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OLI HAS MOVED! I'll still post excerpts here for the time being, but to read my articles in full, visit http://oliverarditi.com/

Wednesday, 16 March 2011

Album Review: Russ Sargeant - ‘Solitude’ (ambient/ jazz)

self released, 2010, DD album, £name your price

When instrumentalists release recordings, it’s not unusual for them to do so under a cover from which they stare directly, and intensely, at the listener. Jaco Pastorius’ eponymous debut is an iconic example, recently revisited by Jasper Høiby for the Phronesis album ‘Alive’. It says ‘listen, I am addressing an important statement to you’. Russ Sargeant stares from the cover art of ‘Solitude’, obliquely away from the viewer, refusing their gaze, his half smile suggesting some private, inward amusement, a hunted look in his shadowed eyes. This says something different: ‘I am engaged in a dialogue, and you are invited to eavesdrop’.
This is not to say that his music is uncommunicative; but it is contemplative. It seems to represent a process rather than a conclusion. This is born out in fact by the statement (on the album’s Bandcamp page) of his intent to ‘release tracks two or three at a time and build this album as I do so’. There is no indication as to whether he’s finished.
To say Sargeant creates soundscapes would be to gloss over one of his greatest strengths, as a melodist, but his recordings largely consist of spatial, layered pads, and melodies played on electric or upright bass. Sometimes the pads sound very like synthesizers (as on Dream The Brightest Dawn), but with some effects and an Ebow, anything is possible: what’s certain is that these tracks are performed as they sound here, using live looping technology. If you see Sargeant live he will realise these compositions for you with one or more basses and some gizmos.
The album opens with a beautifully warm and atmospheric landscape of heavily processed fretless bass delays, that builds slowly in layers, evoking for me the melancholy cityscapes (and soundtrack) of Blade Runner. After nearly three minutes the smooth and calming consonance is ruptured by a distorted voice, that cuts across the harmony as well as the texture; but even this fizzing distortion is cushioned and absorbed in Sargeant’s sound world.
There is a sense of distance, even anaesthesia, throughout this album: even the beautiful double bass melody he dedicates to Eberhard Weber is recorded very wet, and sounds very detached, for all that it is also expressive and heartfelt. Sargeant is fond of technological solutions that generate organic, nuanced sounds, such as the fretless bass, and the Ebow. His music is very pleasant to listen to, very visual and evocative, and seems very welcoming; but it remains enigmatic, and refuses to let you pin it down. We will never know exactly what Sargeant is thinking, because he does not seem to state it explicitly: it is as though we can hear one half of a phone call, a beautiful and moving series of utterances, but one that is not directed at us.
This refusal, to me, is the core of this music’s beauty. It is a refusal, as he refuses the viewer’s gaze in the artwork, to enter into the usual contract between musician and listener, and it is a refusal that is crucial to Sargeant’s creative integrity, bearing in mind that it is easy to read music of this sort in a simplistic way, as being simply ‘pretty’. A familiar musical vocabulary is deployed, according to a recognisable structure, but the listener is challenged to hear past the stock response, which is to hear musical meaning as a straightforward expression of a simple, singular emotional experience. The soundworld Sargeant opens up to us is a colder, lonelier place than we might initially guess from his textures and harmonies, but it is also a more complex and rewarding place to inhabit.

Monday, 14 March 2011

Weekly Roundup: Some News-like Things I Found On The Internet And Some Musings

The critic mumbles
This blog is starting to gradually build up its readership. I mean, the numbers are tiny, but they’re on the up, and although individual posts don’t get that many views, the minimum daily traffic has risen quite dramatically over the last month of regular posts. So I’m considering throwing all this away and moving somewhere else, specifically to WordPress.
The reason for this is basically that WordPress offers some more sophisticated options for layout, and might make it easier for me to adopt a magazine format. I’m working hard on a novel, which I will either find a publisher for, or publish myself as an ebook, at which point I will need a web presence that is based around Oliver Arditi the writer, rather than Oli_Da_Bass the random comment ninja. With WordPress I would find it easier to have a single front page opening onto several strands of writing, rather than the very linear structure of Blogspot, which really best lends itself to a one trick pony. At the moment I’m thinking the best way to handle the transition will be to register a domain, redirect to this blog for a while, then change the redirect to the new one, and post a message here to send people on. I’m conscious I may already have people who look here, rather than being sent here by my posts on Twitter on elsewhere. Watch this space, but not too avidly, as I’m not likely to have much time to do anything about this in the immediate future.
Genre. It’s a complex topic, and it’s a concept whose specific value is debatable. My take on it is basically that when fans get into arguments about whether band X fits into genre Y, they are wasting their lives, and that when bands set out to make music in a specific genre, the result is usually, well, generic. On the other hand, when I use a term like ‘funk’, most people will understand that I am referencing a certain set of musical characteristics, and used in this way, genre can be a very useful shorthand for discussing music. If I say ‘rock’ you know I mean guitars; if I say ‘dubstep’ you know I mean gritty downtempo electronica; and if I say ‘pirate metal’ you know I mean loud rock music concerned with themes of nautical brigandry. This can be a quick way of letting someone know if they will like something or not, and although I usually mention genre in a review if an artist fits an established set of stylistic indicators, I have recently had a request to tag reviews for genre in the title.  I’m going to give it a go and see what happens. Don’t expect me to start giving stars out of five or anything really lame like that though.
Dynamic Range Day is March 25th! Sounds really nerdy, I know, but actually the sonic simplification of commercial music has been a bane, and it’s good to see some organised resistance to the excessively compressed and normalised production that has become ubiquitous.
If Skunk Anansie are playing Download it might just start to edge out Sonisphere as this year’s metal festival of choice. But the Big Four are an awfully strong argument the other way. I dunno.
Interesting to see how Spotify may pan out as a revenue source for the independent musician.
Not really music news, but if you have any self-portraiture chops this could fund several full length recordings!
Following on from the link I posted last week about the growth of music tech startups, it seems that investor money is ready to back direct marketing frameworks. Could be a bubble, as there seem to be an awful lot of these sites/ services around right now.

Saturday, 12 March 2011

Single and EP Reviews: A Mixed Bag

Tooms - ‘When Two Worlds Collide’
self released, CDR demo, promotional
Somewhat grandiosely described as a ‘proof of concept’, this three track demo tackles a form of fusion that is ripe for some more exploration, although it’s far from untouched. We’re talking metal riffery, dark and dirty dance music, and shouty, angry vocals.The electronic elements are of the d’n’b, gabba, break heavy variety, and it has to be said some breakcore has already appropriated the textures of metal: the difference here is that Tooms are approaching it from the metal side, so the tone is unremittingly dark and heavy. Sometimes sounding like some heavier Prodigy tracks, they’ve done an excellent job of fusing the styles, which is to say, it doesn’t sound like a fusion, just like some dark and dirty noise from the fun part of hell. Industrial music fans will love this, but so will a lot of metalheads and d’n’b fans etc. The production could have been livened up with some mastering magic, but this is a demo. Nice work, lads, concept proven. Now can we have some more please?



Swimming - ‘Sun In The Island’
EVR Records, 2011, DD single, $2 
(also available as 7” vinyl, $4.99)

I knew the flip side to this single well already, thanks to its inclusion on the Tummy Touch Records 2011 teaser compilation. Sun In The Island has a nice combination of thumping rock groove and floaty psychedelic melodicism: the production is a thick stick of synthy rock with vintage written right down the middle, but a distinctly modern sense of sonic craftsmanship (I especially liked the processed toms at about 1:30). Team Jetstream (Preflight Mix) is less guitary, but equally groovy and psychedelic. Like the title track it has a positive, infectious, feelgood hook, that’s likely to see it on heavy rotation in anyone’s playlist. You’ve been warned.



Yonks - ‘Yonks Alpha’
Spencer Park Music, 2011, DD EP, £name your price
Yonks consists of Matt Stevens and Lextrical, with their guitars and some technology (including beat making tech). Four instrumental tracks, named Yonks 1 to 4, bursting with progressive creativity, and utterly non-generic. There are voicings and tones that recall Stevens’ solo releases, but this recording carves out a distinct sonic identity in short order: the first two tracks are powered rhythmically by the guitar, 3 & 4 by the beats, but all are animated by a sonic playfulness and generate a pleasingly hypnotic atmosphere. It can be hard to distinguish the processed guitar sounds from the electronically generated ones, but I guess that’s the point: everything’s a sound source, grist to the mill of two sets of ears as attuned to timbre as they are to pitch and rhythm. There’s a lot of detail in this excellent music, and it rewards close listening, but it also has plenty of surface ear-candy niceness for when you just want to stick something on and feel happy.


The Fierce And The Dead - ‘Part 1’
Spencer Park Music, 2010, DD EP, £name your price
This recording probably merits a long review of its own, despite its short length. At 18:49 a single track can develop its themes into quite a complex statement, and I won’t attempt to paraphrase that here. This is the second release in this round up to feature the very creative and thoughtful Matt Stevens: here he’s essentially jamming in a rock trio setting (he has described this music as ‘post-rock’). The ensemble texture is all bass, drums and guitar (there’s no singing), although there’s a great deal of timbral variety, courtesy of Stevens’ electronic trickery. The compositional approach is to establish big waves of changing texture, atmosphere and dynamics that hit the listener like a movie does. There’s nice playing, but no fireworks: if there’s a technically impressive performance, as is often the case in an ensemble that foregrounds texture, it comes from the drummer (like with Magnus Östrom in EST). This is easy to listen to, but far from easy listening.



Marvelry Skimmer - ‘Beachball/ Dunebuggy’
Workbench Recordings WBR38 & 39, 2010, DD single, $name your price
Marvelry Skimmer is all James Beaudreau, but operating in a lighter, more straightforward mode than he does under his own name. He set out to make eleven summer jams, and ran out of summer by the time he’d made two, so we have a single rather than an album. I hope he carries on this summer though, because this is some great music. These tracks are essentially instrumental, although Beachball has a heavily processed vocal refrain; bass and (unconventional) drums make driving rock grooves, while guitars and synths create bright, hot summery atmospheres and melodies. There’s a fascinating account of the making of Dunebuggy here: http://workbenchrecordings.com/posts/marvelry-skimmer-dunebuggy-wbr-39.html. There’s very little that’s obvious about the way this music sounds, or the way it was made, yet it succeeds in being ear pleasing and head nodding, which is just what I want from a summer’s day tune.


http://jamesbeaudreau.bandcamp.com/album/workbench-recordings-presents-marvelry-skimmer



Three Is A Green Crown - ‘All The Pretty Horses’
Workbench Recordings WBR 36, 2010, DD single, $free
A folk rock reading of a traditional song, with a serene, moving female vocal from Anne DeAcetis, and a restrained accompaniment of arpeggiated acoustic guitar chords, and simple but deep grooving bass and drums, all courtesy of the ever soulful James Beaudreau. Oh, and he also plays heartrendingly melodic lead electric guitar, with a thick vintage tone and shimmering reverb. That’s all I’ve got to say: it’s simple, it’s hearfelt, and it’s beautiful.


http://workbenchrecordings.com/posts/three-is-a-green-crown-all-the-pretty-horses-wbr-36.html



James Beaudreau - ‘The Devil Is A Sad Spirit’
Workbench Recordings WBR40, 2010, DD single, $name your price
This is Beaudreau’s first release under his own name since he finished recording ‘Astral Law’. He gets his title from Martin Luther, his cover art from William Blake, and his sound from the late 60s. The devil, to paraphrase Luther, is sad, and runs away from the joy expressed in music: with this tune Beaudreau shifts his focus from challenging our assumptions about how we hear music, to simply chasing away the devil. This is a musically straightforward rock instrumental, but Beaudreau shows himself a soulful lead guitarist and a master melodist, articulating the harmony in a way that just gets right in there and makes you feel it, whether you want to or not. And then it just suddenly stops! He can give us a nice tune, he seems to be saying, but don’t take anything for granted.


http://jamesbeaudreau.bandcamp.com/album/the-devil-is-a-sad-spirit



Faderhead - ’69 Freaks Per Minute’
L-Tracks, 2010, DD single, €0.99 (Bandcamp), €0.84 (Amazon Germany), $0.99 (Amazon US), £0.79 (iTunes UK), £0.42 (eMusic)
A jackhammer backbeat kicks off this floor-filler from the ever nasty Faderhead. Seriously, every effort, at every stage from programming to mastering, has been made to ensure you feel like you’re a building being demolished by this kick and snare. And then a few layers of dirty, fucked up electro sounds are arranged around that very square, straight, pounding beat, in just the right places to make it immensely funky. The usual tale of clubland sex and hedonism is relayed in the usual laconic vocal delivery. Faderhead sells a fantasy, setting his musical persona in a dark, indulgent world, where the night never ends, so there can be no consequences. It’s a fantasy most of us can experience, if only for a few nights of our lives: for the other nights, there are heavy, stomping tunes like this to remind us.


http://faderhead.com/home.php?p=music



Faderhead - ‘White Room’
self released, 2011, DD single, £a tweet or a share
Faderhead was in the studio with a friend when news of Gary Moore’s death reached him: he got on a classic rock buzz and ended up making this electro cover version of Cream’s White Room (which has no direct connection to Moore, but whatever). It doesn’t have quite the devastating impact or blast radius of the stuff he puts out commercially, but it has a classic Faderhead beat and a fistful of gritty FM synth sounds. Faderhead, unlike many dark electro vocalists, knows how to carry a tune without compromising on his badass delivery, and he makes good use of Jack Bruce’s melody here: in fact, he owns it, by making it sound like exactly the sort of thing he’d write himself. This is a fitting electro tribute to a rock classic, and a good track even if you hate rock. It can be yours for free if you share it on Facebook or Twitter: if you can’t do either of those things I guess you’re out of luck.


http://faderhead.com/blog/?p=571

Wednesday, 9 March 2011

Album Review: She Makes War - ‘Disarm’

She Makes War - ‘Disarm’ (2010)
self released, DD album, £name your price
(also available in one of four physical packages, £15 -£80)

War isn’t the first thing that springs to mind: there’s a lot of female performers out there with a far more aggressive image, but there’s certainly a strength and a sense of resistance in the persona that Laura Kidd articulates through her music as She Makes War. This is dark music, in its way: not gothic, horror tinged dark, nor emotionally indulgent, angsty dark. It’s the darkness in the dusty corners of imperfect relationships; the darkness of everyday, ordinary pain, of the kind that we tend not to mention when we tell our stories, to others or to ourselves. Gloom-pop (as she describes it on her website) is not a bad word for it, but personally I find it a bit strange to call this pop, qualified or otherwise.
Words like ‘rock’ and ‘pop’ have changed their meanings quite dramatically over the years, and they have quite different functions when used to describe genres on the one hand, or stylistic features on the other. If I ask my twelve year old daughter what ‘pop’ means, it’s commercial chart music that isn’t R’n’B (her comment on this album was ‘don’t you find this annoying?’). Once upon a time, pop was music played by guitar bands, and so the word has stuck to certain brands of guitar music, even bizarrely being used by Tim Smith to describe Cardiacs’ sound. What’s the point of this digression? I’m warning you off looking for a genre label that will tell you clearly what sort of sound you get from She Makes War. There isn’t one. The stylistic vocabulary is drawn from rock, or acoustic rock, and the instrumental textures are open and spacious, rather than layered and dense.
This is the work of a solo performer, expanded and garnished in the studio, but with all the arrangements constructed around the live core of a single stringed instrument and a voice: there are some full, layered arrangements, but you can always hear that single main instrumental voice.The consequence of that is that we get an ensemble sound that is perfectly supportive of the material, in the way that a band, with all its egos, rarely is. Even a ‘name’ performer’s backing band is unlikely to sublimate its urge to play, and edit itself so ruthlessly as this. There are heavy, rocked out songs, but the other elements are still minimal, and act as a scaffold for the guitar, which is always the main musical current in which the vocals swim. In Got Milk the heavy guitar riff is supported by a spare electro drum beat, that acts like a clip frame on a photograph, quietly announcing its existence as a token of the attention it directs to its contents.
The songs are sometimes quite conventionally structured, and sometimes more experimental sounding, as in the sequentially gestural Olympian. There is always a good match between form and content; this for me is the mark of effective songwriting. The meaning of the lyrics is in the experience of hearing the melody and harmony, just as much as in the definitions of the words.
The characters in these songs speak from a variety of perspectives, often from within the desolation and inertia of a failed relationship. Their statements are never glib, and the songs are never so naïve as to offer closure. This is not to say they are depressing or hopeless; their scenarios ring true, and real situations are always in flux, always offering the possibility of change for the better or the worse. So Kidd focusses on pain: there’s a lot of pain in life, and in human relationships, and it’s how we know we’re alive. There is something fundamentally life affirming about this music, not in spite of, but because of its clinically unsentimental examination of the inner lives of believably damaged, lonely characters. The scalpel like precision with which a song like Scared To Capsize exposes the mutual accommodations and complicity of a dried out, withered bond, feeding on the fear of being alone, somehow does more honour to human life than it would if it copped out into an uplifting chorus of contrived optimism. And seriously, these songs are melancholy, but they feel a lot lighter than you might think from reading this!
A lot of people write sad songs. It’s easier to achieve an expression of sadness in music than one of joy. Very few people write dark songs of broken love with anything like this maturity, perceptiveness and depth, and still convey a sense of vulnerable youthfulness and optimism. ‘I am/ the sweet defender’ Kidd sings in I Am: it’s a good epithet.

Monday, 7 March 2011

Weekly Roundup: Some News-like Things I Found On The Internet And Some Musings

The critic speaks
For about the last six months I’ve applied myself seriously to writing about music. I left school thinking I was going to be a writer, and discovered by 23-ish that I had nothing to say: I hadn’t written anything apart from university essays and the occasional first page of a soon-to-be-abandoned SF story since my early 20s. When I began this process I was still first and foremost a musician, albeit one that wanted to do a great deal of practice before putting his name to any significant creative output. And now? I will continue to develop my skills as a bassist when I can, but I realise that I am a far, far better writer than I will ever be a musician. Fiction, poetry and music criticism are going to be my main focus for the remainder of my life.
So what have I learned in those six months? I have learned the truth of Martin Mull’s oft (mis)quoted adage, ‘writing about music is like dancing about architecture.’ Usually employed to illustrate the absurdity of attempting to paraphrase one art form in the language of another, I’ve come to regard it as holding a more literal truth. You have to do a kind of dance with words, circling the musical object and rushing in to approach it while it’s distracted: you have to constantly adjust the balance between drawing generic comparisons, baldly describing the sound, analysing the musical materials, and addressing the conceptual and social frameworks in which the music has meaning. Every recording or performance requires a different approach, and the more out-there the music, the more out-there the critical response needs to be. My bare opinion, and my professional assessment of technical quality, which are the main tools I thought I had at my disposal to start with, interest me less and less each time I set fingers to keyboard. My usefulness is as an interpreter, firstly helping my readers to judge whether they are likely to enjoy listening to the music I write about, and secondly, to share my understanding of the music in the hope that it may enrich other listenings; and my aim is to be some kind of verbal DJ, sharing the music I love, and promoting the artists to whom I will always be incredibly grateful for enriching my life with their work.


Here’s a story: Apple want to give iTunes customers the right to download unlimited copies of music they’ve paid for. This is not so much interesting in itself, as for what it says about the ongoing erosion of the sense of a recording as a physical, tradeable commodity. Music is an experience, not a thing, and the ongoing upheavals in the music business are all about the gradual collapse of the pretense that it is.
I love new and obscure genres, especially those with silly names (such as ‘misanthropic technical death grind’). I’m currently thinking about what to call New York experimental folk guitar improvisors, since I know of two, which by the standards of pirate metal, is enough for a genre. Here’s an article about ‘djent’.
Which music distribution formats were you glad to see the back of? I know the cassette is enjoying a good deal of retro chic lately, but for me they were fucking heartbreaking, as album after favourite album drifted into electromagnetic incoherence. I don’t agree with much of this, but that’s the fun of it: a list of the 13 worst formats ever.
Where is the major growth in the music business? Silicon Valley, where digital music technology firms are sprouting like mushrooms on cowshit. Seriously, the web is crammed with new band profile/ audio hosting sites, vying to see who can play Brutus to MySpace’s Caesar.
And finally, for completists and bootleg nerds, SideLine reckon the newly unearthed three track demo from Depeche Mode is the genuine article.

Saturday, 5 March 2011

Album Reviews: James Beaudreau - ‘Astral Law’, ‘Java St. Bagatelles’ & ‘Fresh Twigs’



James Beaudreau - ‘Astral Law’ (2011)

Workbench Recordings WBR35, CDR album, $10
(also available as DD, $ pay what you want)
In the theatre Bertolt Brecht pioneered an effect that he called the ‘Verfremdungseffekt’, variously translated as the distancing, alienation, or estrangement effect. This was a technique used to draw attention to the artificiality of the performance, to undermine the convention of the fourth wall and the illusion of naturalism, with the intention of forcing the audience to become actively, critically engaged with the work.
In music there is no fourth wall: there is no obvious form of ‘naturalism’ at work, but there are conventions that serve a similar function. All the conventions of musical ‘competence’ are aimed at eliding the presence of the performer, and even of the musical instruments, and especially of any technological process involved in recording or amplifying the sound. Instrumentalists learn to play so that the note is clear, and the sounds of their physical contact with the instrument are as quiet as possible; creaks, coughs, electronic noise, passing traffic, are all edited out by performers, technicians, and ultimately listeners, as being extraneous.
So what is the point of deliberately drawing attention to these things, and of using other strategies to undermine the conventional sense of what constitutes a ‘quality’ musical performance?
I would suppose that for James Beaudreau, as for Brecht, the intention is to focus the audience’s critical attention on the work, to make them aware of the act of listening, rather than taking for granted the automatic processes by which certain sounds reference certain socially constituted assumptions. Where he and Brecht part company, to my mind, is in Brecht’s intention to privilege an intellectual response over an emotional one. While Beaudreau encourages us to listen closely, with conscious attention, to listen critically to the entirety of the recorded sound, the end point of that process is still a musical meaning, which in my view can never be wholly, or even predominantly intellectual.
A lot of the music on ‘Astral Law’ is about melody, harmony and a pleasing sound made with a guitar. This is somewhat at odds with Beaudreau’s earlier work, but only somewhat. There has always been an element of conventional musical language in what he does, but it has not always been central to his meanings, and sometimes it has been an instrument of subversion in itself, as when pleasing melodies with consonant harmonies take unexpected turnings at variance with common notions of tonality.
The album opens with an odd noise, a descending glissando, followed by a couple of stray chords, and then a smattering of unenthusiastic applause. After this a variety of ideas crop up: a couple of bars of snare fills that sound as though they’re about to launch into something; some melodically ambiguous notes with no attack (perhaps articulated with an EBow); two bars of funky, bluesy groove; and then a more extended episode of EBow (if that’s what it is) with some percussion, and eventually a rhythmic overdriven guitar accompaniment. This is the title track, and it doesn’t go anywhere more songlike, or conventionally narrative than I’ve described.
At the Foothills, which follows it, is a slow, picked chord sequence, with a simple, haunting melody performed on slide guitar (there’s a fair bit of slide on ‘Astral Law’, which is a Good Thing in my book). It’s lovely, and it allows me to fall back on my residual idea of what ‘lovely’ sounds like, but because of the way Astral Law has compelled me to listen very attentively for the musical meaning, I’m still in that mode, still drinking in every little string noise. As a consequence, the simple melody has a disproportionately pronounced impact, and is unexpectedly involving.
And so he continues, sometimes exploiting an established folk guitar lexicon (Goodmorning Junction, Stellar Rushes, Easy Pieces No.4), and sometimes doggedly forging his own vocabulary, that incorporates sonic elements conventionally regarded as extramusical, arhythmic phrasing and seemingly aleatory components (Signal Stations, The Leaden Circles, Quiver). And sometimes, as in The Mirror Wall, he simply applies his technique in a straightforward manner to a melodically challenging composition.
The penultimate track, American Gothic, is a fuzzed out blues rock boogie, albeit one with only one riff, repeated obsessively while a lead guitar part repeatedly tries to pull away to another chord, and is repeatedly snapped back into place by the refusal of the other part to move. It panders to some of the commonplace rock blues assumptions, which makes its subversion of others all the more potent. It’s the dynamic peak of the album, which immediately drops away to a tranquil calm.
The final track is called Listening. Ultimately, I found myself doing just that. It was as though this entire album, or in fact Beaudreau’s entire oeuvre, had systematically prepared me to hear this piece. There’s string noise, unpredictable phrasing, melodic and harmonic ambiguity, seemingly random percussion, other noises that may or may not be percussion, and precious few signals to tell you how to like it. I found myself just listening, letting all the sounds float through my awareness, and finding it uncomplicatedly pretty. It has a quiet, contemplative mood, and although it lacks conventional structuring devices, its aleatory character is gentle and pleasing, like wind chimes. I found myself doubting whether Beaudreau would recognise his music in my analysis, and wondering whether perhaps he just likes all the sounds he makes, and doesn’t think about them at all. But of course the purpose of describing art is not to paraphrase the author’s intentions, which are often as elusive to them as to anyone else, but to share an understanding that may help others to digest the work to its fullest potential: and I have to say, with James Beaudreau, the deeper you dig, the more you get.






James Beaudreau - ‘Java St. Bagatelles’ (2006)
Workbench Recordings WBR1, numbered limited edition CD album, $10
(also available as DD, $ pay what you want)
Be warned, I’m going to have to resort to semiotics to describe this music. The most interesting meanings this album feeds me are the ones generated by Beaudreau’s approach to compositional syntax, so structural analysis is the tool for this job. Using that sort of approach for its own sake makes for self-aggrandizing intellectualist bullshit, but my primary aim in writing about music is to describe and analyse the listening experience, and I’d argue that an examination of the way meaning is built up from the combination of small into large structures is central to an understanding of how this composition works.
And yes, that’s composition, singular. This is an album of twenty-four short tracks, which are clearly not intended to be listened to in isolation. In a conventional composition meaning is generated through the mechanism of combining notes to make a melody: the notes are analogous to the words making up a sentence, and constitute the individual signifying units, or musemes. In Java St. Bagatelles, meaning is generated in a different location, in the syntactical relationship between the bagatelles themselves. Where the tracks of an album are usually relatively self contained, like the chapters of a longer narrative, here they draw their capacity to signify from their context, and function as the musemes that constitute a single long musical statement.
This is not to say that they do not contain notes making up musical phrases in a recognisable manner; various strategies are employed to frustrate common habits of listening, however. It is obvious throughout that Beaudreau is a capable guitarist, but at no point does he cop out and tender technical facility as a token of musical quality. Notes are choked where you might expect them to sustain; string noise is elevated to the level of content; tonality is present, but it is always provisional, and subject to sudden abandonment or repurposing; phrase lengths are unpredictable, and phrase shapes often ungainly.
None of this should suggest that these vignettes are ugly, or difficult in the sense that Edgar Varèse or Albert Ayler are difficult: in detail the textures are usually consonant, and there are sequential episodes of pleasant noodling. But ideas meander strangely into one another, without being developed, and then seem to stop in mid thought. They are performed by a solo acoustic guitar, using a vocabulary mainly derived from folk and blues idioms, although from time to time I was reminded of John McLaughlin, for example by the bent harmonics in Under The Tree On The Hill.
Ultimately a piece of music is the experience of listening to it. Java St. Bagatelles makes it clear through the various strategies described above that conventional listening habits are inappropriate: realising this will either cause the listener to switch off, and dismiss it out of hand as incompetent, or to open their ears and start paying real attention, to the sound as encountered, rather than its relationship to their preconceptions.
It is recorded in a way that emphasises hiss, and incorporates background noises, odd thumps and bangs that might be the body of the instrument, or furniture moving in the room. These elements encouraged me to hear the entire piece as being aleatory in some sense, with Beaudreau’s (presumable) improvisations bearing as much resemblance to automatic writing as they do to blowing in the conventional sense. It took me a while to get it, but when I did it forced my musical awareness wide open, and yes, I found beauty in it.
The aesthetics of this album can only be found once you abandon your desire to classify it. It’s an ethereal, astringent beauty, with a bite like lemon juice, and so rich in musical meaning, once you start to hear how it hangs together, that you need an hour of silence to digest it after each listening.








James Beaudreau - ‘Fresh Twigs’ (2008)
Workbench Recordings WBR2, DD album, $ pay what you want
The last note of James Beaudreau’s debut release dies away a second or so before the recording noise; ‘Fresh Twigs’, his sophomore release, opens with a moment of noise before the first note of the guitar. Silence is an important part of music: it is analogous to the frame in visual art, or the wall behind the support if the work is unframed. All music begins and ends in silence, and by seeming to let you hear the unsullied ambience of the recording apparatus Beaudreau represents the frame in a way that a simple absence of sound cannot.
In Gold Coast, the second piece on this album, the hiss gives way to a repeating soft crackle, like dust on a record: this is a bit more obviously contrived, but also spells out its own value as a part of the composition more clearly, as does the deliberate coming and going of the white noise on Twig. ‘Fresh Twigs’ is composed of fewer, longer pieces than its predecessor, utilising a broader range of instrumental textures and sonic effects: there is a concomitant shift in the site of its principal musical meanings, back toward the individual piece as a self contained composition.
We hear more of Beaudreau the player on this album as well, finding a variety of interesting ways to extract sounds from his instrument with his hands, sometimes in a way that flips the relationship between fundamental and transient. If there’s one lesson that Beaudreau is keen to teach us it is that every sound you can hear is a part of the artwork: in a way, like John Cage’s silence, it encourages us to listen as much to anything else that comes our ears’ way while the album is playing.
To say that meaning is generated within the scope of the individual tracks is not to suggest they conform to conventional notions of what a short instrumental guitar piece should sound like, or how it should be structured. In contrast to the bagatelles of Beaudreau’s first album, ideas are developed within these pieces, but they are usually developed and then abandoned in favour of another, meaning that the structure of the pieces resembles verbal syntax, eschewing the repetition and incremental development of a conventional arrangement.
Parlor is one exception to this, repeating its sequence of ideas, and presenting a more easily digested set of harmonic and melodic materials. It even ends with a confirmational return to the tonic. Fresh Twigs, the closer, is another: a bass riff accompanies electric blues guitar improvisations, but it is repeated so obsessively, and is so short a cycle, that it begins to ask the same questions of the listener as the more confusingly structured pieces.
Beaudreau uses electric guitar throughout the album, from time to time, and utilises some other sound effects in Rowing/ Haint, although they may have been generated by his guitar. Like the recording noise effects, these sounds tend to come and go very abruptly, cutting across any comfort zone we may have settled into now that we think we know what James Beaudreau sounds like. Using this broader sonic palette enables him to approach compositional aims more directly than at the level of the whole album, which essentially makes the music easier to listen to and understand: in making it easier, he sacrifices some of his debut’s power to command direct attention to the recorded sound, but what he gains is the capacity to express his meanings more forcefully. As an album, ‘Fresh Twigs’ certainly makes you think, but it also makes you feel, in a more accessible way than Beaudreau’s earlier work.

Wednesday, 2 March 2011

Album Review: VA - ‘Oi! A Nova Música Brasileira!’





Various Artists - ‘Oi! A Nova Música Brasileira!’ (2010)
Mais Um Discos MAIS01, 2CD album, £10
I love Brazilian music, and I have done for years, but do I know anything much about it? Well, to be honest, I tend not to know about any particular kinds of music: what I know about is the stuff I’ve come across and liked enough to pay some attention to, and that is such an eclectic mix that I can’t claim expert status on any style, movement or region.
This is why I like albums like this one. A truly well researched compilation, curated with a real love of the music and depth of knowledge, and accompanied by informative and articulate commentary, is a thing of great value. I enjoy hearing new sounds, but sounds mean very little without context, and any effort to broaden and enrich the context of an encounter, especially with the music of another culture, can only enhance the complexity of meanings generated by that encounter. There’s a whole debate around how and what music means, and what constitutes an ‘authentic’ meaning in cross-cultural listening, but unless you’re an ethnomusicologist the only issue is that the music should generate some meanings for you, as a listener, and that the process should be satisfying on some level: aesthetic, political, cultural, educational, or hopefully all of the above and then some. So if you care about authenticity, a well made compilation should be a boon, but if you don’t, the whole structure still ought to help you enjoy the music more than if you were just presented with the sounds as a folder of audio files.
My initial encounter with Brazilian music was heavily mediated by American jazz artists, and while it did lead me on to the classic bossa of Tom Jobim and João Gilberto, that was where it left me. America plundered Brazil’s musical treasury at a particular moment, and never went back: had I stopped to think about it I would have realised that noughties Brazil was not listening to 50s bossa, wearing lounge suits and smoking cigarillos, but it took the excellent Manteca compilation ‘Nu Brazil’ (MANTDCD217, 2003) to open my ears to some of the diversity of music being recorded there.
The music presented there ranged from Silvera’s mainstream r’n’b, through Vitor Ramil’s haunting Argentinean tinged folksong, and jazz-funk hipsters Max De Castro and Jair Oliveira, to the electronic dance music of Mad Zoo and the late Serbian expatriate Suba. There was a sonic thread that unified all that diversity however: a deep groove, a lightness of touch, a melodic sweetness, a harmonic coolness, a combination of all these, or maybe none of them. An elusive but audible character that I would come to identify as Brazilian-ness, and to value in music so diverse as to have nothing else in common. Brazilian musicians have given birth to many home grown folk and popular music styles, and also put their own stamp on everything the global music industry has thrown at them, from reggae to metal.
The compiler of ‘Oi! A Nova Música Brasileira!’, known only as Mais Um Gringo (‘another gringo’) says ‘all the Brazilian compilations I found either offered a tired mix of nu-bossa and nu-samba or were titles covering niche genres like baile-funk’, and as a pathological trawler of world music racks I can concur. There came to be some big money in selling an idea of Brazil through Virgin and HMV, and it was unsurprisingly a non-threatening, easy to dance to, ‘tropically’ floaty, Riocentric idea of what is in reality a very large and diverse country. The idea of this album is to bring us the underground: and not just one underground, but a sampling of underground musics from all over a country with extremely strong regional identities.
The amazing thing is that I can still hear the same Brazilian-ness that I first encountered on the much more mainstream ‘Nu Brazil’ eight years ago. Far be it from me to attempt to say what it is, but I do contend that Brazil has a national musical character, albeit one that is probably totally blurred across its borders, and hard to hear from within them.
The CD insert folds out into a large (slightly bigger than A3) poster, with a track by track guide to the album on the back, organised by region, and laid out around a map of Brazil. This is immensely helpful, although it can be confusing that the artists’ descriptions are not laid out in the sequence they appear on the album.
To my ignorant European ears the tunes bear some resemblance to contemporary independent rock, but with a great deal more groove, and a somewhat unexpectedly strong echo of central European folk sounds. This is a gross generalisation: there is a huge mixture of genres, both between and within all of these selections, but genre is a funny thing, and unless you are equipped with an understanding of which musical characteristics are usually grouped together to make up a style, it is very hard to unpick them. Fusions of fusions of musics with which I’m unfamiliar: not necessarily the obvious thing for me to be reviewing, you may think, but in the absence of expert knowledge I hope to share my musical experience, which has been one of joyful discovery.
Many of the tracks on Disc 1 sound like a Brazilian incarnation of things we’re used to hearing in Europe and America, with clean (or psychedelically fuzzed) electric guitars, and analogue synth sounds mixing it up with funky beats and folk flavours to convey some (mainly) happy sounding material. Fun, uplifting, danceable stuff, but also displaying a great deal of extremely diverse musical and sonic creativity. In production terms, we’re talking vintage flavours.
These observations hold true on into Disc 2, but a stronger electronic vein is mined as the compilation progresses. From around halfway through the disc the beats get bouncier, reminding my philistine ears of dancehall and reggaeton, as well as, unsurprisingly, baile funk. These are all home-grown flavours however, crossovers and fusions between regionally specific rhythms and a variety of influences, and the excursion into big bangin’ choon territory is a relatively brief one. The album closes out with a lilting, bittersweet episode of folktronica, courtesy of Júlia Says.
It’s hard to compile an album from different artists and make it sound like an album: it’s even harder when those artists come from a variety of traditions across a huge, regionally diverse country, but Mais Um Gringo has succeeded. You might be forgiven for thinking these artists have something specific in common, for instance that they are label-mates, but although some of them have something to do with one another, the one unifying thread that unifies the entire compilation is the curatorial ear. This is very much a DJ’s ear, in the way that sonically compatible tracks are sequenced to exploit their similarities and differences, and to spin out a coherent narrative, that ebbs and flows across the whole two and a half hours of music.
There are stand out tunes for me, unsurprisingly. The album is punctuated with pretty ballads: Tulipa’s haunting ‘Pedrinho’, and Lucas Santtana’s gorgeous, fragile, English language ‘Hold Me In’, are both intensely moving. Santtana is also the composer of BaianaSystem’s ‘O Carnaval Quem É Que Faz’ which features a deep groove and a shimmering waterfall of African styled electric guitar. ‘Eletro Do Maciota Light’ by Maderito & Joe lays it down in righteously electro style for the dancefloor, while Burro Morto espouses a more mellifluous brand of (instrumental) funk in ‘Navalha Cega’.
Picking particular tunes is pretty pointless, however. The quality is high right across both discs, and the album is more than the sum of its parts: I could give you a close reading of every tune, and it wouldn’t tell you much about the success or failure of the whole enterprise. My encounter has been with the collection, more than with the individual tracks: it’s in the big picture that the important meanings have been generated for me. Similar to my earlier revelation that Brazil contained a variety of musical practices, it has been a revelation for me to discover that there is such a rich musical underground. I was already aware of Brazilian music in American and European genres, such as punk and metal, but it’s been deeply satisfying to gain the beginnings of an understanding of all these fusions, whose foundations are outside my listening experience. So, in its aim to represent these musical scenes from across the country, to capture an accurate snapshot at a particular cross section, does this album succeed? I couldn’t possibly judge. What I can say, is that this is a collection of ear pleasing, danceable, creative and sonically imaginative music, which presents a well balanced combination of familiarity and novelty, and opens a window into what for most listeners will be new territories. I can’t wait to hear more from some of these artists: my horizons have been broadened.