12.11.12

Larry Gus Interview for 06:00am

Hey guys:
First of all let me share my pure love for 06.00 am. In the last few months, this has been a source for amazing music and extremely thoughtful and inspiring interviews. A perfect view of the current and undercurrent.
Excuse me in advance for some long answers:
06. What where you doing before getting to answer these questions? We are curious to know what do you do in one day of yours?
Yesterday i went to bed at 10.30 in the morning, because i had to finish a remix. I am sleeping super late in the last weeks, and i seem to enjoy it. After i finished my master thesis i decided to keep doing some stuff that i wasn't able to do before. Sleeping really late is one of those things. When you are stressed and anxious, even getting to sleep is a burden, so now that i am stress-free (relatively and supposedly), i sleep whenever the fuck i want to.
So, i woke up at 16.00, replied to some emails, and went straight to the park for running. This park (Giardini Pubblici "Indro Montanelli") is my favorite place in Milan, i fucking love this park, there are times that i wish that i could just go and live in there, but the doors close around 22.00 each night, and i don't want to get raped (yet).
While i was running, i was supposed to listen to this remix i finished yesterday, but i fucked up the export, and there was a midi channel playing, but it was supposed to be muted. And this made me angry. But i decided to calm down, because right after i finished my thesis, i persuaded myself to be more calm and cool. It's super hard but i try. I also try to eat healthier because i turned into a fat fuck and i hated myself.
So, instead of getting back home to re-export the track, i just listened to the Marc Maron WTF Podcast with Louis CK, and i instantly got better. I didn't run that much today, and after that i got home, had dinner, and watched the last SNL episode, with Louis CK hosting. Last year I found about Louis CK (i came to the party quite late), and my life literally changed, i am so happy about it.
06. When did your relationship with music start to develop and which was the first record you ever played?
My father had lots of vinyl at home, his favorite bands were Pink Floyd, Uriah Heep and the Beatles (i guess), and on the side he had LOTS of Lucio Battisti LP's. I think that this is the single best thing that my dad gave, considering that the original Numero Uno copy of Anima Latina can go up to 100€ on ebay. It depends. I wouldn’t ever sell it, so i really don’t know why i even mentioned that. Hmmm.
My first musical memory is Mozart's Magic Flute from the Amadeus film, and the first song that i really liked, in the sense that i was constantly thinking about it and waiting for the time to come to listen to it again, was El Condor Pasa (If I Could) by Simon and Garfunkel. I think i was 5 years old. Around that time my father made me to go have music lessons, and i was super reluctant about it initially, but i still thank him for that.
The first band that i became obsessed with were Pink Floyd (around the age of 12), and the first CD that i bought with my own money was Chronicle by Creedence Clearwater Revival (or Thick as a Brick by Jethro Tull? still not sure). The first LP that i bought with my own money was New Day Rising by Hüsker Dü.
06. How did you come to know that you could make your own music? What does being able to get involved in such a creative process 'offer' you as a person?
I started getting to play around with chords and stuff when they bought me my first guitar, a red korean imitation of a strat. The brand is kimaxe and i still use it today by the way. i wanted to have a strat because i was watching that pink floyd show at earls courts in '94 and i was so in love with dave gilmour and his guitar and his fingers and his fat belly.
My first "songs" were just imitations of nirvana's power chords, and then i kept on copying. Thinking about it, i made my first songs on a computer copying dj shadow, and then i just spent 2 years around 2003-2004 trying to copy four tet's sound. and that's how i started learning how to use software and all that.
in the story "pierre menard, author of the quixote" borges is talking about this guy, who wanted to write don quixote, so he started living cervantes life. but then he realized that even though he acquired the exact same experiences, he couldn't write it. he just couldn't. so he started copying it, by hand, page by page, line by line, letter by letter. And then borges compares the exact same passage from these two books, and he praises the differences in menard's writings, even though the two texts are identical. this story somehow describes many parts of my creative process.
the rest of it, comes from being super young and uncool when i was at school, and never actually had had any real and close friends. i was always geeky and unfriendable, and always passed unnoticed and unobserved. all this made me try harder in the things that i liked, and that kept on for years after years. I guess that it's the same with all the people. we just build a small corner with some abilities or plain features that we perceive them to make us fell “better” (better being an extremely vague and open term here) than other people, and just stay there and never move out of that corner.
if i had to write it down in less words it would be like that: i constantly feel that everyone is better and happier than me, and i keep putting down huge amounts of effort in order to overcome that feeling, but of course this never happens, because i have problems and anxieties deeply hidden that never let me think straight.
06. How was the environment like while growing up? How was your family like?
Small city, shitty people, ugly buildings. I don't have any brothers and sisters, spent mostly time with my mother when i was back home, my father was working a lot back then, he still does.
06. Do you ever find yourself trying to become something that others would expect?
I was like that for a huge amount of years, let's say i sort-of stopped this habit two-three years ago. i am turning 30 this december, so that means that i spent 27 years trying to do stuff i don't like, and deliberately trying to persuade myself that i like them. last frontier was my aforementioned master thesis.
The weird thing is that everyone constantly tries to live himself up to a projected image that others have on him, but an image that he somehow imposed himself into trying to fit into. So it's like a typical programming deadlock, the door is locked but the key is behind the door. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deadlock
"A deadlock is a situation in which two or more competing actions are each waiting for the other to finish, and thus neither ever does"
06. Do you believe in luck or do we have absolute control over what' s going to happen in our lives?
All i really believe is that life is about to fuck you up at any given point, constantly. And that failure and disaster are always imminent.
06. Is there another kind of music that you have secretly wanted to make?
I wish i could play jazz, but i am uneducated. I would love to start studying at some point though.
06. Are your parents influenced by your way of living?
Only in the sense that i am not living in Greece, and there is some extra effort needed from each one of us when we want to meet. Other than that no, not at all.

06. How would you explain the fact that people are so slow to recognize and accept the work of ingenious people?
I never thought about that. Really. But I guess that, considering the way the media were always functioning, most of the times what is perceived as ingenious is just imposed by random factors. Then instantly, an actual hub is created around this "ingenious" work, where imitators attach themselves to it, and its artistic value is raised. But initially, there was no actual value per se, only a relative one. It is always about networks of influences and those prevalent nodes that are always randomly chosen.
06. How did you choose Milano as a current living place? Can a city influence ones creativity?
I live in Milan because my girlfriend works here and it's much easier for me to move around, considering i don't have an actual office or anything. Another reason that makes me happy being here is that Lucio Battisti was living here for many years, and when i walk around thinking that i feel weird and happy about it. I don’t think i’ve ever been happier.
06. What is there for you to say about your new album? Does it signify a new phase in your work?
This new thing (Silent Congas) is part of the proper album sessions (Years Not Living) and all that work was based on the book "Life: A User's Manual" by Georges Perec. It's been some time since i finished those songs, but at the time, there were some extremely strict constraints imposed on the songwriting, recording and producing that material, and all of that was directly influenced by Georges Perec and the whole Oulipo movement (and Raymond Queneau’s way of cross-referencing styles, influences and moods in a vertical way).
For example, the numbers of samples used per song, the way that they were chosen, their role in the songwriting and mixing processes, all that derived by setting some specific constraints in the beginning of the project, sort of creating a certain environment where the relationships between the samples would start emerging on their own, and everything started functioning in a semi-generative manner. From my point of view, It's just a rip-off of the methods that Georges Perec used when writing Life.
Another big influence was Borges and the various definitions of infinity found in his fiction and non-fiction work. During the months when i was working on those songs, i would get to sleep and dream constantly about Perecian and Borgesian libraries, full with crosswords, labyrinths and infinite rooms. At some point i even had a fucked-up dream where i actually just installed a copy of a early 90's sierra-style adventure game, where the main character was Perec himself, trying to navigate in the Library of Babel, solving mysteries and talking to characters straight from Borges' stories and Perec books.
Hmmm, thinking about it, i never managed to get over all that. In a sense, reading that book (life: a user's manual) and then getting to Borges through Perec and Achilleas Kyriakidis (the most prominent greek translator of perec and borges), literally changed the way i approach my life, the people around me, my work ethics, and the bottomline is that it just changed my life itself.
06. Do you believe that art making is also a way of psychotherapy?
I guess that it depends from person to person. (I have little idea regarding the actualities of psychotherapy, so i wouldn't just start comparing those two things. It would just be embarrassing on my behalf :) )
06. In your opinion what is the role of art in periods of economical, political and social turmoil?
Who gives a fuck about art in those cases, seriously. It's like a tiny small percentage of what is actually happening, and really, who cares about what a singer or a poet or a painter is doing or saying. People have to deal with real problems, fucking heavy day-to- day stuff. Getting to be interested about art, and being influenced (or even informed) by it is just pointless for most of them.
06. Have you ever cried from happiness?
I cry a lot, but most of the times it's a combination of happiness, relief, admiration and excitement, which is quite different i guess.
I think that one of the few times that i was just crying from ecstatic happiness (dancing and hugging strangers) was at an Edan gig, and being honest, i have to say that this was the best concert i've ever seen.
Oh, i think i cry when i get to eat something that blows my mind, but even that, i wouldn't put it in the "pure happiness" category.
Also, another recent incident was when i visited a huge Pipilotti Rist exhibition in Milan. and to be specific the moment when i entered the huge black cinema hall (photos of the whole exhibition: http://goo.gl/dqH7g)
It was the first time in my life that i was feeling that the person who created those things was there in person and cared for me, it was a really primitive emotion in a sense, it was just warm and heartfelt. i was just feeling being loved. and i know that it sounds corny, but i went 3 more times in there, just to get that feeling again.
06. Have you ever been at a concert from which you decided to leave?
Yes.
06. Are there things that bore you?
Watching movies on a laptop.
06. How did you come across Sun Ra? Was there somebody that gave you a record and told you: 'Listen to it'?
I bought some jazz records in high school (a love supreme, birth of the cool, keith jarrett's koln concert -not strictly jazz, but you know, high school-, bitches brew) but my whole infatuation with jazz has two very specific foundations/roots:
I bought my first wire magazine on 2002 (asian dub foundation on the cover, and best of the year lists in it) and the next one i bought had Lou Reed on the cover, and he was saying how in his first days was trying to emulate Ornette Coleman's sound with his guitar, further stating how free jazz changed his life, and that "Shape of Jazz to Come" is his favorite album ever. I just went out and bought it instantly.
The other is Four Tet. I bought Rounds later that same year (2003), and i was obsessed with that sound. I was reading interviews and he was talking about the huge influence of Alice Coltrane (namely journey in satchidananda and THAT amazing beast of an album with Joe Henderson called Elements) and i just started from there. I bought 5 Alice Coltrane albums, and then i bought even more John Coltrane, Albert Ayler, Pharoah Sanders, Art Ensemble of Chicago, Don Cherry etc etc. I think i was just trying to buy all the impulse albums i could see in front of me. One of the albums i bought in that spree was Space is the Place and this is how i got my first taste of Sun Ra.
Lateri i came to love him even more through Madlib, and those Quasimoto tracks where he samples Astro Black and all that stuff.
06. Tell me a person who you truly admired in your life.
All those people that can really and honestly care and deal about other people's problems and issues instead of their own.
06. Can you send us a picture that best illustrates your current state of mind?




11.11.12

v/a : knurr & spell


v/a : knurr & spell CD (memoirs of an aesthete, smokers gifts, noise-below)
 
σχεδόν 2 1/2 χρόνια στα σκαριά (η ιδέα της συμπαραγωγής συζήτηθηκε το νοέμβριο του 2010 στα πλαίσια του infinity http://absurd.noise-below.org/_a76_100/a83/a83.html) κι επιτέλους μετά απο σωρεία προβλημάτων κυκλοφορήσαμε το knur & spell. συλογή με 4 γκρούπ της σκηνής του δυτικού γιορκσαϊρ (shembold, ocelocelot, moral holiday, foldhead) με τον ήχο τους να κινείται σε βαριά ψυχεδελικά μονοπάτια, πειραματισμό έως και ψυχεδελικό θόρυβο. σε μία έκδοση 300 αντιτύπων.
 
το κύκνειο άσμα της σειράς του κέντρου ερευνών για τον προσδιορισμό της ευτυχίας (παράρτημα δυτικού γιορκσαϊρ)
 
 
 
 



phil minton / dylan nyoukis : live


phil minton / dylan nyoukis : live (1sided LP - πτώματα κάτω απο το κρεββάτι, phase records, mafia)
 
ήταν στο dhalgren (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dhalgren) που πρωτοδιάβασα για έναν πατέρα ο οποίος έχει απολυθεί και που μη θέλωντας να στεναχωρήσει την οικογένεια του, ξυπνάει κάθε μέρα, ξυρίζεται, ντύνεται, τρώει το πρωϊνό του και φεύγει για τη 'δουλειά' του. άγνωστο το που πηγαίνει και που περνάει 8 με 10 ώρες. ίσως να κλάει σε κάποιο παγκάκι σε ένα πάρκο, να μεθάει, ή οτιδήποτε. υπάρχουν φορές που η ίδια η πραγματικότητα βέβαια δημιουργεί ακόμα πιο δυστοπικές εικόνες απο αυτές που πειριγράφονται στο έπος του σάμουελ ντελάνυ. και ήταν τέτοιου είδους καταστάσεις που μας ξαναγέννησαν την κάβλα για την ανθρώπινη φωνή και πάνω σε μία τέτοια συζήτηση για τι είδους όργανα θα επιθυμούσαμε να ακούμε μετά την καταστροφή του στυλιζαρισμένου μας κόσμου μας κόλλησε η ανθρώπινη φωνή.  ήταν μια απόφαση που πήραμε φυσικά καθώς απο την αρχή της κρίσης πιάσαμε τους εαυτούς μας να σκαλίζουν δίσκους με βάση την ανθρώπινη φωνή (η φωνή ως το αυθεντικό όργανο για να κάνουμε μνεία στο ομόνυμο κλασσικό δίσκο της joan la barbara) έτσι όταν έπεσε η ιδέα να στήσουμε μια συναυλία στηριγμένη μόνο στην ανθρώπινη φωνή μας έσκασαν κατευθείαν τα ονόματα των phil minton και dylan nyoukis και χωρίς δισταγμό τους καλέσαμε για μια βραδιά που μας χάρισε ένα απο τα πιο φυσικά και ζωτικά σετ που έχουμε στήσει εδώ και πάααααααρα πολύυυυυ καιρό. ένα σετ με φωνητικές πιρουέτες, αντιπαραθέσεις μεταξύ του ντύλαν και του φίλ που μας έστειλαν για ένα περίπου μισάωρο εκείνο το βράδυ της 26ης νοεμβρίου του 2011 στο υπόγειο της knot και για μία ακόμα φορά μας γέμισε ενθουσιασμό για περιπέτεια και αναζήτηση. αλλά εκτός απο αυτό αποδείχτηκε η ευκαρία για 3 φίλους να συνεργαστούν σε κάτι πυ γουστάραν και χάρι σε αυτό τον ενθουσιασμό κυκλοφορεί αυτό το ντοκουμέντο σε 300 αριθημένα αντίτυπα.
 
 
 
 



8.11.12

Larry in a loop! Contours Sway

5.11.12

Putsum / Photos 04.11.2012 EMBROS theatre


[Click on images for full view]













4.11.12

Inverz interview for 06:00am
























06. How would you describe your music?

Electronic, Dark-ambient, Drone, Sad

06. When did your relationship with music start to develop and which was the first record you ever played?

I spent time as a kid listening to my uncle’s vinyl collection, long before I started playing a musical instrument. I think that the first vinyl record I spinned on my own was Led Zeppelin 1, and the second was Harvest by Neil Young.

06. How did you come to know that you can make your own music? What does being able to get involved in such creative process 'offer' you as a person?

I bought my first guitar at the age of 16. It took me 6-7 more years until I found out how to record my music and create a track with the help of the PC. I realized that I could do that after experimenting with recordings on a tape recorder with a really cheap microphone. This whole experience has changed my life ever since and for sure had its impact on me and on my growing up.

06. What is there in the collaboration with Eventless Plot as V.I.A.? What are your plans or current endeavors?

V.I.A. was an idea I had early that summer, after 2 key members of Eventless Plot and Good Luck Mr. Gorsky left Greece for a better future. I decided to try and play music with beloved friends and musicians who are still here, sharing the same shit that I do. We are all excited about the project so far. We played 2 shows one week after the first rehearsal, and we are now recording the material in a studio. We will play more shows and maybe release some stuff later in 2013.

06. Would you like to talk a bit about the environment that you are currently living in? How do you feel connected with the city of Thessaloniki and how does it affect your work?

I always say that I love Thessaloniki, and that this is the place for me. I don’t think this will change, it is easy for me to create music in this city, I don’t know exactly why, but it is. I spent a few years in Athens and abroad and I didn’t manage to create anything worthing. 
Despite this love for my city, I can see that things are like living inside a cave the last few years. Nothing new happens and everything is recycled in a very bad and tedious way. There are few people promoting something new and interesting. Add this to the economic environment, and you have a very lurky situation.
Thankfully this situation doesn’t seem to affect my appetite for music.

06. How where you as a child? Where did you live? What did you do?

I think I was pretty easy going as a kid and a very quiet one. I spent my early childhood in a social-housing flat in the west side of the city, which is the ugly one.
One thing I did for sure was getting bored and alienated, growing up in a 95%  skyladiko* oriented school environment.  Was a huge sports failure but an MTV addict, taping on a small recorder music that I liked and finding time to steal my uncle’s vinyls. (he still doesn’t know about that I think). 

[*skyladiko oriented= oriented towards greek trash cultural artifacts – note of 6am]

06. How did you start Granny Records?

Me and fellow Good Luck Mr. Gorsky bandmates had a compilation cd with us and other artists in it, and decided to make 100 copies on CDr and give it to people and friends. So this was the main idea, to release music by Greek artists that we like, and of course our stuff. The name is after Spyros’s grandmother’s house where our studio was, and all the recordings were made at the time. The poor lady was semi-deaf and we didn’t have trouble playing loud in the room next to her living room.

06. What difficulties were/are there in running a record label in Greece during this period? What was on your side along the way?

The main difficulty is the fact that your audience is very narrow. But we knew that from the beginning. This is why none of us ever thought of having the label as his main profit income. So this doesn’t seem to be bothering us after all that years. We sure had thought of quitting, but now after many thoughts I for myself see that all the music we have released and the music to come, makes me very very very proud and happy. I know that a handful of people have listened the TON release for example, but I really can’t be bothered about it. It is music that I love, and I think that this love for music was on our side along the way. And of course the joy of meeting and working with musicians that you respect and vice versa.

06. Are you in any ways related with people that worked with Poeta Negra or other record labels in Thessaloniki? How do you see this 'music society' evolving through the years?

The thing in Thessaloniki is that there are many many small ‘music societies’, like in every other city I think. When it comes to musicians and music-related people close to my musical taste, then I can say for sure that I have met and sometimes even worked with many of them. 
Poeta Negra was an ideal label for us when we started and Lotus Record Store is a huge cultural capital for me and my friends, and we are thankful that despite Poeta Negra, lotus is still up and running.
It is still very fascinating to meet people from Thessaloniki that you never knew before, and see that they are so talented and committed to the music they create. I still have this teenager think of admiring other musicians and artists.

06. Do you like to wake up early in the morning?

Depending on last night’s conditions. But mostly yes.

06. Have your actions and behavior influenced your parents?

I will secretly ask our family-therapist, and tell you. 

06. Which is in your opinion the best 2012 Oren Ambarchi release?

The one on Touch, because of the opening track ‘Salt’. I must have listened to that for over a hundred times in a month.

06. What do you think the role of art is in periods of political and social turmoil?

To self – exile itself to other countries and write politically correct songs. (joking). I really don’t know. Art is art. Fuck politics. When art meets politics, shit happens.

06. The more informed we are the more dissatisfied we feel with the situation in which we live? 

Yes. I think Foucault said that ignorance is power…or was it Baudrillard..i can’t remember. But I agree… information nowadays can cause serious health damage.
But on the other hand information is everywhere, forcing you into a passive role without knowing.

06. Can you send us an example, a picture that best illustrates for you the significance of art in our lives to post along with your answers? 




Tenor for today

Putsum Live at EMBROS theatre






































Κυριακή 4 Νοεμβρίου
LIVE - ώρα 21:30
Punkers Keepers 
Putsum
(ηχητική performance με θέμα
τον Αναβαπτιστή μυστικιστή βασιλειά 
της επανάστασης του Münster
την εποχή της Μεταρρύθμισης)

3.11.12

Rabih Beaini aka Morphosis interview for 06:00am
















06. Where are you based?
Between Lebanon and Berlin, mostly in Berlin lately.

06. What is your first musical memory?
A Lebanese late 70s pop music cassette that my uncle used to have, it mainly was some prog-and--psych oriental pop stuff, and some classic pieces.

06. Can you describe your work for the people that haven't experienced it?
It’s an expression of inner light and darkness. And sometimes you can dance to it.

06. Does your family have any relation with music?
I heard that my grandfather was one of the most respected Aataba and Mijana singers in the whole region where I grew up, Aataba, Mijana and Zajal are traditional and popular improvised singing sessions between qualified quawwali’s, requires a good skill in the use of words and structure. This I think is the only relation my family has with music, but I never met my grandfather.

06. Which is your guilty pleasure(s) in music?
I like to twist people’s minds, sometimes this becomes too harsh, and I feel sorry about it, but I can’t avoid it. 

06. What was the last record you bought?
Nick Edwards - Plekzationz album on Mego Editions

06. What is your idea of happiness?
There are many forms of happiness, sometimes it’s when you reach inner peace, and peace with the world surrounding you, other times it’s when you know you will be forever remembered, for some reason, leaving a mark on this planet, a son, a composition, a creation, this is mainly our idea of living in eternal.

06. What is good music?
There is nothing called Good Music. There is only Music. The rest is not.

06. How was the environment during the first years of your life? How were you as a child? How did you live, what did you do?
I was quite a calm character, with an early sense of responsibility, you needed that living in a country in a war state, my parents taught me how to develop my own sense of understanding and evaluating. I had a lot of curiosity and love for discovery and learning. I also had bad company, did shoplifts for ice cream and matchbox cars, got caught both times, set fire to the cane forest close to my house, stuff like that, was a hard worker in fields and in construction sites with my uncles, constantly fighting with my brother to maintain my dominating position in the family, things that normal kids do, I guess. I was fortunate I never had a passion for war related things, never wanted to follow any local ideology in politics, and never got into any sort of organization, it was too easy for a kid at those times to get involved in militia and organized crime. But I managed to survive this. 

06. What's your father's profession?
He used to run a construction company for public contracts and works, and then a stone quarry, now he lives in the village taking care of the fields and lives a quiet and peaceful life.

06. What did your family think of your music?
There was no initial interest, they thought I was one of those big room mainstream DJ’s, until a couple of years ago I started explaining some things, my father was surprised that I loved traditional music, my mother totally loved what I did, for some reason she caught exactly the spirit of my music interest and development, she loves to listen to some of the records I recently left in Lebanon, some afro-beat and free-jazz. 

06. Is there a person that you are glad you have met through this work?
Many persons, too many to count and name, but some special ones for sure.

06. How long have you been DJing / making music / running the label?
I would say 20 years since I played real gigs as DJ, 14 years in music making, 8 years in running labels. 

06. Which production / remix are you most proud of?
Every Single One of them, and I’m happy it’s still like that and actually getting better, for me. 

06. What is there between dance and groove?
Dance is a discipline, an expression of the spirit. Groove is subjective, each one can find groove in many diverse ways. Your Dance relies on the way you find this groove.  

06. Why do you make music?
It’s my form of expression, I’m a bad dancer and a terrible painter. 

06. What is it that makes you constantly create?
Curiosity and Love. 

06. Does silence have sound?
Thank god no. 

06. Do you read newspapers? Which?
Randomly, I don’t care to be honest. I’d rather read something more interesting. 

06. Do you vote?
Yes, in my country when needed. I think it’s a civil duty.

06. Can you send us a picture of you and a picture of something or some place that best illustrates your current state of mind to post along with your answers?
[click on image for full view]



TERANGA BEAT showcase today!




Showcase του label που επιμελείται ο Αδαμάντιος Καφετζής κάπου μεταξύ Αθήνας και Ντακάρ.

Η Teranga Beat μετράει ήδη τέσσερις εξαιρετικές κυκλοφορίες, αποτέλεσμα βαθιάς αναζήτησης παλαιών ακυκλοφόρητων αλλά και πρόσφατων ηχογραφήσεων της Σενεγαλέζικης -κι ευρύτερα Αφρικάνικης- μουσικής παράδοσης.

ΚυκλοφορίεςROYAL BAND DE THIÈS - Kadior DembKARANTAMBA - "Ndigal"GUELEWAR - Halleli N'dakarouIDRISSA DIOP - Diamonoye Tiopité


http://www.terangabeat.com/
Special DJ sets Αδαμάντιος Καφετζής / Anthony K


Κρασί, μπύρες και παραδοσιακό Σενεγαλέζικο φαγητό!!!


Σάββατο 03 Νοεμβρίουστο vinyl microstoreΔιδότου 34στις 20:00

1.11.12



28.10.12










17.10.12

Christine Abdelnour interview for 06:00am


06. When did you start playing music? How do you describe what it is that you do when people ask you?

In 1997, I got attracted by improvised music. When I was young, I did a little bit of classical music on piano and guitar but it was too strict for me. Then, when I was 18, I started directly with improvised music on the clarinet and the saxophone. I did some workshops of improvised music and then I entered the orchestra of INSTANTS CHAVIRES in Paris. The INSTANTS CHAVIRES was the place to be for that kind of music. I was going there two or three times a week to listen to some concerts and I practiced there too through workshops. At this period, I was very impressed by saxophonists like John Butcher, Evan Parker, Peter Brötzmann or Mats Gustaffson. I learned some techniques, just by listening some of their solo on cds and was trying to reproduce the same sounds. Then, I felt more attracted by electro-acoustic or purely electronic music and I tried to get rid of the specific sounds of the saxophone itself. The more I was playing, the more I got fed up with this instrument and tried to find ways to escape the instrument. I tried to develop my own techniques and now I hope that I don’t sound at all like a saxophone.
I’m trying to produce sounds that are close to those of electro acoustic music but on a purely acoustic instrument.

When people ask me what I do, I tell them that my interest in music is sound. I approach sound as a malleable material, rich in concrete textures which combines breath, silence and countless acoustic distortions. I’m exploring the microtonal aspects of the saxophone and its high-pitched tones, but also tonguing techniques, unpitched breaths, spittle-flecked growls, biting, slicing notes and breathy echoing sounds. Far from any narrative effects, my music tries to deal with perception, time and space.

06. What is music for you?

As I said, in my music, I’m interested in sound itself but the important thing for me, that creates the music is the creation and the construction of a shape. This “work in progress” that will build the music is primordial for me. How will a sound emerge? What is the purpose of a sound, its laws of movement? Does the musician create the shape or is it the shape that creates the musician? Beyond my work on sounds as a multiplicity of techniques, what interests me when I improvise is to try to analyse how the brain works in music. I’m more and more against this “romantic” idea that improvising is only related to the body of the musician, that would just “feel” the music without any intentions. I’m convinced that the brain is also very active in this process, that it’s a decision and a will that will conduct the music. That when the musician feels or perceives, he is theorising in the same time and his brain obeys to some codes in a causal system. (Ref : Jean-Luc Guionnet)

Music is a language. Language has some codes. Moreover, music is a structural system or an organism where every sound is in interrelation. Every sound that we produce has to be stretched towards a change in the shape or has to pass on some information. No sound has to be anecdotic or useless. The musician has to be always in this state of mind of urgencies that results from the process of listening. Playing when it’s just necessary and being precise and concise. Less is more.

I can’t also think of music without the concept of “listening”: to listen is all ready in a gesture of composition.
The big emotional strength of the music comes exactly from this abstraction of the space-time.

This is music when I do it. 

But sometimes, when I listen to music at home, I don’t think about all this at all. For example, I never listen to improvised music at home. I don’t listen to jazz and I won’t define my music as jazz.
I listen to all sorts of music, read all kinds of books and watch all kinds of movies.
I’m not a fetishist of anything and I don’t feel related to any kind of musical history.

06. In your opinion what is the role of art in periods of economical, political and social turmoil?

It seems to me that one of the main functions of the artistic commitment is to push away the limits of what can be made and show that art consists not only of manufactured objects in galleries but being invovled in a “context", putting in relationship the art and the reality. But what is the reality? Within the postmodern speech: the reality would be an overtaken "concept", because it is constituted by the exchanges of mediated signs taken from heterogeneous fields, where the artists are such as "tourists” far from their own experience. 
In front of this idea, I think that artists have to create another reality. They have to create a kind of new power of reality that dig into movements, displacement and the meeting with the other or the perpetual search of something or somewhere else. Art doesn’t have to reproduce the visible but to make visible the invisible. Art has initiated a new perception, returning to its unconscious premisses of its own functioning, creates another reality than the one that we believe in and explodes the shell of the social by creating underground paths where the deep intimacy of ourself can express itself.

06. What is your relation with Lebanon now? Have you lived there for a long time before moving to France?

I was born in France and lived all my life in France. My parents are lebanese and the link with Lebanon has always being strong. I go there one a year at least to see my family. When I was a child I had a lot of lebanese friends because the lebanese diaspora in the 80’ in Paris was very present.

06. You organize the experimental music festival IRTIJAL in Beirut. Can you talk a little bit about it? How do you think it is a political gesture to organize a thing like that in Beirut? 

I can talk to you a little bit about the experimental scene in Lebanon but I only organized IRTIJAL in the first years. After some personal problems with some lebanese musicians,  I am now not related anymore to the festival or the musicians there. 
So, the guitarist Sharif Sehnaoui or the musican Mazen Kerbaj would be more efficient than me to talk about music in Lebanon. 

Nevertheless I can speak to you about the beginning of irtijal in 2000.
In Lebanon after fifteen years of civil war and decade of reconstruction, the artistic situation was very poor. The artists were more worried about surviving than creating. In music, from the Arabic pop to the group of hard rock or standards of jazz revisits, all that we could hear was copies of western fashions. Then things began to change in 2000 with the arrival of the generation born at the beginning of the war and more interest was shown in forms of aesthetic resistance, not a negative resistance but an affirmative and creative resistance. 

We have created in 2000 with sharif sehnaoui and mazen kerbaj the MILL association (free improvised music in the Lebanon) with the irtijal festival (improvisation in Arabic). The objective was to present the contemporary and experimental practices in music but also to register the music in a permanent dialogue with all the Lebanese artistic space. The idea of irtijal was to present a maximum of international artists, while trying to make them interact with the local artists through improvisation. Even though irtijal was the only individual initiative and in that we were only volunteers with no local or international structure, the festival was and is still the main event of  creative musics and the biggest structure of this type all over the Arabic world.

06. What time do you wake up in the morning?

I love to sleep and I sleep a lot ( 9 hours ) so I wake up very late depending on what time I sleep.

06. What was the environment like in the first years of your life?

I was born in Paris in a very wealthy environment. My parents were immigrants from Lebanon. They were very protective with my sister and me. Being far from their country and family made them very much in need of love and they surrounded us with a lot of tenderness and affection, specially my mother. My father was very afraid of being in lack of something so he was giving us all that we asked for in the material field. He was very generous and a big spender, throwing money out the windows as we say in french.
On some aspects, they were not strict at all. For example they didn’t care if we were good at school or not but on other aspects, my father was very anxious and afraid of everything so we had to be always at home. We lived a little bit confined in this family “bubble” without a lot of contacts with the external world except our private and catholic school which was the opposite of our family world.  With this excess of love and maximal protection, my sister and I were very unsociable and very timid, we had also a reverse reaction: a kind of overdose, which brought us to the feeling of guilt, to a  big consciousness of the value of things, a bit against the idea of wasting and the feeling of being  “over responsible” of our lives and education. A classic adolescent crisis followed when I discovered music and underground worlds where I had a lot of internal fights with my father trying to conciliate all this existential oppositions… I was extremely shy when I was 18 and the discovering of music and improvised music as another “social” world was really a key to open another door that could help me escape and reconciliate everything. But it was a very long process of destruction/reconstruction, war and reconciliation and I can say that now at 34 years old I’m just reaching my real self.  
But playing music now is not easy for me, it’s not like I know what I want and I’m doing it. Playing music is all about doubting and a kind of despair for me. 
To make some music it is like digging. The hollow grows. But I keep saying to myself that the hollow carries us and that our inside is huge. That it is maybe necessary to empty outside all this inside. With all the questions and the pain, playing music is not simple, it is not just happiness and it is not shining in static answers.
Also, I don’t really care about the saxophone. Even sometimes, I hate this instrument. The instrument is only a medium to express myself. It could have been a piano, paint or a sculpture.  
But also in the same time, it’s not only a pure coincidence that I chose this instrument; I chose it because I felt that it was a good extension of my body, an extension of my “air”. What interested me in the first place was that it is was a breath instrument. The resonance of the saxophone felt good directly physically. The mouth is like the door of the body. It is a peaceful cavity surrounded with complex ways. It is our hollow space. It opens and closes a cycle of roads. It is not a question of expelling our air and emptiness but crossing it in the body.
Something is very powerful with the breath: we can touch a kind of intimacy and I feel that it brings something more, like a kind of a very sincere exposition of yourself. The link between the inside and the outside is very narrow. 
There is a sentence of Beckett that I like very much. I’ll try to translate it here: “On one hand there is the outside, on the other side there is the inside. That can be as thin as a blade. I am neither one nor the other one, I am in the middle, I am the partition. I feel that I vibrate, I am the eardrum, on one side it is the skull, on the other one the world. I am neither of them.”

06. Which kind of ideas initiate the formation of a concept for a release?

No ideas, nothing written, just improvising with the language of others individualities. 
I don’t like the word “improvising” because It is always a reproduction of some codes and some structures. The thing is that it’s hard to reproduce always the same sounds precisely. There is some accidents that can create surprises and improvisation. Also, different contexts with musicians that you are not used to play with can generate more improvisation.

06. What are your set of rules when you improvise? By which parameters are these rules affected?

For me, six codes or abstract parameters are important in the process of improvising :
- The time or the duration of a sound
- The choice of the timber in the surface in the pitch
- The precision in the locations and the proportions
- The density in the choice of volume or frequency
- The intention or the dynamics
- The articulation or transitions
It was a long process for me to develop this parameters. It took me all my life to develop those ideas. But it’s a process with no end. So, it can change anytime. 
There is a famous sentence saying “ce qui compte ce n’est pas l’enoncé du vent, c’est le vent” that can be translated as “what matters is not how you enunciate the wind, but the wind itself.“ This is a little bit how I live the music.

06. What is happiness for you?

To be super healthy and in love. 

06. Do you often go out of your house or do you like to stay in more?

I’m better now but I’m still quite unsociable so I love to stay at home. I’m very lazy and I love my slippers. That’s why touring is sometimes very difficult for me.

06. What is so nice about collaborating that you cannot enjoy while working alone and what is so nice about working alone that you cannot enjoy while collaborating? (Examples of collaborations you have enjoyed are very welcome)

The duo is for me the easiest and the most beautiful group. It is like a couple which exchange. If you put four persons in a room, the conversation will be less fluid and more difficult. There will be alliances, disagreements. Improvised music is like a social network. Being two or being alone is sometimes easier.

I like also to play in solo. Actually, solo doesn’t really exist because in solo, the room where you play is becoming a partner too. The environment is indeed very important. Music is like a landscape. You have to dump in a network and then move with sounds within this network. The question of energy and emergence is fundamental. By penetrating into the space, the public feeds it and makes it live too.
The acoustic aspect of the room is also important. Is it a dry place, a very resonate one, a noisy one, this can bring unexpected result. Also, the time, the weather or the accidents caused by the public can be a source of influence.
Usually, I prefer to play inside in a very silent environment with a little bit of resonance. I like to be surrounded by the audience and not on a stage. 

In solo, the concentration is also very different. Knowing that everything can arrive in a visible and quantifiable geometry. Every sound, every gesture is important.
The question is: why and how what I am going to make now is going to change everything and how is it going to dictate to me the continuation?
How can I go in and how can I go out of the shape?
How every sound has a secret tendency for the whole without ever being able to create the totality?

Maybe I can add some words about my recent groups because I just had two new cds that have been released this month. (MYRIAD with MAGDA MAYAS on UNSOUNDS LABEL and AS:IS with Andrea Neuman and Bonnie Jones on OLOF BRIGHT label)

Magda is like my “alter ego” in music. We sound immediately in tune, we are so locked into each other that is unclear who's doing which sound. This fluidity in our dialogue allows to bring together intensity and inventiveness, sharpness and softness. It is quite an unique experience. 

Bonnie plays electronic and Andrea plays inside piano and mixing board. Andrea Neumann being one of the leading improvisors in the Berlin scene, master of the inside piano. Bonnie Jones, Baltimore and Seoul, one of the creators of the new South Korean impro, a challenging unique artist on electronics.

I just want also to add something about my duo called SPLIT SECOND with Ryan Kernoa because it is also one of my favorite groups and because we have been playing quite a lot this year. Our music is particular because it is a duo. We are working in producing the same frequencies and same sound in the same time. It is made of multiple frequencies, pulsations, interferences between different harmonics that creates the particular effect of 'beating'. The aim is to let perceive lines and shapes in music, appearance and disappearance of vibration. It is all about disorder and confusion: the sound stands still and begins to live inside the one who listens.. It is difficult to classify the music of Split Second. It’s different from the current "classics" of the contemporary music and also from the improvised music.  We appeal alternately to sound techniques referring to minimalism but also, due to our work on frequencies, drones or feedback, of the electroacoustic music or even rock music. The duet unwinds a sound space combining sharp and low sounds, dense and continuous frequencies which evolve very subtly in time. Our music exploits the space in all its directions: depth, height, but also the 'invisible' space of silence. 

06. Can you send us an example, a picture that best illustrates for you the significance of art in our lives, to post along with your answers?



Gordon Matta-Clark cuts a house in two.