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AMM/FORMANEX
Treatise
Fibrr
006
Not for the dilettante nor the electro-acoustic faint-of-heart, this nearly
46 minute slab of semi-improvisation can be an unsettling experience if
you come to it with explicit jazz, classical or even free music expectations.
Based
around a 193-page graphic score of numbers, shapes and symbols of exquisite
intricacy by British composer Cornelius Cardew, (1936-1981), Treatise,
developed between 1963 and 1967, contains no explicit instructions about
how to perform the work. Every performance can be different, though it's
possible that some who have heard it other times may not be prepared for
the unyielding electronic tones that arise during this performance. Most
upsetting are the harsh, ear-splitting textures that arise from either
electric guitar or electronic distortion and reverberate for up to 40
seconds at a time.
Treatise's
chameleon-like character obviously continues to fascinate musicians like
this mixed French-English crew that recorded this in Nancy, France on
the 20th anniversary of Cardew's death. Front and centre are the three
British members of AMM, who not only recorded a version of the piece in
1984, but who all played with Cardew. The composer once wrote that "joining
AMM was the turning point, both in the compositions of Treatise and in
everything I have thought about music up to now." But the CD is more
than AMM writ large
Formanex,
the French quartet has already recorded two earlier versions of Treatise.
Here the band is seconded by Laurent Dailleau, best known as a member
of the Art Zoyd ensemble, who probably plays theremin, vintage analog
synthesizer and PowerBook -- no instruments are listed anywhere. AMM brought
alone John White, another experimental composer, who can play bass trombone
and piano.
This
time out, the compositional beginning features prolonged rugged drumming
and those shrill high-pitched oscillations at points. But most of the
timbres, near silent drones and bumps could arise from half a dozen sound
sources. Soon you hear what sounds like the eerie middle passage of Sgt.
Pepper's "A Day In The Life" mixed backwards.
Eventually
a single piano chord and answering drum rumble appear, soon answered by
grating, electronic buzzes and shakes, superseded by what could be the
wiggling landing sound of a UFO, the squeaking hinge on the door of the
Adams Family's mansion and the lowing of cattle. To get excessive atonal
distortion, someone seems to be randomly turning the volume pedal of a
guitar and fiddling with its delay pedal.
Following
the steady beat on a ride cymbal and the manipulation of a single piano
key, chain-shaking, cymbal moving and bell pealing tones cut through the
drone along with the curlicue rasp of what could be a slide whistle, but
is probably a saxophone. A doorstopper appears to ricochet right in the
centre of an oversized, horizontal bass drum, while drumstick scrapes
resound across the top of a ride cymbal. Reverberating, contorted guitar
echoes meet frightening sine-wave squeaks and underwater bubbling until
an undulating, pedal point, organ-like chord introduces an even more piercing
rumble.
Sheep
baas mix with an explosion of ascending then descending distorted computer
riffs, as a solitary drum beat introduces a single guitar pluck and a
rhythmic growl that could come from tape running backwards and surmounts
spinning top sounds, more chain shakes and identical conveyer belt moves.
In the distance is the faint sound of right-handed piano octaves as the
rumble of moving implements gradually supersedes all other noises. Then
a near-Impressionistic piano fantasia is heard among a solid noise block
made up in equal parts of amplifier distortions, truck motors and a sidewalk
street drill.
Following
what could be the pressure of a blunt object applied to the keyboard and
the sudden sharp tug of an electric bass string -- conveyed with a echo
pedal for maximum impact -- a short burst of radio music appears then
fades away. So does the shrill of a bird-calling whistle. As indeterminate
sonic rumbles and bumps reconstitute themselves into a sort of extraterrestrial
Morse code, the diminuendo features pulsating static until the entire
performance evaporates into dead silence.
To
reiterate: this is not an easy listen, nor one for everyone, especially
those with an aversion to piercing tones. But still, electro-acoustic
veterans, plus the followers of AMM, Formaex and Cardew will find much
to appreciate here.
--
Ken Waxman
Track
Listing: 1. Treatise
Personnel:
AMM: [Keith Rowe (guitar, electronics); John Tilbury (piano) and Eddie
Prévost (percussion)]; Formanex: [Christophe Havard (soprano and
tenor saxophones, amplified objects); Anthony Taillard (guitar and bass);
Emmanuel Leduc (electronics); Julien Ottavi (percussion and electronics)];
plus John White (bass trombone, piano); Laurent Dailleau (theremin, aks,
PowerBook)
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