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POLWESCHEL
Archives of the North
Hatology 633
Situated even more so than previously within its own unique sound world,
the now five-man Polwechsel mixes reductionist techniques and inchoate
electronic tinctures with the autonomy of FreeImprov to make its point
On this CD, the Austrian-British band changes direction by adding two
percussionists Burkhard Beins and Martin Brandlmayr to an
aural concept that previously was advanced by Polwechsel founders, Werner
Dafeldecker on bass and cellist Michael Moser and given auxiliary tinctures
when London-based reedist John Butcher joined the ensemble at the beginning
of the century.
True to its initial impulses though, Beins, who has partnered with everyone
from British guitarist Keith Rowe to vocalist Phil Minton; and Brandlmayr,
who is in the Trapist trio which explores similar territory; arent
percussionists in the conventional sense at least if thats
measured in beats, flams or paradiddles. Instead both men inject barely
pressured, stretched tones from their kits long,
hocketing cymbal vibrations, patterning wooden rim shot snaps, drum top
scrapes and friction plus chains rattling and the rolling of blunt objects.
Interlocking with these impulses are Butchers distinctive tongue
fluttering and stops, singular tone warbling, and multiphonic note expansion.
Dafeldecker adds precise arco string movements and more concentrated dense
hums, plus occasional, and often seemingly random, pizzicato string strums.
Additionally, Mosher outputs electronic impulses from his computer from
time-to-time. Yet the crackling reverb and input signal- crossing is introduced
with the same lapidary care as the reedist brings to his wind-chime-like
trills or the bassist does to his droned undercurrent.
Essentially the concept, like similarly distinctive tone distribution
from Englands AMM or Australias The Necks is inimitable
improvisation following its own reductionist strictures. This way, the
underlying and overlaid pulses are as liable to result from polyphonic
interaction among subsets of acoustic instruments as from wave form oscillation
produced electronically.
Zart as well as staccato, yet characterized at points with authoritative
undulation arising from strummed chords and reed-linked ghost-note obbligatos,
the sound appears and vanishes according to its own logic. Of and in itself
and apparently timeless, ARCHIVES OF THE NORTH marks a stimulating next
step in Polwechsels evolution.
-Ken Waxman
Track Listing: 1. Datum Cut 2. Mirror 3. Core Cut 4. Magnetic North 5.
Site and Setting
Personnel: John Butcher (soprano and tenor saxophones); Michael Moser
(cello and computer); Werner Dafeldecker (bass); Burkhard Beins and Martin
Brandlmayr (drums and percussion)
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