|
|
|
v-p v-f is v-n 7" compilation series, 7001
v-p v-f
is v-n is a 7” black vinyl compilation consisting of twenty terse
pieces (with five being lock grooves) - nine on side I rotating at 33RPM
and eleven on the side II spinning at 45RPM - and serves as aural digest
of the was, is, and will be of Winds Measure Recordings collaborators.
As I was
listening to v-p v-f is v-n for the second time, I had the volume turned
up fairly high having discovered that several of the tracks especially
on the 33RPM side are moderately subtle and/or sprarse explorations of
sound (although dotted with a few startling moments). The other members
of my family, not really appreciating my peculiar musical interests in
general, kept asking (actually yelling) “What’s that noise?”.
Well there is a lot of noise on this album, but to my ears, the noises
that these artists make is music. There are
some considerably abstract, challenging sounds here in the sense of being
quiet, fragmented, and rough. Listening to the first three pieces on side
I - Jeph Jerman & Albert Casais, Ting Ting Jahe, & Richard Garet
- will confirm this observation. Be forewarned to drop the volume before
the piercing frequencies of Alfredo Costa Monterio’s Élytre
[track 4] kicks in and quickly disrupts the quiet atmosphere established
by its predecessors. In sharp contrast, Ben Owen brings back a sense of
calm down with Typhoon, kii-tanabe consisting of what appears to be a
minimally processed field recording containing some vocals and natural
background ambiance, and then Lawrence English complements this with a
droning piece of naturalness titled Water Run Sand. mpld follows this
up with another drone segment titled Red Tape but this time sounding coarser
and very machine-like. Side I concludes with two lock grooves (Jeph Jerman,
Ben Owen). Side II
begins with Civyiu Kkliu and Rudolf Unger joining forces to produce a
minute’s worth of vibrating, rumbling noise that becomes a little
broken towards the end. Jeph Jerman then delivers a beautiful 50-second
piece of macrobiotic resonations that goes hand-in-hand with Ben Owens’
sparse and reverberating 16-second miniature s-s-e, sm ca. Listen carefully
or Tommy Birchett’s barely audible 11-second interlude will be absorbed
by Ben Owens’ piece or made imperceptible by Andy Graydon’s
gorgeous Two Fold Note - a dark and harmonious tonal drone. Ben Scott’s
ccc is an interesting 25-second experiment in percussive clatter that
is followed directly by Ilya Monosov’s For Well Treated Trumpet.
Short Version - a rather warped and amusing piece of discordant abstractness.
Side II concludes with three lock grooves (Civyiu Kkliu, mpld x 2) and
short-lived 7-second reprise by Tommy Birchett. v-p v-f is v-n gives a candid retrospective of what Winds Measure Recording has offered and also provides a peek at what the near future might hold. Nice to see it released on vinyl as this medium serves the label’s sonic aesthetic well..
reviewed by Larry Johnson - 7/12/2008 |