love to listen to this stuff but I'm not sure I really understand it beyond "that's a bunch of cool weird noises in a pattern"
and I think there is something to understand, usually, because these are generally Proper Composers, steeped in the tradition, inheritors of Beethoven or whoever - and most of them feel like they are contributing to that tradition - even if the recital hall middlebrow public doesn't agree with them - there's a lot of lofty themes and references to classical literature and so forth - or the nature of time... philosophical, spiritual, religious notions....
it might sounds psychedelic to us but I don't think many of these dudes were thinking "I'm going to make some good noises to get stoned to or trip to". They went about it with a sobriety and seriousness.
feel like I can tell when it's done really well, and tell when it's done really badly, but there's a LOT in between that is kind of "well that was pretty cool, but why listen to that one again, and not this other one out of 1000s of other examples"
a lot of the best stuff feels like you are entering a non-naturalistic space, or perhaps a space that is part of the natural world but is very different in its acoustics and perspectives to the plane on which we normally exist
so there's one particular piece by Parmegiani that always makes me think of a speleological expedition - like you're going into a disorienting cavern system
the writing about it in serious books, or the liner notes of records is fairly useless - tells you a lot about the technical ways in which the sounds were achieved, or the lofty intent behind the project, what it's official themes and meanings are - but it is pretty dry stuff - the books especially are almost entirely about the technology side and nothing about how it feels as sensations or as a moodscape or whatever
one thing that has struck me that is analogous with the musique concrete tape-snip stuff is animation as technique in the analogue era - like an arrangement of heterogenous audio objects brought into the same space and given eerie life - dreams built by ear and hand, as opposed to dreams built by eye and hand
this one always make me think of The Clangers
even though it doesn't sound much like the actual (and delightful) music in The Clangers by Vernon Elliott
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ReplyDeleteGood selection. I've been listening to this stuff for years now and like you 'I'm not sure I really understand it beyond "that's a bunch of cool weird noises in a pattern" '! But I think it's that very mystery which is why it remains so appealing.
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