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Review | By Henry Kozok | radio.friendsofalan.de – Resonant Dowland | Matthias Engelke


 

Review | By Henry Kozok / radio.friendsofalan.de
Resonant Dowland | Matthias Engelke
CD Tipp: „Resonant Dowland“ Matthias Engelke
Shakespeare und sein Zeitgenosse John Dowland sind heute immer noch aktuell. Shakespeares Dramen werden auf allen Bühnen der Welt gespielt. Und John Dowland? Auf LastFM, nur als Beispiel, haben seine Lieder in diesem Jahr 102.000 Hörer gefunden. Das finde ich beachtlich. Wie können neue Hörer einen Zugang zu seinen Liedern finden? Eine interessante und sehr hörenswerte Möglichkeit hat Matthias Engelke mit seinem Projekt „Resonant Dowland“ gefunden.
Ich möchte mich recht herzlich bei Matthias Engelke bedanken, dass er mir auf meine Fragen sehr umfangreich geantwortet hat und ich diese hier einbinden kann. Schon in seiner Jugend ist Matthias Engelke mit der Musik von John Dowland in Berührung gekommen. Seine Mutter, die Barock Flötistin ist, führte mit u.a. Bob Spencer ausgewählte Songs von John Dowland auf, wie „In darkness let me dwell“ oder „Come again“. []

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Review | By (DM) / VITAL WEEKLY – Resonant Dowland | Matthias Engelke


 

Review | By (DM) / VITAL WEEKLY
Resonant Dowland | Matthias Engelke
Matthias Engelke from Stuttgart, Germany studied biology and chemistry. Besides he studied piano (classical and jazz) and developed a strong interest in electronic music. He works mainly as a composer for theatre- and dance productions. In his compositions, he often shows an interest in integrating analogue sounds in the context of electronically generated music. For ‘Resonant Dowland’ Engelke selected songs from Renaissance composer, singer and lutenist John Dowland. He embedded and integrated these solo vocals works in an electronic environment. Not however in the sense of background. The album is subtitled: ‘Songs for tenor and electronics’. For this project, subtitled ‘Songs for tenor and electronics’ seeks for another between the two. He is not the first one to confront this old music with modern idioms and techniques. John Surman and Barry Guy a.o. made a jazz-oriented version of some of his songs. Also, French guitarist, David Chevalier did this on his album ‘Dowland – a game of mirrors’ (2014). Engelke’s project is rooted in his biography. []

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Review | By Ed Pinsent / The Sound Projector – Silva Datum Musica | PLEIN AIR


 

Review | By Ed Pinsent / The Sound Projector
Silva Datum Musica | PLEIN AIR
Silva Datum Musica (GRUENREKORDER Gruen 187) by Plein Air has unusual sounds, and it’s an LP that starts out nice, but sadly I soon sensed it’s not really going anywhere. Tim Collins and Reiko Goto have, with the help of other scientists, found a way to process “plant bioacoustics” into sound, much like Michael Prime (a legitimate predecessor who is not even mentioned in the notes) did in the 1990s. They do it with one leaf on one tree at a time, and a number of species / varieties are “played” on this record, one side in Glasgow and another in Cologne. Not to deny the scientific basis for this (I think it’s mostly to do with photosynthesis), and I’m prepared to believe we are hearing a tree “breathing”, and Collins and Goto are serious about their work. []

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Review | By Ed Pinsent / The Sound Projector – 11min | snow


 

Review | By Ed Pinsent / The Sound Projector
11min | snow
11min are a Korean duo, and their instrumental LP is called simply Snow (GRUENREKORDER GrD 31). Jiyeon Kim takes the name 11, and she plays the piano, composes, and does sound design; Sangyong Min is the drummer and engineer/producer. What we hear is very restrained, ultra-cool minimal pieces where every piano note resonates with an evocative echo, while the drummer produces a clipped and understated swing-rhythm with the precision of an electronic calculator. I felt the music is trying to be modern classical in some way, yet it is clearly informed by dance culture and electronica, despite being played all-acoustic. []

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Gerald Fiebig feat. EMERGE & Christian Z. Müller | Gasworks @ „quartiersparcours“


 

Gerald Fiebig feat. EMERGE & Christian Z. Müller | Gasworks
Auf Einladung der Kurator*innen des „quartiersparcours“, einer Serie von Kunst-Interventionen auf dem Gaswerks-Areal, hat Reinhard Gupfinger aus dem Track „Ohrentauchen mit Echolot“ ein dreidimensionales Objekt kreiert, das demnächst im Gaswerksgelände angebracht wird. Reinhard und Gerald Fiebig wurden zu dem Thema in einer Folge des Podcasts zu dem Projekt interviewt, und die Signation des Podcasts (gleich am Anfang) zitiert den Track aus der CD.
Hier könnt ihr es nachhören und nachlesen:
http://what-goes-on.de

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Review | By Marco De Vidi / il manifesto – Enrico Coniglio | TEREDO NAVALIS


 

Review | By Marco De Vidi / il manifesto
Enrico Coniglio | TEREDO NAVALIS
Teredo navalis è il nome di un mollusco che si nutre del legno delle navi. È uno dei quasi invisibili elementi di Venezia e della sua laguna, un ambiente che ha un suo suono, una topofonia, un’identità sonora che esprime tutta la ricchezza e la complessità di un paesaggio che difficilmente ci accade di ascoltare. Enrico Coniglio, musicista e urbanista, che da anni esplora questi luoghi di confine tra terra e acqua, ha catturato i movimenti di flora e fauna, un’ecosistema vivissimo e cangiante, che esiste nel margine, sempre a rischio di scomparire. L’uomo se ne tiene a distanza, osserva, solo raramente esprime una minaccia. In questo caso registra: lavorando soprattutto di notte, nell’area tra Murano e Sant’Erasmo, la laguna nord, utilizzando idrofoni e sensori elettromagnetici, captando il respiro di ciò che si trova sotto la superficie dell’acqua. Il field recording confluisce nell’elettronica, in suoni ambient e droni, che rivelano la profondità di un habitat in continua trasformazione, sconosciuto a chi segue gli estenuati itinerari della città turistica. []

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Review | By Roger Batty / Musique Machine – Circles and Cycles | Kg Augenstern


 

Review | By Roger Batty / Musique Machine
Circles and Cycles | Kg Augenstern
Circles and cycles (Tentacles in Sicily– scratching the surface) is an intriguing concept based field recording release ,which depending on your enjoyment of more textured/ noise-based field recordings, is either a rewarding sonic journey, or somewhat of a folly. Here from Germanys, Gruenrekorder is a CD and glossy booklet release, and as we’ve come to expect from the labels it’s another very classy bit of presentation. KG Augenstern are the German duo of Christiane Prehn and Wolfgang Meyer- they live & work on a ship, and their work sits in audio-visually/ audio-kinetic installation, performance and video side of things. They have been working together since the early 2010s, and this is the duos second release on Gruenrekorder- with their first been 2016’s Tentacles(also a CD/ book set) which featured bridge based field recordings made on rivers & canals between Berlin and North-East France. For this new release the pair have selected several abounded sites near Sicily- and in each, they make a recording of their tentacle( a thin metal pole). []

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Reviews | By textura – Circles and cycles | Kg Augenstern – „Stadt (Land Fluss)“ | Daniel Kötter & Hannes Seidl


 

Reviews | By textura
Circles and cycles | Kg Augenstern
It’s a safe bet no one else’s artistic practice is quite the same as Kg Augenstern’s. Operating under the alias, Christiane Prehn and Wolfgang Meyer use custom-designed “tentacles,” in simplest terms extendable fibreglass canes that from a fixed position scratch surfaces in circles, to generate audio documents of physical settings. For their second Kg Augenstern release on Gruenrekorder (the first 2016’s Tentacles), the Berlin-based duo decamped to Sicily in autumn 2019 to collect recordings of ten abandoned places, including an old prayer hall in Palermo that was used for a site-specific audiovisual display of the project. In addition to the audio component, the release includes images captured by a camera installed in the centre of the circles as scratchings were made. No humans appear in the photos; instead, there are ruins that in their decaying condition retain the residual trace of their creators. For each location, two pages of photos show the site itself; two subsequent pages show the tentacle reaching onto the surface. []

 

Stadt (Land Fluss)“ | Daniel Kötter & Hannes Seidl
[] Issues of trade, tourism, industrial development, financing, public spaces, policing, urban control, socialism, and identity arise as historical cases are referenced to strengthen positions (Haussmann in Paris and mobilizations in Argentina as examples). Details accumulate to form a dense stream of electronic and real-world sounds, the texts less converging into shared viewpoints but instead accentuating the vast number of perspectives that emerge when such issues are broached—more questions than answers, in other words. Perhaps that’s one reason why the sound design seems to grow denser as the piece progresses, with the buzzing mix perhaps intimating that positions lose ground when they multiply so abundantly. As the work’s end approaches, the speakers tellingly recede from view and the city as a bustling, sprawling organism takes over, almost as if it’s got a mind of its own. Are Circles and Cycles and Stadt (Land Fluss) musical works? Not in any conventional sense, yet they are music, albeit strange music, of a particular kind—they’re Gruenrekorder projects after all, and one would be naive to expect anything but something unusual from this always compelling label.

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Reviews | By Ed Pinsent / The Sound Projector – Enrico Coniglio | TEREDO NAVALIS – Michael Lightborne | Ring Road Ring – Various Artists | Next City Sounds: Interfaces


 

Reviews | By Ed Pinsent / The Sound Projector
Three Acoustical Surveys
Enrico Coniglio | TEREDO NAVALIS
Enrico Coniglio has been researching the Venetian lagoon for 15 years. His latest findings are published in the form of sound art, on the CD Teredo Navalis (GRUEN188 CD). His work has evidently provided him with deep knowledge of specialist areas like tide systems, marine life, and an understanding of the nature of the territory which few of us can hope to achieve. He’s also aware of constant and profound change in the environment, and not just in the water – the “post-urban and post-industrial” landscape interests him too. He’s conducting an ecological enquiry for sure, but on his own terms; most of us, myself included, see the “crisis” in Venice as one created by tourism, with the flooding problem and the damage to historically and culturally important buildings uppermost in our minds. But Coniglio sidesteps this particular debate, in favour of examining what he considers to be the more “marginal” parts of the lagoon, referring specifically to a location between Murano and Sant’Erasmo which is where he chose to put his hydrophones in the water, along with electromagnetic sensors. []

 

Michael Lightborne | Ring Road Ring
Michael Lightborne‘s previous record for this label was the excellent Sounds Of The Projection Box, released in 2018 as a beautifully packaged LP record with plenty of photographic illustrations of his theme. He made documentary recordings of the sounds of projection booths in UK cinemas, but also contextualised the work with his detailed, well-considered annotations and observations. That rigour is much in evidence on today’s record, Ring Road Ring (GRUEN 195). He made recordings of the ring road in Coventry, a structure that was built after the war in the hopes of allowing traffic to bypass the city, so the council could make good on its plan to build a pedestrianised centre. There are numerous concrete pillars supporting this road, and this is where Lightborne attached his microphones to collect his field recordings. These are presented on the record; first as a long (10:53) piece, the title track in fact, which collages and layers a number of the original recordings together into a mini-symphony of grey, droning sounds. []

 

Various Artists | Next City Sounds: Interfaces
Both Teredo Navalis and Ring Road Ring are examples of a single artist’s investigation of a very specific location, using sound art. By contrast, the record Next City Sounds: Interfaces (GRUEN 192) is a highly collaborative effort, involving multiple creators in its realisation, and was also a very interactive event, allowing the audience to participate in its making to some extent. I think it’s a document of what transpired on one day in Karlsruhe in August 2018, as part of a larger cultural event called KAMUNA, the Karlsruher Museumsnacht. It involved three locations in the city, one of which was the pedestrianised Kaiserstrasse; the creators involved were Lasse-Marc Riek; the electronics duo Linto + Røyk; the performance art group KITeratur; and the group No Input Ensemble. Though separated in space, all of these people were generating sounds and contributing to the general audio data-stream – Lasse-Marc did it with field recordings to make a “live collage”, Linto + Røyk performed live electronica and modular synth music, No Input Ensemble did their act live in part of the ZKM arts lab, and so on. []