In the summertime, in the woods of New York State, the midnight insects can be at once serene and deafeningly loud. A field recording of this din of nighttime creatures was the inspiration and base for 1am. Dense, and often aggressive, 1am
Despite 1am‘s opaque and rich sound it is not unlike the 23-minute epic title track from Deupree’s Stil. CD (12k1020). It is unwavering and highly repetitious but with enormous amounts of textural and timbral shifting.
Category: Music
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1am
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Specification.Fifteen
LINE is proud to present the first full length collaboration by Richard Chartier and Taylor Deupree since 1999′s Spec. (12k). For this collaboration, sound artists Richard Chartier and Taylor Deupree were invited by the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC, to create a new live work inspired by the Seascapes series of renowned Japanese photographer Hiroshi Sugimoto on the occasion of his retrospective exhibition. The result is this live recording, Specification.Fifteen. This work premiered on March 30, 2006 in front of the curved panoramic window of the Museum’s Lerner Room as the sun set across the city’s skyline. Specification.Fifteen evokes the stillness and opposing yet related spaces of Sugimoto’s Seascapes, which suggest infinitesimal change and variation under a seemingly uniform surface.
Water and air. So very commonplace are these substances, they hardly attract attentionÜand yet they vouchsafe our very existence. Mystery of mysteries, water and air are right there before us in the sea. Every time I view the sea, I feel a calming sense of security, as if visiting my ancestral home; I embark on a voyage of seeing. – Hiroshi Sugimoto
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May 6, 2001
On the night of Sunday, May 6, 2001, composer Kenneth Kirschner, as part of a series of pieces documenting the sounds of different New York City neighborhoods, took his tape recorder to the Financial District of Lower Manhattan to begin field recordings for a new piece. The resulting low-resolution portrait captured the sounds of a deserted urban landscape: the empty, winding streets of old Dutch New Amsterdam, its modern, towering skyscrapers — and a region of the city that, several months later, would be renamed Ground Zero.
and/OAR is proud to present “May 6, 2001”, a collection of five interpretations by five renowned contemporary composers of the aforementioned field recording portrait.
With excerpts from Kirschner’s original 2001 composition based on the field recording, the CD also includes pieces by Taylor Deupree (USA), Tomas Korber (Switzerland), Ralph Steinbrüchel (Switzerland), and Aaron Ximm (aka Quiet American; USA), all utilizing the 2001 Financial District field recording as their sole source material. The result is a project that obliquely and subtly evokes the source recording and its subsequent meanings, while also standing on its own as an estimable example of each artist’s mastery of his craft.
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Bricolages (Ryuichi Sakamoto Chasm Remixes)
“Pop quiz: when’s the last time you heard a remix album that was good all the way through? Even the best of the crop usually contains at least one clunker—often many more than that. It’s the risk you take: you’re a fan, you’re intrigued, but somewhere in the back of your head, you can’t quite trust the original material to be reworked by someone else the way you liked it the first time. Remix albums are, by nature, experiments, and as such, the point of them isn’t necessarily to better the original, but rather to simply present things from a different angle to simply see what happens.
That said, Bricolages—a collection of remixes of tracks from Ryuichi Sakamoto’s 2005 album Chasm—succeeds where most other remixes don’t. It isn’t necessarily that the material here betters the originals, as Chasm was a fine return to Sakamoto’s electro-pop roots. Rather, because Sakamoto’s work has always been diverse and stylistically varied, Bricolages doesn’t require that it be judged against the original work. Sakamoto has worked in acoustic, electronic, and classical genres extensively, and so a remix album is par for the course. Putting together a diverse set of remixers to tackle his material seems far less out of place for Sakamoto than it does for most other artists because he takes these same approaches to his own music already.
Of course, as with any remix album, the finished product is only as good as the remixers you enlist, and Sakamoto has signed up a most interesting combination. There’s fellow Japanese artists AOKI Takamasa and Cornelius taking on “War & Peace” from two decidedly different angles (glitchy and skittering versus loose and fun, respectively). There’s micromeisters Fennesz, Alva Noto, and snd. There’s twitchy technohead Richard Devine, noted soundtrack composer Craig Armstrong, Rob Da Bank & Mr. Dan, and the pride of Hefty Records, Slicker. There’s even a fantastic take on “Break With” from former Japan (the band) drummer Steve Jansen, with whom Sakamoto has worked the longest out of those assembled. The fact that he turns in perhaps the best and most unexpected work here is illustrative of why the whole project works. This isn’t so much a break from the norm for Sakamoto as it is a logical next step.
Sakamoto’s best work is all about combining disparate elements from his myriad musical tastes into a new whole. The selections here cross cultural and generational boundaries, making them not all the different from a standard Sakamoto LP. And if I were told nothing more before hearing Bricolages for the first time than, “This is the new Ryuichi Sakamoto album,” it wouldn’t sound the least bit odd to me. In fact, it would sound like his best album in years. Conveniently enough, the word “bricolage” roughly translated means “construction achieved by whatever comes to hand.” He couldn’t have found a better title for this project. ” – Stylus Magazine
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Northern
The inspiration behind Northern (including its music, title and photography) comes from Deupree’s recent relocation from the heart of urban activity in Brooklyn to the tranquility of the forest in upstate New York. Inspired by nature and the winter during which it was created, Northern, like much of his recent work, explores Deupree’s interest in stillness and a slowed sense of time. Through quiet textures, subtle movements, faint loops and echoes, it was his goal to create the type of music that comes naturally to him while also highlighting the input from his dramatic new surroundings.
In contrast to the brazen repetition found on Stil., Northern’s
Deupree’s earthbound ideas in the album are rooted in his choice of sounds and studio practices. His now-signature Kyma manipulations are still prominent, but they have been applied to improvised electric piano, melodica, guitar, and field recordings using techniques picked up from his experimental/pop collaboration with Eisi (Every Still Day, Noble Records, Japan, 2005). A careful balance is kept through the layering of synthetic source tones of basic waveforms and long, drawn-out, fragile swells. Northern is melodic, warm and introspective, forming a bed of sound that is simultaneously quiet and noisy, structured and unsettled, looping and chaotic.