CD
Reviews:
#11: Air, Talkie Walkie
#12: Alloy Orchestra, New Music for Silent Films
#13: Alloy Orchestra, Silents
#14: alog, red shift swing
#15: alog, duck-rabbit
#16: alog, miniatures
#16a: alog, amateur
#17: amina, AnimaminA
#17a: amiina, seoul
#17b: amiina, Kurr
#18: Tori Amos, Little Earthquakes
#19: Tori Amos, Under The Pink
#20: Tori Amos, Boys for Pele
#11
- Air, "Talkie Walkie"
Air, Talkie Walkie, released 2004 by
Astralwerks
1) Venus
2) Cherry Blossom Girl
3) Run
4) Universal Traveler
5) Mike Mills
6) Surfing On A Rocket
7) Another Day
8) Alpha Beta Gaga
9) Biological
10) Alone In Kyoto
Air is a couple of French guys who make
gentle, pleasant synth pop on their release Talkie Walkie. Most of the
instruments are the beeps and boops of synthesizers and supported by
drum kits, with a bit of piano and acoustic guitar. Their music filled
with surprising but satisfying harmonic progressions, and their best
songs feature surprisingly elusive rhythms and patterns. I tend not to
pay as much attention to lyrics as many people, but even I have to
point out that their lyrics are a bit silly, which I find charming but
others might find insipid; my favorite couplet is, "Five, four, three,
two, one, zero; no one can stop me to go".
Two of my favorite tracks, "Mike Mills"
and "Alone In Kyoto" were inspired by movies in one way or another;
Mike Mills (not the R.E.M. member) filmed a documentary on Air, and I
believe "Alone In Kyoto" was composed for Lost in Translation. "Venus",
another favorite, always feels rhythmically stilted even though it's in
a straight 4/4, which is a really neat sensation. While none of the
other songs stand out, none are particularly objectionable either;
though some are certainly more fun than others.
So.
Talkie Walkie isn't a terribly exciting album to listen to, but
it's mellow and engaging. It's spacey, drifty music that's very
well-crafted and meticulously produced; kind of like if the Beach Boys
were strung out on opium and didn't speak English. I imagine that I'm
in an incredibly low-key go-go club when I hear it.
The least helpful thing I can say
is that Talkie Walkie is how
I expected Stereolab to sound.
Top of Page
#12
- Alloy Orchestra, "New Music for Silent Films"
Alloy Orchestra, New Music for Silent Films,
released 1994 by Accurate Records
METROPOLIS
1) Metropolis
2) Garden of Earthly Delights
3) The Clock
4) Maria's Theme
5) Escape from the Underground City
AELITA, QUEEN OF MARS
6) Aelita
7) Life on Mars
SYLVESTER
8) The Blue Room
9) Theme from Sylvester
10) Cabaret Medley
THE WIND
11) The Wind
FIRST NIGHT
12) Burundi
13) False Alarm
14) Zone of Silence
15) Ophelia
16) Deep Water
17) Baptism of Fire
The Alloy Orchestra is an amplified
three-man group that performs, as the title of this CD claims, new
music for silent films; the lineup is one keyboard player and two
percussionists playing racks of found instruments, with occasional
guests. They particularly excel at creating ominous, threatening
ambient music, with a strong sense of physical impulse[1].
Of the films on this album I've only
seen them perform Metropolis. Made in 1927, it exists in many
different versions due to the vagaries of film preservation. The Alloy
Orchestra was founded specifically to create new music for an 80-minute
version cobbled together by Giorgio Moroder in 1984; Moroder's
soundtrack was a bit...idiosyncratic, made up of '80s rock and pop
songs.
You can read about the movie yourself,
but one of the most striking things about it is the huge sense of scale
it conveys, depicting towering cities and massive caverns in the
futuristic society of 2006. The AO's score does an excellent job of
matching that epic feel, particularly live; they're very loud, and the
sound they create is immersive.
One of the problems of film music is
that...well, it's written to accompany film, and tends to feel lacking
if heard without. Such music is intended to set a mood, to highlight
and complement rather than to draw attention to itself by going off and
developing on its own, exploring its own ideas.
As regards the pieces for Metropolis,
the title track and "The Clock" are good enough to stand on their own;
the rest are enjoyable, but I find them compelling mostly because they
remind me of the film. However, even though I lack the original context
in which the other songs are meant to be performed, I find them fun to
listen to, mostly for their sense of drive, amazing and inventive
percussion, and ability to create a mood. But they're not terribly
satisfying; nor are they meant to be.
___
(1) The Alloy Orchestra is one of the
main inspirations for my own piece Lightning
Fields.
Top of Page
#13
- Alloy Orchestra, "Silents"
Alloy Orchestra, Silents, released 1997 by Accurate
Records.
PLAIN CRAZY
1) Complete SCore
LOST WORLD
2) Into the Amazon
3) Dinosaur's Revenge
4) The Couple
NOSFERATU
5) The Vampire's Waltz
6) Lust
7) Hydra
8) The Escape
9) The Coffin
METROPOLIS
10) Yoshiwara
11) Escape from the Underground City
12) The Chase
THE UNKNOWN
13) Alonzo the Armless
14) Hands, Men's Hands
15) Stung Like a Whip
16) Love Theme
Unfortunately, most of what I have to
say about Silents I already
said about New Music for Silent Films.
The tracks I find compelling are those I've seen the Alloy Orchestra
perform live -- Nosferatu and
Metropolis -- and
the others are interesting but not very arresting. Though I do prefer
the music on New Music... to
that on Silents.
I believe Nosferatu
is the first vampire movie, based heavily on Dracula, to which director
F.W. Murnau couldn't get the rights -- hence, "Nosferatu". Like any old
film, it has its dated bits, but there are some spectacular moments of
dread, even 80 years after its release. The Alloy Orchestra again does
a great job of setting the mood, but I find their Nosferatu soundtrack
less good on its own that their Metropolis soundtrack.
Incidentally, "Yoshiwara", not
included on New Music..., was
written for scenes in a den of ill repute, and is some excellently
sleazy music.
Top of Page
#14
- alog, "red shift swing"
alog, red shift swing, released 1999 on
rune grammofon[1]
01) drifting west
02) 500,000 years ago
03) the travel light
04) expand the heart
05) lonesome train
06) red shift swing
07) popul vuh
08) tuning the piano
09) a regular hexagon is found in the sand on some beach
10) the sun is where the clouds should be
alog is a pair of laptop musicians,
Espen Sommer Eide (who performs solo as phonophani) and Dag-Are Haugen.
Built out of samples and processed sound, red shift swing is about mood
and atmosphere; their tracks are mostly smooth and mellow, occasionally
playful. Their main technique is to create isorhythms -- slivers of
music that are unequal in length and looped so that they relate to each
other differently on every repetition -- and release them into the
wild, letting them do as they will. Unfortunately, isorhythms alone are
not enough to make a piece compelling [2].
Their first album is nearly good, and
almost interesting. They have lovely and funky ideas, and actively try
to do interesting things with rhythm. I like the processing they apply,
and the fact that they don't always apply it; and the sounds they
generate are compelling and new without being harsh.
But not enough happens, nor does it
happen quickly enough; listening to nothing but isorhythms play out for
3 minutes before a new element is introduced is not very compelling. I
do like "the travel light" and "tuning the piano" even though they
suffer from similar problems; but the rest of the album is, well, kinda
dull. The two come up with great titles, though.
___
(1) Based out of Norway, they release
beautiful, chill electronica -- among other things, of course. And
their sleeve art -- by Kim Hiorthøy, another electronic artist
but on a different label -- is one of my favorite things about them.
(2) I've tried it myself, so I'm an
authority.
Top of Page
#15
- alog, "duck-rabbit"
alog, duck-rabbit, released 2001 on rune
grammofon
1) islands of memory
2) objects begin to appear from the future
3) violence and magical danger
4) fire's for burning
5) duck-rabbit
6) idea-changing liquid alchemy
7) your secret flesh
8) as complicated and as beautiful as always
9) drunk dj's
Somehow, on their second full-length
release, alog manages to preserve all the things that were worthwhile
about red shift swing, and to
get right what they first got wrong. Their music is still based on
isorhythms, but there's much more depth, detail, and sense of motion to
their work as a whole; it feels organic and alive. Now above their
mismatched loops soar lovely, jagged, improvised-sounding melodies,
supported by gentle but pleasingly unpredictable and elusive beats.
duck-rabbit
is a lovely, haunting album , probably best suited for rainy,
contemplative days. Throughout, alog maintains an ominous, dark feel,
like wandering through a landscape at night. Each track has a stately
melancholy underneath[1], even as their music swoops, soars, and plays;
a constant sense of searching and yearning. The timbres they use are
still mostly heavily processed and smoothed -- my understanding is that
one of their favorite techniques is to record acoustic instruments and
run them through a vocoder, voice included. And somehow, when they do
computerize singing -- as on the love song "your secret flesh" -- it
manages to sound sweet and sad. My favorite songs, "islands of memory"
and "as complicated and as beautiful as always" are epic in feel, with
a grand sense of flow and form, of journey.
When I close my eyes and listen, I
imagine shimmering lights, fields of glowing and shifting color against
a dark background.
__
(1) Well, "drunk dj's" is a little silly.
Top of Page
#16
- alog, "miniatures"
alog, miniatures, released 2005 by
rune grammofon
1) severe punishment and lasting bliss
2) steady jogging of the heart
3) st. paul sessions II
4) the youth of mysterious conversations
5) leyden jar
6) pesce spada
7) buffalo demon
8) change position
9) building instruments
On miniatures,
alog's style has changed significantly; they've turned away from using
isorhythms as the foundation of their songs and their structures are
much more improvisatory and free. And for the first half of miniatures, it works beautifully.
In the opening four tracks, repetition,
pulse, and inner quiet are still a fundamental part of their music, but
there's also a much stronger sense of forward momentum and development.
And somehow, the combination of stillness and motion inspires ecstasy
-- not so much in the sense of overwhelming joy as a kind of mystical
transport, a kind of rapture[1].
But after "the youth of mysterious
conversations", miniatures is
a real letdown, with the exception of a lovely moment in "building
instruments" that, unfortunately, quickly fades. The second half feels
unfocused, and sparse, basically a tossed salad of real-world samples
and sporadic percussion. After the lushness of what came before, it
sounds empty and, well, kind of pointless.
Nevertheless, miniatures is well worth listening
to for those opening songs, which are just plain beautiful.
___
(1) I don't know what it's like for
other people to listen to music, and any description of a personal
experience of a sensation is fundamentally inadequate and incorrect --
but when I'm carried away by a piece of music, it's as if the music and
I become the same thing. As if the music is expressing a part of who I
am -- and as if a part of who I am becomes the music.
Top of Page
#16a
- alog, "amateur"
alog, amateur, released 2007 by
rune grammofon
1) son of king
2) a throne for the common man
3) write your thoughts in water
4) sleeping instruments
5) the beginner
6) the learning curve
7) turn back, undo
8) a book of lightning
9) the future of norwegian wood
10) exit virtuoso
11) bedlam emblem
12) the northeast passage
In amateur, alog's musical sensibilities and
goals are still
proudly
evident, as they continue to build vast, dreamlike compositions, almost
like alien landscapes. However, they introduce a number of new elements
and surprises to their palette of timbres.
Most notable is their inclusion of natural (or at least
undetectably
altered) sounds; the duo play various metallophones, and they sing
simple melodies as well on some tracks[1]. As a kind of second-order
"natural" sound, some songs feature percussion that's sampled oddly[2],
and then stitched together to form melodies. It's an odd, but
mesmerizing effect; the aural equivalent of a ransom
note[3]. This
heavy use of Partch-like percussion lends the CD a ritual, mystical
atmosphere, like a series of magical incantations.
The album is mixed very unusally; the instruments are
made to sound up
close and dry, with almost no reverb...as if you're listening to a
performance in a small, softly padded room. This lends the music an
intimacy often not present in most electronica, and serves as a lovely
contrast to the sprawling nature of their songs, and the more spacious
feel of their electronically-generated sounds.
Like miniatures, amateur is very
hit-and-miss. Some
tracks never seem
to really gel, sounding like a random mishmash of unrelated sounds;
some feature so little that they seem like a waste of time. However,
the best pieces, such as "a throne for the common man", "the beginner",
and "bedlam emblem", begin with trickles of sound that grow and
pulsate, expanding into huge, beautiful waterfalls of sound and noise,
filled with a mix of soaring melody and cacophony; they build so
organically that they almost seem like living things.
The most memorable parts of the CD aren't the motives,
melodies,
rhythms, or what have you, but the sense of climax on the best
compositions, the feeling of having reached some epiphany, an inner
stillness only possible to experience in the center of a storm.
___
(1) Vocals on previous albums were fed through a
vocoder, a
roboticizing effect.
(2) Imagine listening to someone speak in such a way
that you can't
hear the beginnings or ends of syllables.
(3) It's a neat technique I've also heard used by The
Books and Susumu
Hirasawa, though to much smoother effect.
Top of Page
#17
- amina, "AnimaminA"
amina, AnimaminA, released 2005 by The
Worker's Institute
1) skakka
2) hemipode
3) fjarskanistan
4) blaskjar
amina[1], a group of four musicians, is
probably most famous as Sigur Ros's backing string quartet, as well as
their opening act on Sigur Ros's 2006 tour[2]. They are composers in
their own right, however, and their debut EP release AnimaminA features them playing not
only strings but various pitched and unpitched percussion, with a bit
of sampling and laptop work thrown in. Each track is mostly built out
of patterns which interlock and hocket in intricate and lovely ways.
Though I assume these pieces are greatly collaborative, the fact that
each track name is signed in a different hand implies that each had a
different "lead" composer.
"skakka" opens the CD uncertainly, with
a staggered rhythm played on a low metallophone that soon settles down
into a simple pattern, which is joined by what sounds like a marimba
and a glockenspiel playing their own loops agains a soft, high
electronic background. It's a very still, meditative piece -- listening
to it is like watching dusk become night.
"hemipode" is more active; it opens
with a thin cloud of string harmonics over a bass line provided by
pizzicato cello, eventually joined by hammered dulcimers and a
glockenspiel, in angular, complemetary rhythms. After a slight pause in
the middle, everything restarts and is joined by bowed strings, giving
a depth and fullness to the sound. The feel is one of joy, of
celebration.
"fjarskanistan" begins with gentle
tinkling that's like water dripping into a pool which provides the
background for a slow chorale on strings that seems to be always
ascending, as if constantly reaching for something. It's a sweet,
yearning song full of hope.
The EP closes with "blaskjar", which
features a beautiful solo cello woven into a dense 5/4 texture of
hammered dulcimers, metallophones, and pizzicato cello. The track
closes the album perfectly, with a sense of resignation.
AnimaminA
is a wonderful album. It opens and closes in minor key, bracketing two
major-key pieces -- I like to think of the journey from night, to day,
back into night. Although the entirety of it uses the same basic
compositional technique, each track is its own world, like a music box
given color and life. I eagerly await their first full-length release,
due out by the end of this year.
__
(1) Now amiina. Apparently there's already a fairly prominent musical
act called Amina.
(2) I saw both play in Boston this
Spring, and was actually more impressed by amina.
Top of Page
#17a:
amiina, "Seoul"
amiina, Seoul, released 2006 by the
worker's institute
1) Seoul
2) Ugla
3) Ammælis
Seoul
is a little EP of more amiina; the three tracks on here are lovely and
fun, if not transcendent like those on AminanimA. As before, they focus on
adding and removing layers, although their choice of instruments ranges
a bit further afield: "Seoul" introduces a musical saw, "Ugla" includes
a gently rocking acoustic guitar[1], and "Ammælis"...well, it
starts out with a little beatbox rhythm that's literally sampled from a
cheap 1980s keyboard[2].
As they're planning the release of
their first full-length CD soon, as well as a US tour in March/April
2007, this EP feels like an appetizer. Tasty and appealing, but a
stepping stone to something greater.
___
(1) Of which I'm not a big fan, since
it makes their sound less unique.
(2) I always think of Casio Strongbad
when the track opens.
Top of Page
#17b:
amiina, "Kurr"
amiina, Kurr, released 2007 by Bláskjár Records
1) Sogg
2) Rugla
3) Glámur
4) Seoul
5) Lúpína
6) Hilli
7) Sexfaldur
8) Kolapot
9) Saga
10) Lóri
11) Bláfeldur
12) Boga
Kurr
is amiina's first full-length release. As always, their music is full
of innocence and happiness, and they expand their palette of sounds a
bit, including some intentionally dinky synthesizer sounds, as well the
more ethereal timbres of musical saws, bowed metallophones, and crystal
wineglasses[1]. Their music sounds very medieval, in part because the
extra instruments they use, as well as the way they play their own
stringed instruments, actively lack vibrato; and in part because their
music is fanatically tonal.
All the songs are delicate and
gentle, and the CD as a whole sounds like an extended lullaby. That
homogeneity is both a blessing and a curse, however. It's a
consistently pretty CD, lovely all the way through...but although
amiina is able to compose transcendent moments in many of the
individual tracks, the album as a whole never peaks similarly, and ends
up feeling a bit flat overall.
Most of the songs are fairly
foursquare in beat and close in tempo, which is fine in small doses but
gets a bit too predictable over the long run -- especially in
comparison to their first EP release AnimaminA, which has quite
a bit of rhythmic subtlety. That, coupled with their extremely tonal
language and nearly unchanging mood between songs, makes the album feel
a bit static.
Individually taken, most of the songs on Kurr are gorgeous
pieces: unpretentious, simple, and joyous. But as a whole, Kurr
somehow feels less than the sum of its parts because of the lack of
variety in amiina's compositional decisions.
___
(1) It occurs to me that one of amiina's
inspirations may be, oddly, George Crumb's Black
Angels , which itself is scored
for electric string quartet and various percussion batteries.
Top of Page
#18
- Tori Amos, "Little Earthquakes"
Tori Amos, Little Earthquakes, released 1991
by Atlantic Records
1) Crucify
2) Girl
3) Silent All These Years
4) Precious Things
5) Winter
6) Happy Phantom
7) China
8) Leather
9) Mother
10) Tear in Your Hand
11) Me and a Gun
12) Little Earthquakes
The music Tori Amos makes could be best
described as idiosyncratic, emotionally intense piano-based pop/rock;
and no discussion of her music is complete without at least a mention
of her lyrics, which tend to polarize listeners, as her writing walks
the fine line between highly personal and self-indulgent[1]. She's an
incredible musician, wicked hot, and I was mildly obsessed with her
until her fourth album[2]. Though she turned her back on her classical
conservatory training, it's nevertheless apparent in her approach to
composition.
Nearly all of her music is centered on
the piano, and her voice is versatile enough to follow the wide range
of her songs' subjects, from the confessional to the playful to the
resigned. She's not content to stick to one thing, even within a single
track -- she'll suddenly switch gears and inject a moment of ferocity
into an otherwise placid song -- although her experimentation would go
farther afield in later albums. My favorite parts of her music are when
she sings in counterpoint against herself.
It surprises me to find that the only
songs I really love on this album are "Mother", which is a gorgeous,
quiet, and subtle song, and "Precious Things", which is wild and
angry[3]. All the others I find compelling more from their intimacy,
and the force of Tori's personality; though certainly sophisticated and
polished, and with lovely and powerful moments, they're no longer
particularly arresting. I still like them, and there are some great
turns of phrase in her words, but I think in some part I loved them
because of my crush on her.
Little
Earthquakes seems to be mostly about women's relationships (not
necessarily her own) to men; to Jesus, to fathers, to lovers. And, of
course, there's "Me and a Gun", which is about her rape. In retrospect,
it's a good and promising debut, but there's still an element of the
conventional about her music (such as her arrangements, which are often
relatively standard pop) that she manages to shed in her later, better
CDs. And, of course, Little
Earthquakes may have more meaning for you if you're more focused
on words than I am.
___
(1) I've heard her compared to Kate Bush, which is pretty legitimate.
(2) Unless you count Y Kant Tori Read as her first.
(3) That may have to do with the fact
that they're the most rhythmically interesting, both based on splitting
two 4/4 bars into a 3+3+3+3+2+2 sequence.
Top of Page
#19:
Tori Amos, "Under the Pink"
Tori Amos, Under the Pink, released 1994 by
Atlantic Records
1) Pretty Good Year
2) God
3) Bells for Her
4) Past the Mission
5) Baker Baker
6) The Wrong Band
7) The Waitress
8) Cornflake Girl
9) Icicle
10) Cloud on My Tongue
11) Space Dog
12) Yes, Anastasia
One of the basic techniques in the
production of pop music is called "normalization": flattening out the
dynamics of a song so that it all comes out at pretty much the same
volume, so as to make music easier to broadcast on the radio. It has
been argued that this homogenizes pop music and discourages real
creativity within the genre.
And so one of the things that makes Under the Pink particularly unusual
is the wide variation within many of the songs, the way they grow and
build, or suddenly veer in a different direction. For example, the
opening song "Pretty Good Year" is a placid, gentle song that suddenly
breaks out into a furious rage before settling back down as if nothing
had happened. Or the epic "Yes, Anastasia", which begins with a single
piano note, and grows into a lush piece with string orchestra.
It's stronger musically than Little Earthquakes; Tori's melodies
and harmonies are more ambiguous and compelling, she makes occasional
use of unusual meters[1] and dissonance has a much stronger presence,
particularly in the track that first made me interested in her,
"God"[2], as well as "The Waitress" and "Space Dog"[3]. Even a delicate
song like "Bells for Her" features a piano that's been detuned to sound
old and forgotten[4]. And she still makes extensive use of
counterpoint, both in the piano part and with her voice against itself,
one of my favorite things about her music.
Lyrically, it seems to be less
confessional and more distanced than her first album, though still
personal...sometimes a bit infuriatingly so, making reference to things
and people only she knows.
Most of Under the Pink seems to be about
warring emotional states, the conflict between how we feel and how we
want to feel, or about an internal world breaking through our exterior,
and the music often reflects that struggle with its shifts, sometimes
subtle and sometimes brutal.
__
(1) Much of "God" is in what amounts to
7/2, and "Yes, Anastasia" flits back and forth between 2/4, 4/4, and
5/4.
(2) Which features screeching guitars
throughout, and exploits the tritone between the 3rd and 6th degrees of
Dorian mode.
(3) Which draws a lot from Bartok, and
heavily inspired my piece Lightning
Fields, though I didn't realize it at the time.
(4) She would actually take a detuned
upright piano on her 2nd and 3rd tours just for this song. It sounded
really beautiful.
Top of Page
#20
- Tori Amos, "Boys for Pele"
Tori Amos, Boys for Pele, released 1996 by
Atlantic Recording Corporation
Beauty Queen
1) Horses
2) Blood Roses
3) Father Lucifer
4) Professional Widow
5) Mr. Zebra
6) Marianne
7) Caught a Lite Sneeze
8) Muhammad My Friend
9) Hey Jupiter
10) Way Down
11) Little Amsterdam
12) Talula
13) Not The Red Baron
14) Agent Orange
15) Doughnut Song
16) In The Springtime of His Voodoo
17) Putting The Damage On
18) Twinkle
Boys
for Pele sounds raw. Not as in unfinished or crude, but
unfiltered, unadulterated, and uncompromising, almost too visceral.
Almost every song feels incredibly intimate, as if we're peering into
something private -- part of this is due to the more flexible rhythmic
feel of each song, but I believe most is attributable to the fact that
she uses her voice to its fullest, willfully unpolished, as we can hear
every swoop, screech, and crack in her singing.
I think this is her best album, though
some of my favorite of her signature techniques are somewhat less
prominent -- the songs are more "normalizable", and there's less of her
singing against herself. She experiments further with texture and
sound: on the opening track, she feeds her piano through a Leslie
cabinet, making it sound as if the piano is being remembered rather
than played; others feature older keyboard instruments, including a
particularly badass harpsichord part on "Professional Widow". And as I
said, her approach to tempo is more organic and fluid, with a nearly
classical nuance.
There are missteps, though -- in
comparison to the more intense songs on the album, the failures of the
blander, poppier ones are made more apparent. I find three of the songs
basically unlistenable: "Muhammad My Friend", which is tiresome and
heavy-handed; "Talula", just plain boring; and "Putting The Damage On",
which doesn't ever seem to go anywhere.
The "indented" songs are short, 1-2
minute tracks, and I think they're tributes to music from the '70s she
liked -- at least, "Mr. Zebra" reminds me greatly of Queen's "Killer
Queen" and "Agent Orange" is strongly reminiscent of Joni Mitchell's
"Blue".
I think Boys for Pele an incredible album,
as she pushes the boundary in both emotional intensity and musical
experimentation. It's not perfect, and it's often not easy to listen
to, but it's well worth it.
Top of Page
|