(logo)
(navigation image)
Home Audio Books & Poetry | Computers & Technology | Grateful Dead | Live Music Archive | Music & Arts | Netlabels | News & Public Affairs | Non-English Audio | Open Source Audio | Podcasts | Radio Programs | Spirituality & Religion

Search: Advanced Search

UploadAnonymous User (login or join us) 

v.V. - chgt of x(or blue [zero126v] (2000)


try new player!embedding and help

The first release by v., now a duet. Wide ranging material, every piece different from each other. Noise, rhythmic, free, musique concrete, ReR, melodic and atonal all at once.

This item is part of the collection: Zeromoon

Author: v.
Date: 2000-00-00 00:00:00
Source: www.zeromoon.com
Keywords: Avantgarde

Creative Commons license: Attribution-NoDerivs-NonCommercial


Notes

"The Bake cd was V.’s first release, and reflects that in its diversity (which they acknowledge on the website). One of the pair (at least) is a percussionist as about half the tracks are grounded in live drumming/rhythms. These are scattered between minimal experimental electronica and more complex tracks. The opening is an intense restrained percussive barrage – all manners of drums – together with a burring noise. From here the percussive strand runs through the album. There is the perpetual motion machine of 3 where the drum and loop is joined by some pulsing organ with piano or guitar deep in the mix; ringing metal in 7 together with scraping, high tones and gated affects; driving beats and wuzzing electronica in 11; and then the 14, 15 & 16 sequence where complex percussion and lighter guitar, followed by drums and sustained long tones which sound mightily like a Wurlitzer (hey, Word knows this!), wavering up and down, and then the full complexity with drums, a rubbery bass loop, clattering, tones and sqrls from the synth and something that sounds like a violin. The violin can link us to 13 where long rising and falling tones, if not string originating, at least sound like violin (and there are more strings on the next V album) are surrounded by scrabbling and scratching and percussion which sounds like someone dropping a cutlery draw. The remaining tracks mix electronica with other instruments. Piano is present in 2 as notes and runs after an introduction of buzzing and looped pulses. A swirling shimmer joins in, lit by descending notes, and this is sustained after the piano leaves. On 8 a guitar is obvious played percussively and with some fx, backed by swirling electronica and stretching noises. And then the mainly electro pieces: Buzzy melodies and clicks which breaks down in 4; the directed instability of a host of sounds in 6; muffled pulsing, clatters, chitters, scrapes and squeals of 9 shifting into 10’s rising and falling drones with distant piano; jittery throbbing and glitches in 12; and a pulsing tones and clicks for the final track. I must say I enjoyed the variety – well paced, varied, not too confronting but still extending – a strong debut. (As an aside, the transition from 10 to 11 is interesting – if you let it play it goes through normally, if you start at or track jump to 11 it sticks and then goes to the start of 10, but you can rewind in from 12. The track time, though, is the total of the two. Not sure if this is intentional or an error, but it is interesting)."

[Jeremy Keens] - Ampersand Etcetera - 2001_19

Individual Files

Whole ItemFormatSize
zero126v_64kb.m3u64Kbps M3UStream
zero126v_64kb_mp3.zip64Kbps MP3 ZIP28.3M
zero126v_vbr.m3uVBR M3UStream
zero126v_vbr_mp3.zipVBR ZIP76.1M
Audio Files192Kbps MP3Ogg Vorbis64Kbps MP3VBR MP3
13.8M2.4M1.3M3.7M
101.9M1.1M630.4K1.6M
111.1M602.8K358.5K742.6K
127.7M4.8M2.6M8.4M
134.6M2.8M1.5M3.8M
144.4M2.3M1.5M2.9M
159.7M6.2M3.2M9.2M
164.0M2.4M1.3M3.4M
172.2M1.5M734.5K2.3M
25.0M3.3M1.7M4.7M
34.5M2.8M1.5M3.5M
43.8M2.6M1.3M3.5M
56.0M3.5M2.0M4.2M
67.1M4.7M2.4M7.5M
78.0M5.1M2.7M7.2M
84.0M2.4M1.3M3.3M
97.0M4.3M2.3M6.3M
Other FilesAnimated GIF
large cover43.0K 
thumb nail6.1K 
zero126v_files.xml 39.1K
zero126v_meta.xml 3.8K
zero126v_reviews.xml 169.0B

Be the first to write a review Reviews

Downloaded 4,788 times


Terms of Use (10 Mar 2001)