release & review
 
Google Custom Search
 
 

Critikal - Graphorrhea

RATED: 7.4 / 10
reviewed by Max Schaefer
5/14/2008
Sound artist and label manager Andrey Kiritchenko cajoles and browbeats with Kvitnu foreman Dmytro Fedorenko, and musicians Tobias Astrom, and Jeff Surak on this slab of enchanted sonic excrescence.

Digg    del.icio.us    Facebook    Google    Ping.fm    TwitThis

facts

LABEL
[ Kvitnu ]

RELEASE
[ Graphorrhea ] [ CD ]


Other reviewed releases of Critikal

Other reviewed releases of Kvitnu
Graphorrhea, the albums title, can be defined as the scribbling of lengthy lists of meaningless words. Indeed, the group evince no qualms with obscenity, that is with the tearing away of sounds from their setting, in fact, even from any last morsel of sense. The field recordings and instruments exhibited here are volatized by their arbitrariness in manipulation, by their fullness that allows for a litany of quick connections to form and eventually teem like an overgrown forest.

Opener "Tesseract of Distrust" isn't so much buoyed as it is crestfallen with a ferment of burbling, babbling, and wheezing percussive pops and splashes. With this a momentum is established that serves as the background for successive pieces, one which is either subjected or invested with a small clutch of motifs that are equally punishing and generative in their purification. Here an opaque drumming defines densities, tapping against the background, a harsh, edgy sound, in a manic manner, until like magic it dissolves into a twilight of deformed and gnawed notes. At other times, the brawling meatiness is pummeled with an electronic distortion and the sheer, ecstatic, cranky noise of rock.

Curiously, with only the odd exception, everything on the album shrivels up like a shred of skin after one or two minutes of life, as though its high-wire tension and mad movements can only be sustained for but a very short while. Oddly enough, when approached from a distance, this concision re-establishes a palpable sense of coherence and purpose in the music. When this is removed, and one is lost in its quagmire of unorthodox tunings and thrashing textures as though in a delirium, only a constant threat can be gleaned from its dark surface. As such, the album can be appreciated on both levels.

Read all about and by Max Schaefer and listen to his favorite tracks!

reviews of
+ Avellaneda
+ Pairings
+ Dubious
+ We Share A Shadow
+ Airport Symphony
+ Untree
+ Je dechire l'ongle aux criminels
+ Luminarium
+ Passerelle
+ 1000 Fragments
+ Suisei
+ Graphorrhea
+ Shoot's Huft
+ Topography
+ Up, Down, Charm, Strange, Top, Bottom
+ The Happy Error
+ Audible Geography
+ Mit Ohne
+ Hi Bi No Ne
+ Recollections
+ Obadiah
+ Summerland
+ Early Works
+ Filtered Light (chamber music 4)
+ Teaism: music inspited by the art and culture of tea
+ Winter
+ Weekend
+ Lost
+ Fakerie
+ Haxon
+ Gris Gris
FURTHER READING
Latest articles
+ Tobias Fischer : Jodi Cave, 15 questions
+ Tobias Fischer : Tomas Phillips
+ Tobias Fischer : Danny Kreutzfeldt
+ Kenneth Goldsmith (editor) : Publishing The Unpublishable
+ Larry Johnson : An Interview with AUTISTICI

      [ archive... ]

Latest reviews
+ EARLabs - changes
+ Laura Gibson & Ethan Rose - Bridge Carols
+ Pausal - Lapses
+ Spartak - Verona
+ Roel Funcken - Vade
+ Mothboy - Bunny
+ Enduser - 1/3
+ Zebra - Live in Leugen
+ Sehnsucht - Wüste
+ Stormhat - From the moat

      [ archive... ]

Latest label reviews
+ 12rec.
+ absurd
+ Autoplate
+ con-v
+ Entity
+ Filament Recordings
+ Frozen Elephants Music
+ Homophoni
+ machine.records
+ Mirakelmusik
+ NISHI
+ no type
+ Panospria
+ RAIN
+ Slaapwel Records
+ Stasisfield
+ TIBProd
+ Treetrunk Records
+ UBU sound poetry

new RELEASES /

"Isha ashi - means: 'Celebration start Night' in chinese (i love translators :) It's a minimal music, more ambient than i do. I wanted to search a bit different language or just ...
Horiso - Horiso - | online

Acustronica

 

 

 

eXTReMe Tracker

     
     

Creative Commons License and Creative Commons License EARLabs 1999 - 2010 | contact