On Record – Copper Sounds – Sequenced Ceramics (TBC Editions)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

Sometimes, a press release for an album tells you the story in exactly the form you want it to. This is the case with Copper Sounds, whose story runs as follows from the Sequenced Ceramics Bandcamp page:

A unique take on deconstructed club / ambient music, the intimate and immersive sounds on Sequenced Ceramics were made using seven purpose-built ceramic vessels, played using a custom-made sequencer and mechanical beaters. The album is released as a limited edition of 50 ceramic vessels, each one unique, and glazed with a download code. This ceramic is also an instrument, its shape based on one of the seven ceramics used on the album.

“While developing Sequenced Ceramics, we were initially inspired by traditional and highly sculptural clay instruments such as the Udu and the Ghatam. We then experimented with different clays, forms and scales; allowing us to understand the specific acoustic and resonant properties of ceramics. Through this process we began to think about sound, like clay, as a malleable material which you can manipulate through various sculpting and making processes. The final sculptures showcase a range of traditional ceramic making techniques, forms and are made with both visual and sonic aesthetics in mind.”

These sculptures were initially presented together as an installation and have recently been shown at the British Ceramics Biennial 2023 and Indian Ceramics Treinnale 2024. The album features seven sequences composed on this array by the duo, including a collaboration with Tara Clerkin and Sunny Joe Paradisos, and reinterpretations by DJ 2 Button, Memotone, Dan Thorman, Deep Nalström, Wojciech Rusin and Dwhyte Olivers.

What’s the music like?

The music ends up as a fascinating mix of positive energy and ambience. Above all, it feels old and primitive, in a good way – for the rhythmic profiles generated are easy on the ear but could be heard sitting around the fire.

The seven Sequences unfold very naturally, each with a different rhythmic profile that fits the sequences around it.

There is a striking centre point on the album, too – the vocals of Tara Clerkin and Sunny Joe Paradisos adding unexpected emotion to Sequence 4.

As a substantial bonus there is a range of mixes from carefully considered producers, many of whom take the ritual feel of the original further down the road. Dan Thorman’s Pseudo-Spiritual Drone is especially good, time stopping still as the harmonies slowly shift. By contrast Memotone’s Inebriated Cop Following Suspect stumbles across the path with unpredictable movements, and Wojciech Rusin’s Dzban mix projects hyperactive movement.

Does it all work?

It does – and is best heard on headphones, where the wide range of frequencies can be properly appreciated.

Is it recommended?

It is. This is a thought-provoking piece of work that takes its music back to basics, and the mixes are the ideal complement. A sonic investigation well worth making.

For fans of… Kathy Hinde, Cabaret Voltaire, Daphne Oram

Listen and Buy

Published post no.2,206 – Tuesday 11 June 2024

Another serenade for an early summer evening…

…this time in the form of one of the most charming works by Johannes Brahms, his Serenade no.1 in D major. An early work – published as Op.11 – it is full of good tunes and has a sunny disposition. Here it is in a performance on period instruments, with the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra conducted by Nicholas McGegan:

Published post no.2,211 – Sunday 16 June 2024

Let’s Dance – Fahrland: The World Is Crazy (Microkidz Music Production)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

Fahrland is the pseudonym by which Alexander Geiger makes his music, switching to the name when he released a first Mixtape for the Kompakt label.

In theory, The World Is Crazy finds him in introspective mood – but that is not the case. As he takes up the commentary, “There has been a paradigm shift since the 2000s. From golden to grey. The World Is Crazy (TWIC) is a musical diary, in which Fahrland tries to manifest these changes through musical quotes.

It reflects the global madness that has been developing at an unstoppable pace worldwide ever since the beginning of the financial crisis, the pandemic till now in which wars worldwide and social unrest dominate the news. Despite the apparent hopelessness many songs are thought as an antidote to the crisis the world finds itself in. Always with a romantic wink. And always a bit seductive.”

What’s the music like?

This is indeed an antidote to the world crisis – just what house music should be. In the course of this consistently good album, Fahrland offers up some very danceable beats, plenty of hooks and sunshine grooves – all taking their lead from the deeper side of house, but keeping a great deal of originality while they do.

We begin with some nice, easy going deep house, on the smoky side – but the subtly inventive Geiger drops plenty of good ideas throughout, with well chosen vocal snippets and hook lines. He is not afraid to drive a bit more on cuts like Deeptroit, with its rolling beats, or the chunky set-up of I Am Keeping Up, featuring tOMBo. If You is especially good, while Feel So Fine 2 and Love Me both hit strong grooves, flickering in the half light

Does it all work?

It does – a consistently strong piece of work, nicely woven together.

Is it recommended?

It is. Fahrland’s deeper side of house is a great place to be, and The World Is Crazy offers up a release to the strife – taking house music back to first principles in the best possible way, but with an individual flair.

Listen & Buy

You can listen to the album and explore purchase albums at the ProStudioMasters website

Published post no.2,210 – Saturday 15 June 2024

In concert – Summer Music in City Churches: Tier3 Trio @ St Giles Cripplegate

Tier3 Trio [Joseph Wolfe (violin), Jonathan Ayling (cello), Daniel Grimwood (piano)]

Liszt arr. Saint-Saëns Orpheus
Tchaikovsky arr. Grimwood Andante non troppo (second movement of Piano Concerto no.2 in G major Op.44) (1880)
Arensky Piano Trio no.1 in D minor Op.32 (1894)

St Giles Cripplegate, London
Thursday 13 June 2024, 1pm

Reviewed by Ben Hogwood

‘Love’s Labours’ is the title of this year’s Summer Music in City Churches festival, based opposite the Barbican Hall in St Giles Cripplegate. The ten day-long enterprise is proving ample consolation for the much-missed City of London Festival, which once captivated audiences in the Square Mile for three weeks and offers music of equal range and imagination.

For the second year in succession the Tier3 Trio visited for a lunchtime recital, following up last year’s tempestuous Tchaikovsky Piano Trio with an attractive programme subtitled From Russia with Love. They began with a curiosity, playing Saint-Saëns’ little-known arrangement of Liszt’s symphonic poem Orpheus for piano trio. A highly effective transcription, it retained its dramatic thread in this fine performance, notable for its attention to detail and well-balanced lines when reproducing Liszt’s slow-burning music. Pianist Daniel Grimwood successfully evoked Orpheus’ lyre, while Jonathan Ayling’s burnished cello sound probed in counterpoint to Joseph Wolfe’s violin.

Tier3 was formed during lockdown, and in the same period when he was performing Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto no.2 in Germany, Grimwood realised the suitability of the work’s slow movement for trio. He rightly complemented ‘the extent to which Tchaikovsky was an experimenter in form’, a trait found in many works but at its inventive peak in the second concerto, whose slow movement is in effect a piano trio with orchestra. Here the arrangement was just right – balanced, elegant and fiercely dramatic towards the end. Clarity of line was secured through sensitive pedalling from Grimwood, the trio using the resonant acoustic to their advantage, while the individual cadenzas were brilliantly played.

These two notable curiosities linked beautifully into one of the best-known works of Anton Arensky, his Piano Trio no.1 in D minor. Arensky is not a well-known composer, fulfilling in part an unkind prophecy from his teacher, Rimsky-Korsakov. However that does not mean his music is without merit – far from it, as in his brief life of 45 years he wrote two symphonies, four orchestral suites, a substantial output of piano and high quality chamber music, of which the first piano trio is the pick.

Dedicated to the cellist Karl Davidov, it is equal parts elegy, drama and ballet – with a powerful first movement setting the tone. The balletic second movement Scherzo demands much of the piano, but Grimwood was its equal, sparkling passagework from the right hand dressed with twinkling figures for cello and piano. The emotional centre of the trio was in the slow movement, with a heartfelt tribute to Davidov in Ayling’s first solo, while the finale rounded everything up in a highly satisfying payoff, a return to the first movement’s profound theme capped with an emphatic closing section.

These were very fine performances from a trio at the top of their game, navigating the resonant acoustic of St Giles with power and precision. On this evidence, Rimsky-Korsakov would have had to eat his words!

You can read more about Summer Music in City Churches at the festival website – and you can listen to a Spotify playlist below, containing the music heard in this concert – with the original version of the Tchaikovsky:

Published post no.2,209 – Friday 14 June 2024

On Record – SUN: I Can See Our House From Here (Alien Transistor)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

This is the first album from Andi Haberl, long-time member of The Notwist, who specialises on drums but is a gifted multi-instrumentalist.

The charming title of his debut masks a darker subplot, Haberl dedicating the record to the house he grew up in – but had to move out of when his parents split up.

Making the album was something of an epiphany, as he fell under the spell of sampling but also mastered a number of different and complementary instruments.

What’s the music like?

Colourful and multilayered – and rather charming. Haberl builds fascinating and compelling textures, rather like the album cover art, and takes the ear this way and that with persuasive melodic loops and bright textures.

There is a homemade feel to his writing, but a deep set emotion too, meaning that tracks like Sun, while initially revealing their charm, have a more substantial impact when listening back. The elegant Low, too, reveals a great deal with its softly moving piano line, before the softly chugging heart comes through.

Influences on Haberl’s music range from Krautrock to Steve Reich but are never too explicit, and there are winsome harmonic twists that are very much his own. His creative way with instrumentation adds to the appeal, with the doleful piano of Rain On Me countered by mandolin.

Best of all is the title track, where urgent minimal riffs compete and build to a thrilling finish.

Does it all work?

It does. Haberl has great musical instincts, constructing his melodic sentences with instinct and dressing the music with rich harmony.

Is it recommended?

Yes, with great enthusiasm – Andi Haberl has made a colourful instrumental album with unexpected meaning to be found in its musical corridors. This particular house is full of character and charm.

For fans of… Haiku Salut, The Notwist, Public Service Broadcasting, Lemon Jelly

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Published post no.2,208 – Thursday 13 June 2024