Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Alan Lamb. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Alan Lamb. Afficher tous les articles

dimanche 21 juin 2009

Alan Lamb - Night Passage (Dorobo, 1998)






1-1 Night Passage (24:51)
1-2 Last Anzac (12:54)
1-3 Meditation On SPring 8 (12:11)

Alan Lamb's compositions from telegraph wires is one of the more powerful examples of long wire music. Unlike wire composers Ellen Fullman or Paul Panhuysen, Lamb uses large outdoor installations and the natural wind currants to gather his original recordings, which he then assembles in the studio to create his extended pieces. Night Passage and Last Anzac both use the Faraway Wind Organ, a ten-mile stretch of abandoned telegraph wires that Lamb found and purchased in Western Australia in the mid-1970s. Night Passage is very dramatic, using crashes of metal on metal, the crackling of the telegraph poles, and enormous reverberation to create an organic but stormy sense of the wild Australian outback. Last Anzac retains the reverberation, but has very few of the metallic events that punctuate Night Passage, concentrating more on the drones created by the wires as they are blown about in the wind. "Meditation on Spring 8" was played on a wind organ built for a Japanese festival celebrating the opening of the SPring 8 Synchotron, a huge electron accelerator built in Kobe. Lamb briefly discusses the uniqueness of each wind organ, and one can hear this difference in this recording. The Meditation is quieter, more harmonious, bringing out the natural harmonics of the long wires. Lamb plays the wind organ with a bamboo bow, but below the drones one can hear the water from a typhoon that struck the area around the festival, drying on the wires. All three pieces on this album use the wind and wires to communicate a majesty that is difficult to achieve only using studios and electronics. These qualities make Lamb's pieces outstanding examples of a music that seeks to plays on a connection with nature, the decaying manmade infrastructure, and contemporary sound art.
All Music Guide

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Alan Lamb - Night Passage Demixed (Dorobo, 1998)


2-1 #13 (Ryoji Ikeda Remix) (8:02)
2-2 Kyros (Thomas Köner Remix) (9:53)
2-3 Fragmented (Lustmord Remix) (19:12)
2-4 Untitled 1/96 (Bernhard Günter Remix) (20:19)

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Sarah Hopkins & Alan Lamb - Sky Song (Vox Australis, 1989)



1 Sarah Hopkins & Alan Lamb The Winds Of Heaven (3:40)
2 Sarah Hopkins & Alan Lamb Sky Song (11:24)
3 Sarah Hopkins Cello Chi (13:03)
4 Alan Lamb Mirages (10:36)
5 Sarah Hopkins Flight Of The Wild Goose (14:42)
6 Alan Lamb & Sarah Hopkins New Journey (7:21)

The music of Sky Song was composed by Sarah Hopkins and Alan Lamb between 1985 and 1988. It was commissioned by Brown's Mart Community Arts Project, Darwin, with funding from the Australian Bicentennial Authority and the Music Board of the Australia Council. Performance of the music took place in Australia and New Zealand during 1988 within the Sky Song Music and Dance Production.

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samedi 20 juin 2009

Alan Lamb - Primal Image (Dorobo, 1995)






1 Primal Image (16:52)
2 Beauty (29:33)

Deux drones dont le matériel de base est l'enregistrement de lignes téléphoniques balancées par le vent...

Recorded between 1981 and 1988, Primal Image is a recording of repetitive, gradually shifting frequencies with no other accompaniment to dampen the effect.
All Music Guide

These tracks were constructed in 1988 ("Primal Image") and 1986 ("Beauty") as a series of segments averaging several minutes each, with transitional overdubs at the seams, and with heavy use of EQ for harmonic balance and noise reduction. About 20 hours of source material was recorded using contact microphones on telephone wires over a cumulative period of 10 days in November 1981 ("Primal Image") and April 1983 ("Beauty").
Alan Lamb

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