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www.hauntedink.com/25/lowercasesound.html
Minimalist artist Steve Roden coined the term "lowercase" to
describe a particular style of music he was making a few years ago.
In an interview for a Berkeley journal, Roden notes, "lowercase is
about a work that sits quietly awaiting discovery, as opposed to loudly
calling
attention to itself." In other words, "lowercase" music
isn't so much about particular sounds or particular musical styles
as it is about attitude: creating music that is unassuming, that exists
in order
for listeners to discover and appreciate it.
Well, a lot of listeners
have discovered this music, and many more critics have taken to
the concept of "lowercase" music as a way
to describe the kinds of ethereal, abstract recordings that make
up the bulk of the releases on such esteemed labels as Line, 3
Particles, and
Trente Oiseaux. I'm not really sure whether Roden is pleased that
his attitude is now a genre, but at least he can take solace in
the fact that most of
the actual musicians who create so-called "lowercase" music
do it not to copy Roden but to further their own aesthetic designs.
And
that takes us to lowercase-sound 2002, a compilation that is
as good as any compilation I've ever heard. It consists of 33 tracks
by some of the finest electronic artists working today, including
Dan Abrams,
Kim Cascone, Taylor Deupree, Tetsu Inoue, Francisco Lopez, Akira
Rabelais, Michael Schumacher, and Otaku Yakuza.
Disk one of this
two disk set is subtitled "[dot]," and it is
composed of 17 field recordings of the more esoteric sounds that
give shape to our world. One of the more interesting tracks is "100:200111
Torrey Pines Outer Buoy" by Bob L. Sturm. Torrey Pines is a beach
near San Diego, but this recording was taken from a buoy about
12 km from the shore
during November 2001. The buoy monitored wave conditions using
Fourier transforms. This work literally sounds like an underwater
expedition as
it bobs beneath waves, never coming up for air. Other notable
tracks include Matt Shoemaker's "Charm," which sounds like
a monster shot of that demon kid in The Exorcist; James Lescalleet's "The
Destructive Effects of Group Dynamics," which sound just about what
you'd expect it to sound likeÑcold and probing; and Animist Orchestra's "4/7/01," which
sounds like someone eating a breakfast of nails and leaves. What
makes field recordings interesting is the simple fact that the
sounds are unfiltered
slices of our world. It's amazing what we don't hear, and these
tracks all give shape and focus to the kinds of sounds we normally
ignore. Fantastic.
Disk two, subtitled "=," is composed of
computer-based compositions that span the gamut of experimental electronic
styles, from Francisco
Lopez's almost silent "Untitled #118" to the fluttering
wisps of feedback in Stephan Mathieu's "Flake" to the infinitesimal
clicks of Immedia's "-(2)" to
Dan Abrams' backwards masking, beautiful, droning "Feature" to
the elves playing polka with a banjo medley of Michael Schumacher's "0." It's
an amazing array of tracks, each one more interesting and more
enjoyable than the last.
I bought this collection about five days before
I went on a vacation
to Hawaii. I spent much of my time in Hawaii listening to this
music and gazing out at a view that included two dead volcanoes,
several ancient
lava flows, pockets of lush tropical paradises, and more ocean
views than anyone has a right to experience in one place. lowercase-sound
2002 fit
right in, almost as if it were the soundtrack to the islandÑa
place that is continually growing, transforming, and mutating into
something
new, something wonderful. Experimental electronic music rarely
gets more interesting or more enjoyable than this.
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