SOUND ART, ART WITH "SOUND" and with the ENVIRONMENT
review page

Matthew Burntner ('08)
V.A.: "Agents Against Agency" ('11) & V.A.: "MICE World Tour" ('10)
Mikhail Karikis & Uriel Orlow ('12)
Elainie Lillios ('12)
























Eco Sono     Dustin Thompson / Matthew Burtner : Signal Ruins -dvd-(US,2008)***'

The largest section on this DVD shows some new music compositions from a live performance in a few different sections. It partly sounds improvised, interactive with the prepared and sheet music ideas, roughly as play with tension, sound gravity and soft greying noise even though there is use of rhythms in the early section, this works like this, as an interactive sound form. The DVD starts with visually interesting graphics, turning from the introduction into a focus onto the live performance which are visually mixed with the readings of the music sheets passing by. Once overcome by the surprise, not many more graphic elements are added, which gives more focus to the music which at first hearing might work a bit more sleepilly of remaining into one sort of focus and vibration pretty long, a more thorough and prepared second viewing can distiguish a bit more through the audible elements mostly. There’s an interesting instrumental use of the piano in the next section, where the musicians are using a wire around some piano strings, pull the string in certain countable rhythmic proportions, producing with this a slightly accelerating tone of the string. Further on I also liked the visual idea where the middle of the total image view changed with the shape of what to a degree still sounds like an electronic wave. This is a nicely sense-blending visualisation of the produced sounds, which makes the totality experience when watching this more perfect. On this section waves of sounds are produced and subtle white noise is added. But some of the white noise was produced simply by a brush, and the peeping tones were not electronic either, but were the playing of the loosely attached wires onto the piano.

The first bonus track, “Prismic Generations” has at first the camera focused somewhere in between a macroscopic and microscopic level, showing water slowly falling down from a glass plate or perhaps car window, the sun shining in. This image changes a bit in the reflection as if a river can be seen in the slightly oiled stream, elsewhere the camera focus changes smoothly onto the light reflections being present. Although all this is not totally agreeable with the music it is nice to watch. The music consists of overtone series, peeping rhythms and rather natural, insect-like background electronic pulses.

The second bonus track with audio only and just one rather nicely fitting static abstract image (-what more does it need, some moving images that don’t fit too well would be more disturbing than this-), you can also hear Matthew’s talent and ideas more clearly. It is a computer-generated piece possibly based upon resonating sounds that evolve in time, I think based upon sounds produced on a resonating bowl. 

In this case I deliberately kept a distance from all liner notes and info. For more in-depth background information, please follow the links.

Trailer :http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IhHaZHqekVA
Label info : http://ecosono.com/EcoSono_media.html
Release info : http://www.filmbaby.com/films/3547
Other review : http://www.furthernoise.org/index.php?url=page.php&ID=284&iss=77%0D
Info on Matthew Burtner : https://ccrma.stanford.edu/~mburtner/ with ..biography.html
& http://www.myspace.com/mburtner
Eco Sono     V.A. : Agents Against Agency -dvd-(US,2011)***°

This DVD so it seems is based upon a rather conceptualised idea, a compilation of different expressions of individualists and groups in reaction to or within nature or natural circumstances. The first few track are very successful with this idea, where you can see that some dialogue has been progressed and stimulated with sound and image, using the aural and visual senses, while hearing and watching and eventually feeling further (with the senses).  Because some of the participants and organizers involved are also into interactive computer systems, their “natural environment” is expanded to the machine. This experience is a bit different and it might have been stronger as a separate art project. From the left over tracks there are a few which are just improvisations, quiet free music filmed outside. Here there is little interaction except a minor awareness of the environment, as an expansion into the oneness of sound alone. And lastly, we have the idea of sound improvisation with studio mixed images to make them fit together, just like a videoclip with the right fitting, in this case outdoor images. So the concept has been taken very broad, the most intriguing for me remains those who fit with that idea, both for the nature context, but personally I think the intractions with sound of the machine an interesting idea as well.

Ted Coffey’s concept is an artwork installation that looks like giant looking glasses, looking like photocell looking glasses perhaps, placed in a river. This installation seems to be a collection of loud speakers. The sounds are like high beeped, and moving-in-all-directions (with vibrations, some melodic series etc.) as interactive electronics combined with some electro-acoustic noises like from the river itself and some pre-recorded (birds sounds-like) associations. The camera moves nervously from one focus to the next. This way it gives the impressions of the environment and the somewhat alienated, but not entirely disturbing object being present, which starts to become the presentation of a camera itself, a witness (a watcher, a receiver), at the same time it is producing with these sounds its own presence.

The next, and very interesting, interactive project is EMMI, where a series of percussion instruments (including a clay pot and a bottle amongst real instruments) are carefully put together into a forest, and that are being played by sticks driven by robots devices.  The rhythms have something natural as if being moved by the wind, at the same time the patterns dance a bit quietly into that environment. Nice to watch ! It almost makes a natural environment more human, it is as if these areas are intermingled. The robots were sensitive to omputer listening and algorhythmic responses, with rewarding result !

MICE (=the mobile interactive computer ensemble) is more like a group improvisation in the desert. The soundtrack is based upon the sand sounds itself, with electro-acoustic rhythm breaks, and also, a pleasant happy melody on keyboards with human whistling, de-attached from the situation, but like one with pleasure of having done this project, as a matter of speaking this is just like mice watching from behind the scenes and describing the performer’s fun with a happy tune. One of the things you can see are the participants dancing in the sand like on an after-project party, but these persons are actually experiencing the rhythm of the sand in a different way than with your fingers this time while stamping the ground.

Yuri Spitsyn’s project is a different sort of interaction than the first examples, but created with the same curiosity and mentality. He sets up an interaction with the sounds of the machine making these electro-magnetic sounds audible, while opening and using a laptop. Lots of slightly annoying but ever changing electro-acoustic noise and rhythms can be heard here. It is a sonic investigation of the machine showing well-fitting image/sound interaction.

Matthew Burner’s contribution showing less of the nature, is something more of improvised free music with saxophones with some variations in sounds by dissembling the instrument and recording from inside. Visually, from one to four different video recordings screenings are combined on one screen. This visual aspect works a little nervously. I would have preferred something more technically advanced with this. It confirms mostly the intellectual or thought idea behind it, something that only becomes more clear when reading about these ideas. So in this case the environment itself is secondary used. The composition/improvisation consists of horn harmonies and electro-acoustic rhythm patterns.

On the Burns/Dinnell’s track I hear electro-acoustic music, like machine-like white noise and grey noise and descending beeping noise movement. With this I see black and white night visions of moving clouds., mixed with a kind of bar code-alike image distortion and in the end some early morning images of the sea. This works pretty much like a thoughtful electro-acoustic soundtrack video-clip.

The group Pinko Communoids play an improvisation in nature with the camera filming from a certain distance. It is a pure audible experience (and awareness). Not much happens either but it is a nice listen (bowls, bells, accordion, bowed guitar).

Also 12 Dog Cycle/Hall is an improvisation, of voice (imitating the resonances of the sax slightly), sax, and accordion, recorded outside, inside an open stone army fort. Like often with free improvisation, it fits ok with the environment all right but it also does not do anything with it. Also this is a nice listen, in two parts, carefully hanging around one note, fitting well, but not necessarily contributing anything extra on the visual level. It’s again like a music clip.

MICE/Emergence (with e.i. Matthew Burtner) has a second contribution from their Interactive Research Group. It was a past project which stated “please match the rhythm of your neighbour”, a nice to listen to, -with surprising details in the evolution-, interactive composition with a whole auditorium of (some 250) PC’s.

Label info : http://ecosono.com/EcoSono_agents.html
& http://ecosono.com/EcoSono_media.html
Article : http://www.newmusicbox.org/articles/sounds-heard-ecosono-agents-against-agency/
Aaron Henderson : http://www.aaronhenderson.com/dvd-artists-against-agency/
Steven Kemper : http://people.virginia.edu/~stk8m/Drum_Circle.htmlCD->
Eco Sono  V.A. : MICE (Mobile Interactive Computer Ensemble) World Tour (US,2011)***°

There’s also a CD compilation of the collective. The first track is the folktronic and poppy tune with whistling, distorted noise rhythms and sweet electronic tunes and rhythms which I already knew from the DVD. The next six tracks are all improvisations done at different locations and with different participants, but the nature of all tracks is comparable. There are more, or less, acoustic and sometimes electro-acoustic improvisations involved, and secondly, some interactive programming with the Mobile Interactive Computer Ensemble. The compositions hold the middle between a real time improvisation and a processed soundtrack composition.

On the second track there are soprano sax and hand percussive improvisations. The fourth track is with spoken word fragmentations, an interesting interactive collage mixed with electronically processed subtle rhythms, cello, soprano sax and who knows what else. The interaction, it says, involved the changes of the direction and sound of the wind. The next track involved toy sounds from squeezing-animals-for-dogs, rhythmically processed into a composition. The next composition which sounds like watercan percussion with broken apart digital noise, still sounding atmospherically, is based upon under water percussion performed in the Indian Ocean. The next track is acoustic, an interaction of algorithmic computer interactions and a World music improvisation on violincello, kora, berimbou, the Vietnamese dan b’ao, oud and ukulele. The last piece in a similar vein is a soundtrack movement with scraping rock, droning, bowl-like and thundering sounds and is based upon the sound of the lava from the Pacaya volcano (Guatemala).
The last few tracks are a computer organised collage of FM broadcast, spoken word and music from all over the world (I heard what I think was Swedish, Pakistani, French and a recording from Moroccan radio). The album itself gives an enjoyable listen. The radio collage however is more something of the chaotic nature of how FM band disturbs the air andassimilated and controlled or organised by the brain into a collage like this. It becomes enjoyable but still does not make too much sense, the compilers still found a bit of humour in the way they picked out their fragments and build the collage with it.

Label info : http://ecosono.com/EcoSono_media.html






Henry Moore Found./    Mikhail Karikis & Uriel Orlow :
Sub Rosa     Sounds From Beneath (GR/UK,2012)*****

I was enormously impressed by the video performed by the mining choir of Dover the Snowdown Colliery Welfare Male Voice Choir), a concept arranged for the music by Mikhail Kartikis and put together on video by Uriel Orlow, I found it one of the most powerful contemporary music expressions I have heard in a long time, and one of the most powerful expressions of new music in general. The music has a dramatic, colleagues-uniting core of vocal harmonies, and a deep melody that unites this even more and also, the sounds of the mines themselves, the drills, the machines, the breathing pressures, the sweat, the physical power, all expressed by vocals only, put beautifully into video not missing each possible detail, like the hands that experienced before what they express here as a conclusion. Apparently this over 7 minute-track is all that has been recorded, but we also get a book with it with some essays. It confirms how much the miners dug from their memories the right association to articulate the essence of all their experience. The result became so powerful because so much of personal and group histories became united into one moment. This is intense and real. Just remember also the formation of the miner’s union, the breaking down of their livelyhood at the time of Tatcher’s rule and the consequences to the mining community. In just a few minutes of music, just by the power of the singing and the look on their faces we know we are dealing with people here that became abandoned like the coal landscapes, their integrity of voice remained intact.

Just see the release as an artwork, an expression of history. Powerful. Recommended !

Video : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YJEcA3rUOnM
Label info : http://subrosa.itcmedia.net/...
Distro info : http://dense.de/news.html#mikhaildvd
Film maker page : http://www.urielorlow.net/2010/07/sounds-from-beneath/
Homepage Mikhail :http://www.mikhailmusic.com
About "Xenon" : http://www.mikhailkarikis.blogspot.com/      

The CD album by Mikhail with the inclusion of this track reviewed on next page
Empreintes Digitales   Elainie Lillios : Entre Espaces (=between spaces) (US,2012)****

I am never as much keen to review electroacoustic works compared to electronic music. It is because it is much more easy to find products of electroacoustic sounds that are more easily collected, the area of expressions can easily hide behind the use of minimalism (illustrating only a lack of talent and a limited musical ear, of compositional skills and so on). But when people are using The Elements like water or stone or glass for instance I am always curious what they do with it, because especially water has such a rewarding range of resonance it easily becomes an experience for the senses. And also, when a visual spectacle is expressed from the starting point of an environment, changing the shapes of the elements involved, where the musician plays with all the elements for the creation of a sound composition then the accidental being of the genre is already overcome and a musical story arises out of the three dimensions.

“Dreams In The Desert” uses the sounds of brushing in water, splashing, bubbling of water, in combination with some interesting amplified echo resonance as if some echoes of what is happening, vibrates on a surface like a produced after-effect inside a different acoustic chamber.  This vision of water then suddenly changes to the opposite with rambling, crumbling and cracks of sound from dry small stones and materials. To combine both worlds, keyboard-alike tones rise up like a new wind, echoing the resonance from before in the first part, and also the brushing reappears, a very completing vision. 
The second track is a bit less clear in its purpose but it contains sounds that evolve in space with variation of vibration, loudness and tension, combined with spoken word. It is about Tarot predictions in time.
The third track uses one part of (fast and scared) breathing in different proportions of deformations and rhythmical speeds and loudness, like a soundtrack made from it, as if this is the expression of a realisation of a terrifying fact. But the track doesn’t end there. There are a few extra parts that give a more relaxed feeling, with a bass tone in the beginning and end and an abstract ambient composition with breathy deeper tones and singing. This reveals more a sleepier sort of awareness, with some indifference of the direction, even though it has been called a “murmuring, yearning amongst the drifting tides of the unknown”.
On “Backroads” the returning sounds of cars has been used. On the first track this is at its most frightening. We hear the driving cars sounds heard from the street position, slipping cars sounding like terrifying screams, the sound of the rain and storm and just before that a voice predicting the rain on a radio. The (achieved) purpose is that of being an ear traveller with these sounds. On this first track it is not a neutral zone any more but more that one of increased tension, just like with a storm. The collage has been made in such a way with it to increase that effect. The second part is a more quietly passing by event soundtrack, a collage with bird sounds, a keyboards drone, children playing sounds, a mechanical rhythm, passing by cars and later wind chimes. The last part is based upon an intro of multiplying horns of cars, bike wheel sounds, a small river stream, and then a heavy sequenced rhythm fading out, and again, passing-by cars. It is as if from a safer distance the dangers from these cars monsters still became to a degree one with the other environmental sounds.
“Threats” is a changing collage of electro-acoustic faster and slower action movements of stones, of scratching and of rolling material (like glass or marbles over stones).  It finds a certain global environmental rhythm- context. Further on, additional glass marble rhythms, mixed with scraping stones material, become a bit the sound of electricity.
“Stumbling Dance” is another action paining collage of a composition with similar material, (stones, rolling sand) including the sound of the tearing of cloths and later on rubbing-rhythmic breathing in a tube. This gives a vivid and nice to listen to experience.
“Listening Beyond” is made from whispering voices, metal tubes xylophones and some deep bass tones. It is like a well-directed performance /composition of sounds improvisation.

It is not surprising to read afterwards that Elainie not only did some research in sound diffusion, developed ideas in audio spatialization employing Ambisonics (3D audio), but was also involved in Deep listening (see Elaine Oliveros). For that specific area she was also most successful with it (compared to other examples I have heard before). I also must mention that she has also made diverse cooperative visual/sound installations.
Currently she’s Associate Professor of Composition and Coordinator of Music Technology at Bowling Green State University in Ohio where she teaches applied composition, music technology and experimental digital audio and animation.

Homepage : http://elillios.com/
Intro : http://dense.de/news.html#elillios
Release info ‘& audio) : http://www.electrocd.com/en/cat/imed_11110/
Other review : http://exclaim.ca/Reviews/ImprovAndAvantGarde/elainie_lillios-entre_espaces
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