east side, soon congealing into an 8-piece cabal of practicing improvisers, determined to collectively inhabit an elsewhere entirely of their own design. Informed by the relentless determination and arch defiance of the free jazz movement, NNCK’s performances are wild, unpredictable, cathartic events, and the records they published were mysterious, encrypted missives. Twenty years later, it is still difficult to say exactly what is going on with this group, other than that they will appear in full force for one night, once more, at issue’s behest, to celebrate dual anniversaries: ISSUE’s tenth, and their own twentieth.


Tom Carter is best known for his work with Charalambides, which he co-founded with longtime creative partner (and one time wife) Christina Carter in 1991. Carter has also undertaken solo work and numerous collaborations with Bardo Pond, Vanessa Arn, Robert Horton, Ian Nagoski, Tower Recordings, Double Leopards, Yellow Swans, Starving Weirdos, and Jandek, among others.


Brooklyn-based guitarist Loren Connors was born in New Haven, Connecticut in 1949. Best known as a composer and improviser, Connors has issued over 50 guitar records on his own imprints (Daggett, St. Joan, Black Label) since the late 1970s and over two dozen on other labels across the globe. He has recorded under the names Guitar Roberts, Loren Mattei, Loren MazzaCane Connors and other variations. Connors' singular adaptation of the blues is a distinct personal vision combining the Delta bottleneck sound and the ancestral blues voice (appearing as distortion, baying hounds or multi-tracked guitar), with hauntingly unexpected sounds. Outside of Connors' three decades of solo work, he has collaborated with Suzanne Langille, Jim O'Rourke, Darin Gray, Alan Licht, Christina Carter, Keiji Haino, San Agustin, Jandek and many others, as well as leading the group Haunted House.


Since 1989, Suzanne Langille has provided iconic, otherworldly, blues-drenched vocals on husband Loren MazzaCane Connors' albums. In October 1998, Langille released her first solo album, The Enchanted Forest, which features guitar by Connors. Evangelineand Let the Darkness Fall followed in 1999. Langille began performing with New York City trio San Augustin in 1997, eventually releasing a collaborative an EP entitled Passing Song in 2002. Her contributions to Connors' catalog were well documented on 2006's Night Through: Singles and Collected Works 1976-2004, and As Roses Bow: Collected Airs 1992-2002, released the following year. In 2010, Langille released an acclaimed collaborative album with Indian classical musician and multi-instrumentalist Neel Murgai entitled Wild & Foolish Heart. She and Connors resumed recording together for a song cycle to accompany the paintings of M.P. Landis, entitled I Wish I Didn't Dream, which was released in late 2012.


Cammisa Buerhaus is a sound and transmission artist based in New York City. Her sonic, sculptural inventions machinate the production of sound, exploring the effect upon and the relation to our body experience. As a solo performer, her work explodes ideas of territory, ghosts, and sensory fields through a combination of destroyed vocals, tape manipulation and shortwave radio. She released her first solo recording, S/T, in 2012. She also frequently collaborates with avant-saxophonist Tamio Shiraishi in an exploration of sound in the expanded field. Their first attempt, DaikYoFuroShiki, was released on Wild Flesh Productions in 2013.

Ten Years Alive on the Infinite Plain is made possible, in part, by “Lead Presenter” support from Robert Bielecki and HBO; “Festival Sponsor” support from Robert Longo, Margo Somma & John Hamilton, and Sixpoint Brewery; with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council; and with the support of ISSUE Project Room’s Members.

10/7/13

JOSEPH'S PHOTO


I am a Brooklyn, New York-based photographer documenting the contemporary urban landscape.
My work is comprised largely of the found and the neglected, often resulting from exploring
neighborhoods that I consider to be of little consequential interest to the majority of the city’s
inhabitants. For a million different reasons, I choose to do this on analog, film-based equipment.
Extremely sensitive. A noteworthy photographer.
He has the ability to be unified the basic concepts of art.

10/2/13

IM MERZBAU | FELIX GEBHARD SOON!!




FELIX GEBHARD - IM MERZBAU

01. Im Merzbau
02. Ab Hannover
03. Zurück Vom Alten Haus
04. Flussfahrt (Leine)

Composed, performed and recorded by Felix Gebhard.


'Im Merzbau' contains four tracks revolving around Felix Gebhard's hometown of Hannover, Germany and the art of Kurt Schwitters - one of that cities' most famous sons.
As a tribute to Schwitters all four tracks are collages, often improvised on the spot, then carefully edited into their final forms.

The title track 'Im Merzbau' is an acoustic translation of childhood memories of afternoons Gebhard spent in Kurt Schwitters' Merzbau - or rather the reconstruction by Peter Bissegger from 1981 that is shown at Sprengel Museum Hannover. The piece is based on recordings made of the reconstructed Merzbau, as well as around the site of the original one - Schwitters' house at Waldhausenstraße 5 in Hannover, that was destroyed in 1943. These recordings act as the piece's beginning and end and are connected by slow-shifting soundscapes, created with electric baritone guitar and several electronic and acoustic sound generators. 
'Im Merzbau' was conceived in celebration of Kurt Schwitters' 125th birthday, June 20, 2012, and was performed live at Oberdeck, Hannover, on that day. 
Recorded fragments of that performance ended up in the final version of the piece.
'Ab Hannover' and 'Zurück Vom Alten Haus' are about leaving or going to Hannover by different modes of transportation. 'Flussfahrt (Leine)' is an imaginary boat trip on the Leine river that crosses Hannover.




Déphasage #24 - 25.09.13 / French radio show about experimental music on Radio Campus Bordeaux, each wednesday at 10pm to 11pm (GMT+2)


Déphasage #24 - 25.09.13

image
Déphasage is now back on Radio Campus Bordeaux, last wednesday as expected you could have listened to a collection of new releases from this summer that you did not want to miss. The playlist, can be listen on the top of this article. I’ve decided like last year, that I did not want to publish online the live recordings of the show because I think that it’s two different listening attitude between the one during the live on wednesday at 10p to 11pm (GMT+2) with my comments and the other whenever you want on the internet with only the mix of the pieces I aired but with the comments written here. Moreover, I’ll add an extra piece from an artist aired on the show each week especially for the blog. So, have a good “déphasage” and see you next time on wednesday on Radio Campus Bordeaux or later on this blog.

Playlist :

01/ Marina Rosenfeld - Seeking Solace / Why, Why ? (“P.A. / Hard Love” / Room 40)
02/ Marina Rosenfeld - I Launch Attack… (“P.A. / Hard Love” / Room 40)
03/ Seaworthy + Taylor Deupree - February 22, 2013 (“Wood, Winter, Hollow” / 12k)
04/ Seaworthy + Taylor Deupree - Hollow (“Wood, Winter, Hollow” / 12k)
05/ Edouard-Léon Scott de Martinville - Au Clair de la Lune (“An Anthology of Noise and Electronic Music” / Sub Rosa)
06/ Bebe & Louis Barron - Bells of Atlantis (“An Anthology of Noise and Electronic Music” / Sub Rosa)
07/ Eugenius Rudnik - Collage (“An Anthology of Noise and Electronic Music” / Sub Rosa)
08/ Dark Side of the Audio System - Loop 4 (“Loop Collections 9” / Analog Path)
Bonus podcast
09/ Dark Side of the Audio System - Loop 7 (“Loop Collections 9” / Analog Path)

I’ve started with Marina Rosenfeld, a composer and conceptualist from New York City. She’s used to create “radical sonic collision” and for this project she has developed a PA system as a sound generator thanks to feedback, noises from the place where the installation is placed and the use of her voice. Indeed, at first some sounds that are on this release from Room 40 were produced at location in New York on Park Avenue and in Liverpool’s Renshaw’s hall car park. A good way to use a PA to make music and not to play music to large audiences.Moreover, she has invited Annette Henry aka Warrior Queen, jamaican singer that we can hear in dub and dancehall productions or featured on some The Bug releases. Marina Rosenfeld has also invited a cellist named Okkyung Lee.
So, as we see there is a collision at every level and we don’t want to complain about this because when we listen to “P.A. / Hard Love” we’re inevitably surprised by the atmosphere that is emanating from the different pieces. We don’t know exactly where we are, even the voice of Warrion Queen don’t give a clue about what’s happening, actually it’s the contrary, we’re lost but it’s good. I can say it’s one of the most surprising releases that I’ve listened to recently.

Then, we have completely changed the mood with some more relaxing tones from Seaworthy and Taylor Deupree, the latter is really an adept of collaboration lately because he works only by this way and has just released another production with Ryuichi Sakamoto.
For this one on 12k, of course, he invites us with Seaworthy to dive into the drowsiness of winter and its atmosphere. It inspired our two artists, which have recorded in Deupree’s studio located near a huge park with an incomparable wildlife and flora hit by the Hurricane Sandy a few months before. It’s this wildlife that reappear and those branches and trees on the ground who portrayed the atmosphere of this release. As usual with Deupree we know where we are, we believe in it, the ambiance is here, we’re nostalgic and we only want one thing, that the cold nights of winter come back to make us go inside in a warm place and listen to this record under the conditions it deserves.

After the winter dreams we had, we went into music history thanks to the label Sub Rosa and its collection titled “Anthology on Noise and Electronic Music”, that started on 2002 and ends on 2013 with the release of this 7th and last “chapter” as Sub Rosa say of this experimental music bible.
With these 3CDs set that retrace a lot of gold gems of the genre between 1860 and 2012 there are a lot to bear with. 1860 can seem weird, but it’s actually the year of the first human recording ever, thanks to a french man named Edouard-Léon Scott de Martinville. Inventor of the “phonautographe”, 17 years before Edison and his “phonograph”, except that our friend Edouard-Léon have not the same success as his american counterpart. Unlike Edison, he was not able to play back the recordings he made on his invention, it’s quite a shame yes… But thanks to some clever people we recently managed to listen to this first recording and we discover it was “Au Clair de la Lune”, a nice way to introduce a lot of big changes and evolutions on music over the 20th century because of and thanks to this invention.
Then, it was the turn of Bebe & Louis Barron, couple that belongs to the precursors and pioneers of electronic music and famous for their soundtrack of the science-fiction movie “Forbidden Planet”. It was with the first oscillators, magnetic tapes and an unusual creativity that they wrote the first movie soundtrack only with electronic generated sounds. This OST does not appear on this release but we can find a less known production that they wrote for an experimental movie of Ian Hugo based on the writings of his wife Anais Nin, movie titled “Bells of Atlantis”.
Finally, you could have listened to a tape collage of the polish composer Eugenius Rudnik, who is also a pioneer in his country because he has founded the first electroacoustic music school in Poland.

I’ve then finished the show with some more analog experiments on tape with Dark Side of the Audio System, project of Shinubo Neboto, a composer from Japan who has released  last may on the japanese label Analog Path a production named “Loop Collections 9”.
This one consists of short melodic patterns played on piano, and as the title tells us, are looped almost endlessly. But, what is specific about the work of this japanese sound artist is that each loop go trough a tape recorder that has a lot of playback issues. The first take is recorded back again on the tape recorder, the second take obtained goes back again and he goes on and on until the sound of the piano fades away and that another instrument emerges, the tape recorder. Usually, this one does not express himself so easily and it’s a good thing to hear him. Close to the work of William Basinski, “The Disintegration Loops”, to name it, that you can hear behind my voice during the show, the approach of Shinubo Neboto is more impressionist and romantic in its soul than his american counterpart.
French radio show about experimental music on Radio Campus Bordeaux, each wednesday at 10pm to 11pm (GMT+2).

Thanks Antoine.

9/25/13

Two new release! Sparkling Wide Pressure & mysterybear






Stream Returner | Sparkling Wide Pressure

1. Opening Channel (12:24) 2. How She Wa¥eaves the Tale (9:02)
3. Serpentine Empires (Where) (10:42)  4. 9Year Fade (14:53)

I was raised in rural Tennessee by the Red River. In the solitude of nature I was able to cultivate my inner world like all children do. As an adult I go back to that well of creative impulse and non judgement for inspiration. I studied visual art in college and met some remarkable people who further guided my development both as a painter and as a musician. I’m most interested in understanding the creative process in all it’s strangeness which is why I enjoy my day job as an art teacher. I’ve been lucky to find a small but supportive audience for my work and I strive to continue growing and evolving with honesty. -Sparkling Wide Pressure/Frank Baugh

$10 / ANALOGPATH016 / Photo card is included / cdr Limited 100











Oscillation | mysterybear

1. Oscillation (35:54)  2. Transpiration (10:32)

Transpiration was made with Csound/blue. Oscillation was made with three Moogerfoogers, two loopers, a DroneLab, and several other devices, and is a single-take performance. More information can be found at mysterybear.net.

$10 / ANALOGPATH017 / cdr Limited 100





ANALOGPATH Official Site

8/27/13

mysterybear

Artist : mysterybear  Album : Oscillation           SOON!

SIDE-BY-SIDE: THE LATEST WORKS OF CODY YANTIS / Review by Decoder Mag


POSTED BY  ON JULY 24, 2013

CYantis_featured
Colorado artist Cody Yantis has been developing a distinctive sort of primarily guitar-based composition over the past few years. His 2011 debut LP, Kerning (Blackest Rainbow), showed him exploring a more drone-centered take on Loren Connors-style guitar meditations, fleshing out his sound with subtle piano, banjo, and field recording embellishments. Since then, Yantis has gone on to release a string of solo cassettes that have featured blistering ambient noise (Box Elder, Cold Scholar), barebones electric guitar investigations (Strung Figments), and Arvo Pärt-like minimalist heft (American Surfaces). He has both extended and refined his sound further through recent collaborative outings as Saguache, his duo with Seth Chrisman, and as Tilth, his duo-cum-trio with Nathan McLaughlin and Joe Houpert. Central to all of Yantis’ work, though, is a sense of both place and space, what he describes as, “an idea of landscape as sound.”
Over the past few months, Yantis has added two more releases to his ever-evolving discography:Place & Distance, a CD-R out on Analogpath, and Starvation Winter, a tape out on Sunshine Ltd. Both show Yantis continuing to push himself in new directions, working with organic and acoustic sounds to drastically different effects, while mapping his immediate surroundings for interpretation. “The title Place & Distance refers rather directly to my life in rural Southwestern Colorado at the time of recording,” he explains. “I’m an extremely place-oriented person, so the high desert mountain environment played a crucial role in the types of sounds I wanted to create (brittle, open, organic) as did my relative isolation — my nearest community of friends/family was a five-hour drive away. I was negotiating all of this during the recording process. Hence, the Placeand the Distance of the title.”
Penitente CanyonPlace & Distance is perhaps Yantis’ most instrumentally varied and sonically rich work to date with more noticeable layers of saxophone, bowed strings, and unidentifiable crackling textures. In places, it bears some similarities toAshley Paul’s organic and free-flowing approach to songcraft, sans vocals. “I wanted to really push myself on this project and try to find new ways of exploring sound, though I had no concept of how this would actually play out. I put far more restrictions into place at the outset, which I think is probably the biggest reason for the shift,” says Yantis.
Analogpath’s focus on presenting works from artists dealing in analog sound also shaped how Yantis approached this album. “Since I record digitally, I was initially unsure if I fit their criteria, but through my conversations with Tetsuo, who runs the label, we settled on the idea that I would make an ‘acoustic’ album,” explains Yantis. “I then decided to further restrain myself to non-’traditional’ uses of acoustic instruments (e.g. no acoustic guitar chords or melodic lines), in hopes that I’d find myself venturing into new territories, which I feel that I ultimately did. So, all of the sound sources are acoustic, with the occasional embellishment via amplification and/or digital effects pedals.”
Studio View (Winter)Starvation Winter, Yantis’ most recent release, also chronicles a specific time and place: “…an audio transcript of his time spent holed up in a snow blown house in Colorado during the winter of 2012,” as the label description reads. While Starvation Winter has a decidedly forlorn quality to it, which anyone who has endured harsh winter conditions would understand, it maybe falls closer in line with the sounds that he explored with Nathan McLaughlin on Tilth’s debut,Angular Music. This is most likely due to the additional tape loop accompaniment that Josh Mason provided, adding layers of wobbly and dream-like textures to Yantis’ otherwise clean acoustic and frazzled electric guitar lines. “As bleak asStarvation Winter is at times, it was a joy to make,” says Yantis. “Josh Mason was insistent that if I focused on clear, minimal guitar lines, a moving and worthwhile project would arise, and it did. I can’t overstate how central of a role Josh played in the project. He took a guitar line or two of mine, ran them through tape, and arranged everything into a beautiful and engrossing sonic landscape.”
Place & Distance and Starvation Winter contain drastically different sounds and approaches, which is something Yantis recognizes in his own work. “I feel I almost have two sides to my musical output. One is a sustained study of the guitar, the other is a dogged desire to push myself farther into unexplored territories (for me, at least).” Despite these differences, Yantis’ use of negative or open space as a compositional tool remains a constant in all of his work, forging a sound that is uniquely his own. As Brad Rose of Digitalis highlighted in the write-up for theAmerican Surfaces release, “Whenever I hear anything he’s done, it is instantly recognizable.” Yantis goes on to say that, “ …space and openness are central to how I process and work with sound. Silence puts sound in stark relief, more clearly highlighting sonic qualities and textures. Incorporating space into a piece of music also heavily dictates pacing, which is a crucial aspect of my music. I’m a kind of minimalist at heart (both in my art and my life), so I often spend a good deal of time paring down my recordings in hopes of arriving at a piece that contains exactly and only what is necessary.”
Yantis’ approach to composition has also been a response to the artists that have had a profound impact on him. He cites a wide range of artists from composers (Morton Feldman, John Luther Adams, and Bill Dixon), to photographers (Stephen Shore and Robert Adams), to filmmakers (Béla Tarr and Apichatpong Weerasethakul), and to authors (John Haines, James Galvin, and Richard Hugo) as influences. Yantis asserts, “I am drawn to, and have great respect for, artists who lay it all out in the open. Utilizing space in one way or another is key to achieving this, I feel.” His latest works show him following suit, laying it all out in the open to powerful affect.

6/28/13

Review


Over the course of the last two years Analog Path has evolved into one of the more consistent CD-R labels in a format that is constantly figuring out where it stands among other musical mediums, particularly vinyl, digital, and, of course, glass mastered CDs.  For its 14th release, the label looks back to its not so distant past and calls upon Shinobu Nemoto to deliver another set of quiet, creaky loop based compositions.  This time he houses it under his Dark Side of the Audio System moniker where wow and flutter become the predominate instruments after a few cycles elapse and your ears become familiar with the short piano phrases.  "Loop Collections 9" isn’t linear like the “Disintegration Loops" and it doesn’t become more distorted and abstracted with every pass.  Instead each revolution is seemingly new and unphased by what came before it, a fresh life given to downcast material. – Ryan Potts, Experimedia



Thanks Ryan, Experimedia!