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reviews of Trummerflora Collective
Rubble 1 |
| The labels releasing this CD are well-known for kicking out some of the most innovative and unusual music around. And so it is with Trummerflora, a wide-ranging collective of folks who traffic in electronic constructions. The tracks are listed by the names of the acts involved, although all of them also put themselves underneath the Trummerflora banner. So what you have is a mix tape created by folks who aren't quite a band, but are more than passing acquaintances. And there are some folks who appear on multiple tracks. Nathan Hubbard performed on or produced a good number of songs here, and quite a few other folks are likewise engaged in many of the Trummerflora "subcommittees." This cross-pollination has led to some seriously exciting ruminations. When this many people get together to share ideas, the result is generally either a mess or truly exciting. Trummerflora is more than exciting. There's so much going on here that I can't begin to describe much of any of it. But that's okay. The revolutionary nature of the sounds on this disc speak amply for themselves. - John Worley, Aiding & Abetting |
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Collaboration of a third sort between labels. Accretions has been appearing across Ampersand regularly, and we have been joined by fellow San Diego label Circumvention at times. They share an interest in new music some slight differences in emphasis and an overlapping group of artists that centres on the Trummerflora collective. Together the labels have released Rubble 1 (Accretions/Circumvention A/C201) that collects a range of pieces from collective members. I might address this very varied delight by looking at some musical styles. Electronica: a number of artists work in this field Holzborn¹s opener is a collage of buzzing, looping rain and banging, voices, hissing clinks, different voices spiralling into an organ buzz. The exciting driving pulsing swirl shifting to more droning from Mrlectronic; Quibbles rhythmic swirling with squiggles, pinging breaks and improv; a more considered work from Robert M constructs shimmering tones, rhythms, voices and subtle burblings to a chittering swirl, apparently from a Fjellestad/Ellis performance; finally in this category, Donkey is woozy then emergently melodic, assaultive, dramatic to putters. Voice: some dramatic pieces here Perfektomat combines some delicate improv with cello, guitar, keyboards that is swinging jazz and classical, with more modern rhythm loops and then vocals that have hip-hop choruses but poetic verses in English, German and Spanish. Radulovich provides material that suggests demented koto/gtr and squeaks and taps, interspersed with cheesy rhythm loops as a ground for Haco's Japanese as Restlight. Sort of fitting here Radulovich reprises a song from his 2 Brains album (recorded here as by Titicacaman) that shifts from a driving grungy swamp song through groovy middle to scrabbly electronica. Group/Improv: Fjellestad remixes FTP from Red Sauce Baby a combination of basketball game and improv to emphasise the game, and it is still a great piece. Cosmologic go from noisey to swinging as sax and guitar are held together by bass and drum, Weller/Fernandes/Scholl is a short and successful sax/gtr/percussion piece. To close the album Hubbard put together some pieces from a Wormhole session shifting from tinkling percussion through wood tuned into chopped and layered voices and finally resonant metal bells and gongs. Which leaves one piece to mention - my favourite: I try not to play too many faves with comps but I was wonderstruck by Nathan Hubbard's Sundials II. Composed and using a group that doesn't include him it is centred on a simple piano solo, searching and delightful, that is joined by long textured notes from the others in the ensemble (flute, clarinet, violin, cello, bass, bassoon) that form interludes (the PR calls it a miniature piano concerto which is accurate). I was reminded of Gavin Bryars, but not in a derivative way, and found the piece beautiful I would love to hear Sundials I which this is a coda to. This is, as you can see, a very varied compilation which disturbs some people. However I think there is a strength in that variety which makes this a very attractive release. - Jeremy Keens, Ampersand etc. |
| Trummerflora is a group of US producers who operate at
the fringes of electronic music and, unsuprisingly, this compilation is
a real off-the-wall collection. Perfektomat's 'Posturban Subfrequencies' features rapping in English and German, while nathan hubbard's 'Sundials 2' is a reflective arrangement, boasting neo-classical pianos and woodwind,but that's as normal as this compilation gets. Restlight's 'A' splices female Oriental vocal with industrial breaks and Hans Fjellestad samples the squeaking sneakers of people playing indoor sports. Meanwhile, some of the other pieces offer up little more than passages of hissing industrial noise, mental jazz riffs and gamelan-inspired droning that will only appeal to the masochistic listener. - Richard Brophy, DJ Magazine |
Trummerflora - RUBBLE 1: If yer ears've never had th' good fortune to catch th' artistic flourish on the Accretions label, this CD will give you a great introduction to their bands. Lots of folks we've reviewed in the last couple of years... Nathan Hubbard, Cosmologic, Donkey & more... all packed tightly into an album that will dredge up th' "caveman" in yer white cells (& prob'ly destroy a few other cells, too). Though I often don't care for "re"-assemblages, in the form of "best of", this is an hex-ception, no doubt. All th' way from heavy rhythm/beats to gentle piano to deconstructionist mayhem, you will truly be taken on a trip 'round th' world for about an hour. Don't get me wrong - th' shy need not apply... much of the music here is definitely in the "outer" zone, & will scare off all but the devoted. It plays will in th' car player, probably because of th' beat-oriented pieces - an added bonus. If you're looking for great experimental variety & something that isn't boring, this comes HIGHLY RECOMMENDED. Rotcod Zzaj Jazzanation Nation |
Rubble 1' sarebbe opera da inserire sotto la denominazione compilation
ma trattandosi di esposizione comune da parte di membri e gruppi accomunati
sotto la bandiera del Trummerflora Collective ho preferito dare maggior
risalto al nome comune piuttosto che alla svilente (in certe occasioni)
sigla AAVV. Il collettivo americano in questione si nutre di libertà
espressiva travalicando i generi come se fossero semplici bandieruole
(ed in parte lo sono) applicate di volta in volta a stimolare l'acquisto.
Libertà quindi, generi ed espressioni fra le più disparate.
L'iniziale brano di Damon Holzborn ottima tracimazione di field recordings
e varie elettronicherie (consigliato il suo 'Adam E Bancroft' su Accretions)
trova parallelismi inquietanti nel successivo hip-hop astratto ad opera
di Perfektoman (il bassista Joscha Oetz) dove fra sinuose onde simil
jazz e dilettevoli performance vocali spoken si scorge un paesaggio
notturno degno di certi attimi di Jarmusch; e siamo soltanto all'inizio
di questo lungo peregrinare. Aggiunto: August 27th 2004 |
| Trummerflora ist ein loses Kollektiv von Musikern unterschiedlichen
musikalischen Interesses, das zu diversen Kollaborationen querbeet untereinander
einlädt, und so zu einzigartigen und ungewöhnlichen musikalischen
Ergebnissen kommt. Die stilistische Bandbreite ist überwältigend.
Mehrere dieser musikalischen Experimente münden in aussagekräftigen,
Maßstäbe setzenden und absolut modernen Songs. Alle Stücke
dieser CD, alle CDs der Labels Accretions und Circumvention sind einzigartige
künstlerische Aussagen, die es unbedingt zu testen lohnt. 13 Tracks,
eingespielt in Projekten oder als solistische Arbeit, sind auf "Rubble
1", dem neuesten Streich von Accretions Records enthalten. Damon
Holzborn eröffnet mit einem Phonographer-Stück. Da werden Sounds,
Alltagsgeräusche und Industrieklänge zu einem Ganzen, einer
umfassenden Harmonie verbunden. Perfektomat bringen Rap, Jazz und Avantgarde
in einen Zusammenhang, sehr groovig diese Aufnahme, düster-kunstvolle
Musik mit positivem Gesang. Mrlectronic verbinden Electronic und Phonographie
zu einem minimalistisch pulsierenden Sound. Hans Fjellestad trägt
wohl das abgefahrenste Stück bei. Kirchenorgel, Jazzgebläse,
Perkussion und - ein Basketball spielendes Basketballteam schaffen eine
Atmosphäre, die nur zwischen windiger Straße, kühlem Vorplatz
und hoffnungsschwacher Kirche existieren kann, in der Wirklichkeit wohl
aber nicht in diesem Arrangement, das kunstvoll ist, wie keine weitere
Aufnahme der CD. Bemerkenswert und grandios! Nathan Hubbard verführt anschließend mit einer fast tonlos stillen, klassisch-modernen Komposition. Kein Jazz, kein Lärm, kein Ausdruck von hektisch-stressiger Alltagszeit, sondern pure Lyrik. Ein ideenreicher Klang, der als Paradebeispiel für die heutige westliche Welt stehen kann: hier draußen Lärm, hier drinnen Stille. Die intime Aufnahme mit leiser, zurückhaltender Instrumentierung ist ein geheimer Rückzugspunkt, in dem alle Ruhe zu finden ist. Trotz aller Lyrik ein sehr kraftvolles Stück, das Ohren und Sinne sauber fegt. Restlight setzen dort auch an, der Stille. Übersetzen Verlorenheit und überwältigende Müdigkeit in ein jazzharmonisches Kleid und lassen Haco mit ihrer klug-nüchternen Frauenstimme dazu sprechen. Sounds, Gitarre, Samples runden die Tonalität dieser einfallsreichen Geschichte ab, seltsam über allem stehende Rhythmen brechen darüber herein, dennoch bleibt die Ruhe vollends erhalten. Dafür übersetzt das folgende, von Quibble eingespielte "Quell" Nervosität und Hektik in einen entsprechenden, parallelen Klang kraftvoller Sounds. Robert M scheint ein elektronisches Projekt zu sein, das überlappenden Tönen auf die Spur kommt und mit eigenartigen Samples computerspielartige Klänge erzeugt. Cosmologic entern die Avantjazzbühne und schmettern, irgendwo zwischen John Zorn und Fred Frith, einen heftig krachenden und fast schon freejazzigen Rockjazz. Sehr gelungenes Teil, das die Stille der vorherigen Songs aufnimmt und zum Spielball improvisativer Lust macht. Weller/Fernandes/Scholl lyrisieren Blues. Wie die Musiklust nach dem Konzert: wunde Finger, lahme Arme, erschöpftes Hirn. Eine sehr gute Aufnahme, die dem Zusammenspiel von betrunkener Gitarre und Selbstverliebtem Saxophon einen köstlichen Ausdruck gibt. In Marcelo Radulovich's Titicaman-Projekt geht es fast schon metalmäßig zu. Ein treibender Rhythmus und verfremdet-harter Gesang teilen sich den Song mit einer frischen Break-Idee, die dem Stück die Ernsthaftigkeit runterschraubt und selbige durch leichtfüßigen Humor ersetzt. Das nahezu perfekt gelungene Stück setzt dem Zeitgeist die Krone auf und vermurkst herkömmliche Musikvorstellungen auf intelligente Weise! Donkey radikalisieren elektronische Sounds zu einem Gewitter tonaler Energie. Da strömen, fluten und bersten (a)tonale Strukturen an irrwitzigem Lärm, der im Laufe des Tracks immer mehr an Ruhe und Struktur gewinnt, um schließlich, gänzlich still, zu versiegen. Das letzte Stück hat das Projekt Wormhole (noch so eine ganz typische Trummerflora-Geschichte: jedes Projekt bekommt einen eigenen, eigenartigen Namen, damit gibt es eine unglaubliche Fülle an seltsamen, merkwürdigen Namen - die sich niemand merken kann) eingespielt. Rhythmen und verfremdete, gedoppelte, gesampelte Stimmen verdichten die Atmosphäre des Tracks zu einem malerisch laut-leisen Klang, der ungemein beruhigt. Und damit ist die lange Spieldauer der CD am Ende. Jedes dieser eigensinnigen und fantastischen Projekte setzt mit einfallsreichen Sounds und markanter Umsetzung von Stimmungen und Gefühlen Maßstäbe. Der Klang heutiger Zeit bekommt damit eine erschreckend treffende und ungemein aussagekräftige Entsprechung. Nicht nur Jazzpuristen oder Avantgarde-Freaks werden sich über diese Sounds erfreut verwundern, auch aufgeschlossene Techno-Jünger und Metalheads könnten sich durchaus mit dieser Musik anfreunden, wenn sie ein tiefgehendes Interesse an neuer, außergewöhnlicher Musik haben. Absolute Empfehlung! |
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Various "Rubble I" (Accretions) Damon Halzborn manipulates some field recordings in a lovely mildly hallucinatry rubbery manner. Bassist Joscha Oetz as Perfektomat provides a beautiful musical bed for his and others hip-hop multilingual verbalizations, with a jazzy almost orchestral density and richness. Mrlectronic has big bouncing machinery and gooey voodoo gravity. Hans Fjellestad mixes a well recorded basketball game with some free interpersonal interplay between Hans on church organ, and two percussionists and two woodwind players. Nathan Hubbard employs piano and is backed by seven players on strings, flute, bassoon, and bass for a lush but spare orchestral soundscape. Restlight is Marcelo Radulovich (guitar, sampling, processing), and Haco (voice), With Haco's spoken word Japanese as a calm narrative center, Marcelo tries out several different phases and guises of sound to back her, from manic robotic beats to twinkling chimes or drones. Quibble are battering the ram, squee and machine angst amongst the android fizz huts in the hydroponic swamp. Robert M processes sounds from television, along with minimal loops that jitter into open air behind a cool spacious distance. Cosmologic contribute an energetic free jazz/tightly composed exploration by sax player Jason Robinson, with Al Scholl on guitar, Scott Walton on bass and Nathan Hubbard on drums. Weller/Fernandes/ Scholl have a quizzical low-key conversation on sax, guitar, and percussion. Titicacaman is Marcelo Radulovich all dressed up as a Mayan robotic warrior out to conquer all old Ministry albums, but too stoned and happy to follow through. Donkey unwind slowly while sail cloth is slowly rubbed across partched deserts of skin. Wormhole shiver in the night air in layers of sound, Marcos Fernandes, Robert Montoya, and Nathan Hubbard each contribute voices and percussion to the final track which feels like a shifting collages of overlapping details and changes. George Parsons Dream Magazine #5 http://www.dreamgeo.com |
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Sergio Eletto 'The Trummerflora Collective is an independent group of music makers
that embraces the pluralistic nature of creative music as an important
means of artistic expression for the individual and the community, and
provides an atmosphere that nurtures the creative development of its
members'. |