l’après monde

27 04 2024

those that know me may have noticed i have been in full hermit mode. this may be to compensate for what i should have done during lockdowns. instead of using the period for stillness, with no gig in view, i occupied the time to produce and publish a large amount of work. i mastered and prepared the entire live archive for my band inclusion principle, created another bandcamp site for my own work and prepared albums for release, compiled all my solo electroacoustic performances for the series résonance, created albums from various field recordings, etc. this can be found on my bandcamp page.

during that time, i also produced three albums and released two of them: a wonderful duo with gus garside published by 377, and Inclusion Principle’s fourth. this is the third composition which has not yet been heard.

‘l’après monde’ started with henry recording piano and trombone at his home in the south of france. we have played as a duo for several years. henry is a wonderful pianist who took up the trombone around the same time as i switched to saxophone. we were part of an amazing network of improvisers and have played acoustic improvisation and gigged during many of my visits in the area. here, we use a very different approach while working from separate countries. plus, this collaboration takes on a new colour with the addition of electronic sounds and treatment. some of the things i was exploring in this piece paved the way to compositions for the Inclusion Principle album i worked on next.

i cut up the recordings henry sent me, drawing sections of improvisation, and shorter clips to create space and dynamic flow, radical changes between tableaux that organically unfold. i used samplers for the trombone, looped riffs, layered harmonic sections, processed the piano to create spectral clouds, etc. and thus, using henry’s material as building blocks, i arranged the structure for four pieces.

in all four, i gradually added electronic rhythms, field recordings and sound sculptures that are part of my palette, enjoying the possibilities found in ableton live 10 and creating new sounds. i then added alto sax improvisations, at times duetting with henry’s phrasing, at time playing in contrast, and flying off over loops or beats. the interplay, i hope, portrays the energy and excitement typical of our duo, and yet feels very different with added studio time and wide soundscapes. i rather like the balance between the raw energy of improvisation and the playful compositional techniques i have used.

this work seems to explore many areas of contemporary music, including jazz, improvisation, electronic, new music and electroacoustic composition. imagine a car crash between rothko and pollock. cezanne cries in a corner. the scene, smudged in the rain. 

 

 

i am very pleased to share this work with you, and i hope you enjoy listening. drop us a line and let us know… pass the word, and please support the artists featured.





three voices

25 04 2024

after a long period spent in the electroacoustic universe, i return to recording saxophone and revisit live processing on a different system. over time, i recorded improvisations using a limited set of plug-ins to inspire a certain soundscape. the three voices correspond to three sound worlds and three types of plug-ins: spectral, granular and tonal.

with the saxophone, i explore abstract textures and sound techniques that can be found in free improv and contemporary music. but mostly, i replicate the fractal approach of this sonic explosion, and play with symmetrical shapes using a harmonic system i have been developing.

the last improvisation, in contrast is free from wild tweakery, and sits in the vast space of a gentle reverb. i am using a minor scale with major seven, a very powerful and dramatic colour used by ravi shankar in his ode to gandhi.

 

this album reflects some of the sounds and techniques i have been playing with. i hope you enjoy this journey…

 





nada – listening meditation

10 01 2023

 

nada

the sound of silence

 

nada is an invitation to meditate with the sounds of the five elements, to heal body and mind with the songs from streams and rivers, from wind and trees, with harmonies that we intuitively relate to. this meditation practice highlights the relation between elements and emotions and our close connection to nature.

 

sculpted from the sounds of natural elements, these listening meditations are electroacoustic performances that draw from many years of practice as a composer and improviser, from qi gong, buddhist practice and meditation.

 

with the practice of mindfulness of listening, one is invited to reflect on perceptions, thoughts and reactions, on our connection to the elements internally and externally, as we delve deep into the observation of subtle sensations. all key aspects of buddhist meditation are integrated into this one practice, so there is no multiplicity of approaches.

the narratives that unfold, following the natural movements of the recordings, and the changes in mood during the performance keep the listener engaged while the live processing that playfully reshape known sounds may incite close attention conducive to meditative states of concentration.

 

another important aspect of the work is the use of resonant frequencies found in natural sounds, especially selecting and sculpting tonalities used in sound and vibrational therapy. it is like a gong bath, but using healing frequencies from nature: the harmonies are specific to a time and place, and the element recorded.

 

each performance is unique as i intuitively select the aesthetic, atmosphere and tonalities i use moment to moment. improvisation as approach and method allows me to adapt what sounds i use, what resonance to focus on, so the music flows and connects with the audience.

 

i offer these performances as livestreams on the bandcamp platform in a series called nada, so that people can meditate in the comfort of their home.

i am also available to travel to buddhist, meditation, yoga centres, etc. who are willing to accommodate such events for groups of experienced meditators.

 

 

technical details:

i use
1 performance laptop + usb audio interface
optional x2 microphones and mike stands [when using a collection of meditation bowls and bells, etc.]
1 streaming laptop + usb mixer
h5 zoom recorder
multiplug extension cable, misc connectivity

required from venue
power or extension cable to the performance area
low table and meditation seat
amplification – high quality stereo speakers, able to reproduce a high range of frequencies and wide stereo image [i can bring suitable speakers if needed, tbc]. possible multichannel diffusion via ADAT
additional – table or support for streaming laptop
stable wi-fi internet access for live stream

 

 

contact:

nexttimerv_at_hotmail_dot_com

 

 

 

reviews:

“I found this work intriguing and at times beguiling […] and I realised that by having more to pay attention to, my meditation sessions could be sustained for a longer time by Hervé’s listening meditations”

Benedict Jackson – dimensions-in-sound-and-space

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It’s been a magical experience, following you in this sound journey, deeply
listening with open heart and ears.
Lukas M – audience member

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Hervé’s live improvisations transport you onto a journey which is at once sensorially relaxing and awakening. Through his unique use of texture, rhythm and space he is able to keep the audience on their toes whilst grounding them into an uninterrupted state of flow from start to finish. A powerful sonic experience!
Lorenzo P – audience member

*

Thoroughly enjoyed falling back into the really clear three dimensional soundscape.
Dave P – audience member

*

These are absolutely magic journeys for drifting off… Thanks for the calming moments.
Phil I – audience member

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audio examples

 

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Inclusion Principle 4

26 06 2021

The long awaited new album by Inclusion Principle is here. Reading the promotional text, i realise that it has been five years since the release of our third album. This was a difficult one to top. We loved this work so much. And it has been a tradition in the group to allow each album to mature, to grow organically. Even though we do not generally speak much about the music contents – as hardcore improv cats… aherm… we do spend some time speaking about aesthetics, and process.

This new album was one like this; we have discused for a long time the different possibilities, how to approach recording, and the general vibe. In the meantime, Peter, our drummer stopped playing live. And so the band returned to its original formation – Martin and Hervé side to side, proving that Pauli was not even wrong when two similar systems share the same space. Brandishing saxes and laptops, the duo is back on the road with their unpredictable and yet recognisable sound. Another major thing has changed. It is the period of time that will be marked in calendars for all eternity. It is the lockdown. And for a group whose work is deeply grounded in improvisation and deep listening, the file sharing and social distancing imposed is quite a challenge. And since i had taken over the role of editing, arranging, and constructing tracks from long improvisations for album three, it made sense that i would be assembling this album too, here at nexTTime studios. This time though, we do not have much pre-recorded material, and the process for this album is yet again different. Only one session in Martin’s studio gets recycled and reworked into two tracks than open and close the album. The rest is all brand new and recorded separately in each other’s studios and composed at nexTTime hub.

Lately, i have been shifting my sound palette and started using Ableton Live, mostly for beats. The approach we used for the latest gigs, such as the multichannel diffusion at No Bounds features in several of these new tracks, propelling the group further into electronics. And this is one point which is very different from all we have done before; the instruments are becoming more prominent and clearly stated. The abstraction and field recordings are of course central, but now, acoustic instruments and electronic elements are coming out of the soundscape and stand their own. And yes, we have some grooves. And we have some melody. We even take solos. If you have been following the work of the group, you will know how much work goes into the aesthetic and coherent work of the group in acting as one mind, one sound, and that most of the time saxophones and even drums merge into the electronics, field recordings, and abstract soundscapes, only to emerge occasionally as ‘traditional’ instruments. Here, arising from the timbres, textures and gestures, we have chords, rhythms that can even be counted if you so wish, and we have saxes weaving melodies. We even have sections of unison and dueting written on paper. Yes, you read it right. Written on paper.

At the same time, electronics are more abstract and shift towards noise. Martin is into processing samples (mostly featuring drums and percussions recorded by our friend Walt Shaw). Some tracks leave more space for the near transparent, the very fragile and subtle field recordings, the sound sculptures that reveal the hidden harmony of natural elements. Birds punctuate the infinite skies, and the elements texture and ring amongst all other sounds. It is a full palette, an entire architecture of vibrations intricately compounded. The instrumentation symbolically stands for different platforms, different realms, all interacting and communicating as one unity.

It is of course the Inclusion Principle sound. Constantly and naturally evolving. And we love it.

We are so very pleased to present to you ‘the 4, the 8, the 10’

 

 

Reviews

After five years without a recording, [Martin Archer], along with sound sculptor and woodwind player Hervé Perez, has chosen to reignite their Inclusion Principle duo on disc. Both players’ love of woodwind and also of electronic experimentation finds them merging the two for some highly unexpected results. Using material that they had originally developed for live concerts, they have turned them into a set of sprawling soundscapes that evoke images both familiar and unfamiliar, often leading us on solitary journeys that open our ears and eyes on The 4, The 8, The 10.

It is a lonely wail of an intro that opens the album and finds the two horn players turning easy circles around one another. The different tones make for a soothing but excited dance. There is a sultry air that is aided by snatches of birdsong. The bluff electronics and scuffling skips hold a beat, while the horns soar and skitter in the breeze. It is an interesting combo, with the insistence of the scuffed beats holding to the earth and pushing the horns on to further acrobatics in the air. The sopranino is as high as a kite at times, a lonely scream.

There is a variance across the pieces here of how much the horns are used. The IDM vibe of “Intermediate Space”, with its typewriter key tones, is like a duet for electronic tinkering. I can imagine the two of them trying to see what sits with what and how much they can push the boundaries. The horns are just snippets, reminders of another era, embellishing the staccato pulses and revelling in one another’s company.

Martin and Hervé seem to be searching for drama and intrigue amongst the space and quiet interludes of “Arising And Passing Away”, where the pace is slowed considerably and the sparse glimmer of stars is shaken up by a barrage of harshness; a juxtaposition that you really feel and which takes you into the almost hornless supernatural rustle of “Gentle Persuasion” with its static, space, silence and an aura of mysterious activity. This goes way beyond the preceding pieces, reductive to a point of abstract soundscape. It is like a half-glimpsed territory, with tension in the barely registered sounds; but it moves with an uncanny grace like a heat-seeking predator. Here though, the shakahuchi does lend an Eastern feel to the drama.

The industrial beat and wild woodwind of “Object Of Refutation” has vocals that bring to mind a native ceremony glimpsed from afar, but later almost verges on bop territory, such is the ground that these two cover. The final section is a suite of pieces that stand like a portal between two worlds, its slow build and stately beats harbouring feedback and long notes that sound edgy and strange. The electronics duel like gunfighters in a narrow mountain pass with ricochets galore. It is noticeably more hectic, but leads into a kind of limbo with sparse hints of memory.

Behind every sinuous horn there is a jostling, glitchy, uneven beat. Somehow it works, rolling from one cold to one warm scene, always awaiting fresh input, be it repetitive echoes, time warps or unfamiliar motif stretches. It moves into a shadow of the past, the subterranean beat resounding through a ghostly world; and then pulses to a standstill, leaving you breathless that so much has happened. – Mr Olivetti, FREQ

 

A lengthy three-part suite ‘Ornament of Light’, which explores the “resonant space” is the pinnacle of the album and is characteristic of the pair’s live performance. The drone and beats with a suggestion of melody by the sax on parts one leads to a demonstrative passage as the ‘jazz’ emerges from the electronica; similarly on the 20 minute second part, where glitchy beats accompany echoing organ and sustained sax; there is flute to come, and again the last few minutes are climactic, as the entwining beats and saxes perform a weird ‘dance’; the denouement is more trancelike. I really enjoyed the contrast between the tranquil beats, bird call and other ‘found sounds’ and atmospheric shimmering synths with eruptions of motile sax and also the suspenseful quality of the music. ‘The 4, The 8, The 10’ is an accomplished, meditative listening experience. – Phil Jackson, ACID DRAGON

 

 

This duet has history; they’ve worked together on other projects but the two person Inclusion Principle is nonetheless a rarity.

The album is as titled, ‘inclusive’. Both Mr Archer and Mr Perez play soprano saxophones. Martin Archer has other horns too, plus his keyboards and software. Hervé Perez contributes alto sax and shakuhachi (Japanese wooden flute) along with programming/electro beats. It matters not who is responsible for what. I set aside my usual practice of focusing on individuals; just let the sound coalesce in my head.

Although the 4, the 8, the 10 is divided up into tracks; hear it as a whole. The opening three minutes is a mesmeriser. Two horns perfectly attuned to each other in every sense. So much so it took me a little while to get beyond those first three minutes; constantly switching back to the beginning before being willing to give them up. They’re a slow, sensuous prelude and delivered like a balancing act.

Eventually I took the journey. Through beats and bird song, spindly drones held like hums; there are places on this audio that are almost visual. (I’d recommend listening to it in the dark. If audio could give off light this is surely an example.)

At around twenty-seven minutes the soundscape opens up to ‘treated’ ambient percussion. Within the sparse cover art there’s a short quote from a Sarva Buddhist text: “Space has no abode… you are free of any point of reference.” A parallel translation could be “free of description”. This approach would mitigate written review. The idea being, if our ears take to this album without reference or description the more likely we are to hear what’s being offered.

At the risk of sidestepping such suggestions, the final Ornament of Light section, spreading out over thirty-eight minutes, is for me the clincher. It feels as if it offers up resolution and in the few unplugged moments Archer and Perez arrive in focus. It’s like seeing (hearing) deep sea divers surfacing in real time. A fascinating album. – Steve Day

 

 

The events—or, more accurately, nonevents—of these strangest of strange years seems perfectly intertwined in the agony and the ecstasy that is the new Inclusion Principle release. Multi-instrumentalists Martin Archer and Hervé Perez have produced a dichotomy of riches here, a many-headed beast ejecting its sonic effluvia across a landscape of cantilevered dimensions, ominous atmospheres vying with compromised ‘jazz’ tropes that instantly mutate as they appear. Both participant’s varied hornplay acts as analog sinew binding together their determined tunneling through an entire kaleidoscopic forest of digital glossolalia; to be emphatic about it, the album’s overall sound design is simply stunning, aural epiphanies writ large. The ten-minute opening salvo “A Dark Night Ahead of Us” sets the tone, Perez’s alto wails resembling beacons searching for some semblance of normality as they flutter within the piece’s chromatic aviary, Archer’s soprano jostling for attention, juxtaposed against a jabberwocky of soft whispers, blurts and beats. Things take more abstract detours on the subsequent “Intermediate Space”, where the duo trade in the kind of clicks ’n’ cuts Mille Plateaux and Oval made a big deal of decades ago but Archer and Perez embrace with imaginative girth and obvious relish, a slice of cyberjungle fourth-worldism that posits a horde of extraterrestrial natives dancing on the heads of reflective pins. Space is assuredly the place on “Arising and Passing Away”, which engages in faux Tangerine Dream escapades put through the 21st-century laptop ringer, moog bass susurrations marking their territory across a shifting synthetic tundra while flocks of seagulls murmur. All of this seems but prelude to the album’s near-indescribable half-hour-plus conclusion, “Ornament of Light”, Archer and Perez letting their freak flag fly. On this three-part suite, electronic motifs of unnatural origin shiver and shake; planets align and are then thrown off their axes; foghorn calls prowl the event horizon before succumbing in a vacuum of corrosive squelch; timbres like synthetic mercury dribble out of the speaker fabric in anthropomorphic glee. Forbidding, fascinating, this work’s viselike grip on your sensibility is achieved with the first gut-punch exposure, to be finally rubberstamped on memory when you hit ‘repeat’. That a variety of moods are conjured so effectively speaks volumes about how both artists are in sync with their objectives, so clearly vested in the realization of their ideas, so highly attuned to their birthing of new musics that to accompany them on their magical mystery tour is an experience not soon forgotten. – Darren Bergstein, DMG

 

 

With “the 4, the 8, the 10”, Inclusion Principle, the duo of Martin Archer and Hervé Perez, present their fourth CD (in addition, there are three live recordings only available for download). Five years have passed since the release of “Third Opening”. From various composition ideas developed for concerts, the pieces to be heard here were created, which were then recorded in the first half of 2021 in Sheffield in Perez’s recording studio.

The drummer Peter Fairclough, who was still involved in the predecessor “Third Opening”, is not to be heard here. Nevertheless, there are various very rhythmic sections, generated by all sorts of pulsating electronic sounds and programmed percussion. Otherwise, electronic sounds, recordings of natural sounds (field recordings), rarely also world music-colored vocal performances (you can hear the beginning of “Object of Refutation”), multi-layered with acoustic instrumental tones (blowers usually – quite a lot of sax, but also clarinet and various flutes) are mixed here. The music therefore sounds sometimes like electric jazz, sometimes like classical electronics, sometimes (mostly) like free sound tinkering and sound painting, somewhere in the border area of ambient and experiment.

In contrast to the predecessor, the more rhythmic or pulsating numbers can be found at the beginning of the collection (which also contain various sections of freer floating), before spherical-experimental sound paintings are created in the second half of the album, i.e. in the long suite “Ornaments of Light”. The same is an impressive, very colorful and densely gliding sound structure, an extended dialogue of the two sound hobbyists, sometimes freely swirling, sometimes mysteriously whispering, sometimes playfully bubbling, sometimes dynamically weighing or jazzing.

“the 4, the 8, the 10” (I have no idea what the title wants to tell us exactly – it’s at least the fourth studio album of the project and there are eight tracks on it) is another excellent work by Discus Music for friends of progressive music making. If you appreciate electronic and jazzy woodwind sounds in a sound-painting-free-format context (and need supplies), you can continue to access them here without hesitation. – Achim Breiling, BabyBlaue

 

translated from the German

 

Inclusion Principle is a duo of Martin Archer and Hervé Perez. They started performing in 2006 and have released several CDs so far. Live recordings are available on their own Bandcamp site. Their project is dedicated to combining electronics and electro-acoustic music, jazz and improvisation.

This new recording appears after a five-year silence and has Archer playing sopranino, soprano saxophone, baritone saxophone, clarinet, flute, recorder, chimes, organ, electric piano, synths, software instruments. Hervé is responsible for field recordings, sound design, beats, keys programming. With this broad set of acoustic and electronic instruments, they combine improvisation with ambient and sound-based textures, resulting in an album of eight tracks. The first five titles all have rhythm or pulse driven episodes combined with free-floating textures and solo or duo improvising on saxophone.

Opening track ‘A Dark Night Ahead of Us’ opens with sensitive saxophone-playing by Archer and Perez, accompanied by sparse field recordings of bird calls etc. Halfway, an electronic rhythmic structure is introduced that intensifies the piece. ‘Intermediate Space’ starts as an open spacy soundscape with sparse rhythm-induced sections. In the second part, saxophones add a melodic element that completes the picture. The last three tracks make up one work: ‘Ornament of Light’. The second part I liked most. It has Archer playing the flute, calling from a distance in a thin and spacious ambient ambience.

Near the end, things change into a hectic and dynamic rhythm-based finale. Personally, I’m always a bit ambiguous about projects like these, that are about combining ambient with improvisation. Often they lead to organically and comfortable sounding exercises that do not harm nor bring excitement. In this case, however, one can trace the spirit of exploration. Two experienced musicians who seek to connect different languages, leading up to an album with very worthwhile moments. Dolf Mulder (DM) – VITAL WEEKLY

 

 

Sometimes it might be easier to provide a list of instruments that Martin Archer is not playing on a recording, so broad are his musical abilities.  And this breadth extends to his imagination of how music can operate, how it can inspire its listeners and how it can create visions of places and events.  The cover art for this album, on mist-wrapped trees which are gradually emerging is perfect for the ways in which Archer and Perez develop the pieces here – and, of course, I mean develop as a photographic metaphor of the ways in which an image gradually forms when the prepared sheet in placed in its bath of chemicals.  There is so creativity in the management of sounds on this recording that it can be easy to miss the ‘background’ and focus on the instruments duelling in the ‘foreground’.  But this is, I think, to miss both the process of the music’s creation and the ways in which these fine musicians work. The ‘background’ is the structure of the piece.  The texture of the sounds and the ways in which they merge and split creates the rhythmic, harmonic and emotional core.  To this, Archer’s saxophones and other instruments respond; often provoking disturbances to and shifts in the musical texture.

Musically, there are traditions of musique concrete and very early (experimental) synthesizer, but also clear evocations of the free jazz scene in which Archer has played so vital a role.  For example, on ‘Intermediate Space’, track 2, layered saxophones play a repeating theme that leads in and out of the busy solo saxophone, all the while electronic beats and bass pulse and ticker to create a groove.  It is the mixing of genres and styles which gives the set is unique flavour and the duo do this as readily and easily as they mix and remix sounds.  Each musician finds ways to sculpt sounds that become incorporated into your own thoughts and imaginings, pulling you into their soundscapes in ways that will you to become an active participant; although the pieces have elements which have an ‘ambient’ quality that could wash over you, they take pains to introduce unexpected, startling, disturbing changes that jolt you back to attentiveness.  You’d expect really good art to be provocative and to stimulate a response – and this set certainly does that.

Having played together for the best part of a decade, Archer and Perez have a well-developed knack for finding mutually intriguing sounds to introduce their creations.  Often the introductions, while spontaneous, have the sense of a conversation which, while it might combine different points of view, is being conducted between two friends.

– Chris Baber, Jazzviews

 

You can stream the music following the Bandcamp link or the player above.

You can purchase the CD directly from Discus music.





PLGD released by Pan Y Rosas Discos

25 08 2020

i’ve been sitting on a bunch of tracks for a while that explored live processing. i was trying things out at the time i was working on the album ‘imploding stars’ and in that period, i was recording improvisations that used various sound sources and strings of plugins. lately, i revisited some of those pieces and did new edits and master. the album PLGD was released by Pan Y Rosas recently and already got some nice reviews.

here are a few words by s. victor aaron from something else:

Hervé Perez is both an audio artist and a visual artist but the sound art he makes tend to get deeply seared into your consciousness as provocative visual art would. PLGD is the last set of sonorities he’s created using is sax, his voice, electronic effects and Tibetan meditation bowls. The art is how all this disparate sources for sound converge to create an alien but liquid whole.

If you’re looking for harmony, melody or rhythm, this isn’t the place to look. Perez is going for something much more primal than that in the creation of these sound sculptures. Similar to the mission of conventional music though, it uses vibration to give your brain something striking and unfamiliar to process and ponder.

Processed field recordings seems to form the basis for PLGD’s opening salvo “Styfg,” where the sounds of nature are completely blended with otherworldly buzz. We hear Perez’s soprano saxophone for the first time on “Likabrd Inacag” but here it becomes the basis of an overall sonic painting made up of heavy processed sounds of that sax. “Winds of Many Harms” is the sound of flowing air, whether that’s through a heavily altered sax or by other means.

Those meditation bowls hums and chimes on “Lance L’eau Du Lac” are ancient timbres that never sound stale, and if you never heard these resonant instruments from the Himalayas, you’re in for a treat.

Perez take his sax to new, exotic places on “Winds and Humming Buds,” at times making his horn resemble a flute. For “Par Anneaux,” he dubs over his sax several times to make it resemble a flock of geese that over time gets enmeshed into a larger tapestry of dreary sonorities. The sax becomes a percussion instrument during much of “Il Faudrait Qu’on Cesse,” spraying into the void a barrage of false notes.

“Bird in a Bush” uses silence as another instrument, occasionally interrupted by rustling, the bowls, percussive knocks and a barely-perceptible low hum. “Styfg Coda” roughly approximates the distorted sound of storm waves crashing onshore and “Soprano Fields” transits from near-silence to ghoulish to placid.

Hervé Perez makes musique concrète using atypical sources while audaciously pushing his soprano saxophone into uncharted territory. That’s why PLGD is made for ears thirsty for entirely new sounds, even for those ears who think they’ve heard it all.

the album is available from Pan Y Rosas Discos.





de quatre mers de quatre vents nt008

29 04 2020

i am very pleased to present my first large scale compostion as number eight in the nexTTime production series.

 

There was an old piano in a corner of the studio, and one day I just had this drive to dig it open, and start putting things in the strings. I was into Cage, obviously, but never saw any of his instructions, or knew how to go about it. I don’t really play piano, but I have years of experience as an improviser on prepared guitar, and so I had an army or crocodile clips at hand and a few other tricks. At first, I wanted to create a database of samples to place into compositions or performing live. This project turned out to be rather different.

I spent a day in the studio working at the piano and preparing all the strings, playing by ear, and aiming for a whole range of sounds, textures, percussive tones.
The second day, I started recording individual notes for sampling, but very quickly I found myself improvising on this new instrument I had created. I came up with motifs, runs, hits and whole sections that were just playing and enjoying the sounds, coming up with rhythmical patterns and so on.
By the end of the day, I had plenty of material to take home.

The next stage was spent doing was I do best, editing, processing, sculpting, and creating yet another database of new samples where the piano had turned electro. Here again, I created textures, harmonic samples, rhythmical patterns and individual hits. And so, the track called ‘empty piano’ came first.

But I did not stop there; while playing with the recordings, I started arranging sections of piano, and just with skeletons of tracks, I knew I had something quite special. For me it was a unique opportunity to use what was an unusual instrumentation and a change from electric guitar and electroacoustic pieces.

Working on the set of short films as sound recordist, I met Carrie who is a trained classical singer as well as actress. I managed to record a few short samples off set, but later approached her asking if she would record in a studio for me. And so I prepared sets of instructions for her so I could harvest more samples, short motifs and single notes in a range of styles to later rework in computer, and integrate all this into the compositions I had.

And this is pretty much the making of this work. Add to this some field recordings, and electronics, programmed beats and sines…
It is an unusual approach to the format of the symphony; in four movements and with four classes of instruments.

Looking back, I still rather like the sweetness of this piece, and it still feels fresh. Somehow, the themes that play out through the movements of nature versus urbanisation, also illustrated in the contrasting sounds that make the line up, are still relevant to me.

 

A symphony for prepared piano, voice, field recordings and electronics, in four movements.

 

the concept:

The prepared piano symphony follows the traditional arch narrative of the form. In parallel of the evolution of music, the sounds follow a historical trajectory of technology in relation to mankind and nature.

 

In the first movement, the four classes of instruments – prepared piano, voice, field recordings, electronics – set the scene. The piano echoes the state of technology and design of the time. It is metaphorically the birth of the industrial revolution and the machine.

 

In the second movement, there is a shift in sound quality and atmosphere as modernism hits a stride, and the technology becomes altered in need of the new, of progress. The instrument / technology is ‘prepared’ in ways that reflect more modern soundscapes with the appearance of pulses and drones in contrast to the more mechanical and dramatic opening section. The second movement is already bridging the modern sound of the ‘prepared piano’ into the digital age, a further alteration of the industrial age and its resulting soundscapes:

As we follow the evolution in struggle between man, machine and nature, into a post materialist rebirth, past the explosion of the atom and the advance in granular synthesis, into a quantum world of digital jungle, we also follow a different narrative of how the piano (here representative of a certain technological advancement) is gradually prepared and transformed further still as we delve deeper into its resonance and sonic architecture at the digital atomic level.

 

 

There is a parallel between the history of the industrial landscape and the evolution of musical instruments and their uses to reflect social changes. We delve deeper into the texture and atomic resonance of matter, of the physical world, of the musical object in ways that deconstructs its original technological advancement.

 

By the third movement, it is the age of doubt and there is a looming, brooding turmoil in the balance of the world and it reaches a climax with uncertainty and existentialism. It is the end of history, the loss of meaning, and even of the purpose of materialism and the quantum field of emptiness where grains of reality and pulverised to conditioned compounded vibrations.

 

This is only resolved in the fourth movement when after a dramatic discharge of energy in the form of a lightening storm when life is stilled into suspension, electronic entities, prepared piano, voice and nature all navigate around a more coherent system of interactions which has its own rhythms, cycles and its own logic.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 





the hanged swordsman nt007

25 04 2020

Let’s go back in time to have a look at early electronic compositions as release number seven in the series of nexTTime production.

This album marks a significant turning point in my work in sound design, digital processing, composition and approach to sound in general. I was still working on a pc at the time and focused all my efforts in sculpting sounds, often using a single source or limited amount of material to create an entire piece.

For example, the opening track is made from a single short sample from Kenneth Kirschner, inspired by a competition organised by Deupree’s 12K label following the release of seminal work post piano. Unessentialists and minimalism has been an important inspiration and yet, I am very much interested in texture, harmony and spectral composition, and in this case, getting deep into the textural and timbral quality of the sounds I used.

Often unrecognisable, the sound sources are still very present, and inform the nature of the compositions. The last piece is another example, with limited source samples recorded in a derelict mill in the peak district. I spent a lot of time in the area taking photos. Soon after, the mill was restored and now has been transformed into luxury accommodations. And yet I cannot help thinking about the many children who died there, working in awful conditions. I think this place has always kept a very weird vibe.

The track diamond is made from guitar samples and the title describes the process the original sounds went through to emerge as they are now.
Cell Breakdown was the soundtrack used for a video installation, diffused in a reverberant gallery space when I was studying at art school.

I am pleased to share this work now, and hope you enjoy its documentary value and its significance in relation to influential electronic music.





Milarepa and Rechungpa nt006

19 04 2020

The fantastic stories and songs of Milarepa continue with release number six in the series of nexTTime production new label.

The relationship between the wise guru Milarepa and his main disciple Rechungpa is difficult to say the least. This very poignant and touching story details how their relationship evolves, and there are many opportunities for deep teachings and thus wisdom abounds. This is possibly the most intense, and intensely rich of this collaboration with Suvarnagarbha, our highest achievement in weaving spoken word and electroacoustic narratives that support each other without necessarily examplifying or mimicking.

This is a stunning performances that sustains incredible energy and focus throughout and pays much respect to the absolutely incredible stories that unfold.

We hope that this will bring much benefit and enjoyment to the listener.

 

The live performance took place at the Sheffield Buddhist Centre on 12 october 2019.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 





Songs of Milarepa nt005

17 04 2020

Building on the stregth of the collaboration with Suvarnagarbha, this fifth release in the series of nexTTime production explores the songs and stories of Milarepa.

Here, Milarepa uses wits and wisdom to battle demons and spirits. And of course, Suvarnagarbha’s impressive translation of the text and perfect delivery underlines the humour that balances the tensions in this compelling narrative.

The music is mostly improvised, apart from some short composed sequences that were prepared in advance to provide a contrast between significant songs and the flow of the narration.

Electroacoustic and experimental electronics, this piece is as eventful and it gets (for the accompaniment of Bhuddist texts…) and features broken beats, glitch electronics and granular randomness as well as more ambient spectral sections. Meditation bowls and bells are augmented with the addition of shakuhachi, and even saxophone appears in places to support the changes in mood of this amazing text.

 

The live performance took place at the Sheffield Buddhist Centre on 15 june 2019.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 





Sukhavati Sutra nt004

12 04 2020

Fourth in the series of nexTTime production releases is a collaboration with Buddhist friend Suvarnagarbha.

I am very pleased to be sharing this recording which is the culmination of much work done together. This collaboration has been very exciting from the beginning and has taken many forms. For the first time, we are exploring buddhist texts, and i think this is the point where we really are touching on something great.

Suvarnagarbha’s narration is as ever splendid and inspires me to accompany the text with mininalist electronics, and electroacoustic soundscapes. This translation of the traditional text was prepared especially for the performance which took place at the Sheffield Buddhist Centre on 23 february 2019.