Archiv für den Monat: April 2023

out on april 28th: KAMMERFLIMMER KOLLEKTIEF – Schemen

KAMMERFLIMMER KOLLEKTIEF – Schemen

Format: 180gr LP incl. download code / digifile CD / download

Release date: april 28th 2023

https://karlrecords.bandcamp.com/album/schemen

11th album by the one-of-a-kind collective: psychedelia and free form jazz (not jazz) trigger a sophisticated excursion into weird textures with drastic turns. Dislocated dense music full of secret connections!

Kammerflimmer Kollektief – »Schemen«
Before reason prevails, invoked by those who want everything to remain as it is, Kammerflimmer Kollektief disrupts the established supply chains of sound. It seeks more interesting ways to assemble them. Trusting in this, because of the fact that every sound that still comes out of a guitar, a bass, a harmonium, drums and electronic devices has already been taken into the common mangle of meaning anyway. Enough of all that. Here, nothing is explained. Here we speak in schemes. Polished and jerky.
The images that Kammerflimmer Kollektief conjures up therefore happen not in the focus of consciousness, but rather in its outer realms. In those to which one does not give one’s full attention at the moment, but which are nevertheless perceived. For example, when a leaf falls from the ground back up to the tree in the corner of your eye, and for an instant you think this is possible, before you realize it was a small bird flying into the tree; it is in just such irritating moments between perception and realization that the art of the Kollektief also unfolds. On »Schemen«, familiar fragments float gently around their core – a Fender Rhodes tone, a bass figure, a guitar motif, a masterful drum shuffle, a moment of icy stasis borrowed from the harmonium playing of Christa ›Nico‹ Päffgen. Triggering brief associations, they slowly rush off in other directions through free jazz-informed editing work, whereupon such zones can also arise in which perception has a few tricks ready and earlier experience suddenly breaks into the now in a completely different way. Half suspected, half seen.
Half-music like Can from Cologne – also masters of improvised editing – sometimes produced a few decades ago in their in-between moments. The first minutes of »Future Days« for example, which fade in gently, sketch a barely graspable figure emerging from all directions of the room.
Kammerflimmer Kollektief also engages in similarly open moments of development. Loosely, it eludes the first formative impressions, keeping itself ready for moments that do not follow any logic of appointment. This looseness in handling makes Kammerflimmer Kollektief so fluidly audible, even when dissonant peaks and free playing arise. What Karlheinz Stockhausen is to Can’s understanding of composition, the recordings of The Cocoon are to Kammerflimmer Kollektief. The Cocoon, a meeting of garage psychedelics from the Hannover area with free jazzers from the Galaxie Dream Band, whose album »While The Recording Engineer Sleeps«, recorded in 1985 in unguarded moments, operates in a very similar way with decentralized perceptual ambivalences and only appeared more or less secretly four years later on Wilhelm Reich Schallspeicher. Other traces of »Schemen« lead to the debut album of Quicksilver Messenger Service. The guitars of Gary Duncan and John Cipollina, which refer to themselves in an unforced manner, are instructions to let go. They don’t want to be traced in every note as a solo, but they give their music a sense that the essential takes place off center, in the mutual and intuitive gift of loving attentions. Consciousness-free. Loving turns like the little guitar phrase that, like a kind of leitmotif, is repeatedly ghosting more or less unchanged through all of the Kammerflimmer Kollektief albums. A Coricidin induced, very catchy slide idea filtered out of ancient Æther, which – who knows – maybe even centuries ago found its way from somewhere to America – the old, the eerie – and from there wafted on through the ages to southern Germany, to a smoky studio in the Upper Rhine lowlands. A memory of which even the memory no longer knows what it once reminded. Unsaid, then forgotten.
In Kammerflimmer Kollektief you will also find a friend of slowly building, unhurried music, which probably would have been appreciated by the old Franz Mesmer, who 200 years ago, after tranquilizing treatments, sometimes used to play for his patients ambient melodies on the enormous glass harmonica. However, in order not to surrender completely to the flow of one’s own life energy, as Mesmer had in mind with his therapies, Kammerflimmer Kollektief occasionally adds hectic tensions, gently embraced by the droning of a sine wave generator, as if a trance could briefly refesh. This old analog sine wave generator is new in the Kammerflimmer assortment of sounds. So, the art of the Kollektief likes to dock occasionally in modern times, yet with the past in mind. Mental states begin to flicker between imagination and certainty, between culture-bound art expression and coincidences: A cawing and scraping can always just be a cawing and scraping with Kammerflimmer Kollektief, the way Andy Warhol’s mushroom eater just eats a mushroom.
Heike Aumüller’s cover works, which illustrate all the Kammerflimmer Kollektief albums, additionally act as amplifiers of unexplained refractions. Her style consists of eye-corner art that remains so, even when looked at directly. Her shots remain disquieting because they do not jolt themselves into a reassuring order, even in retrospect. Rather than evading the fear that arises when looking at them by trying to impose some irrational rhyme or reason, that fear must simply be endured. This strategy of endurance is equally applicable to the music. The trick is to let parts be parts without compulsively seeking delusional patterns that lull us into a false sense of security and in doing so, possibly delude ourselves. In this context, freedom means not having to anxiously attach a fantasized superior meaning to everything. »Schemen« has an conspiracy disintegrating effect.
– Werner Ahrensfeld

Tracklist
face A
Erstes Kapitel [verschliffen] 8:17
Zweites Kapitel [ruckartig] 8:09
face B
Drittes Kapitel [ungesagt, dann vergessen] 3:25
Viertes Kapitel [bewusstseinsfrei] 4:48
Fünftes Kapitel [kreuzweis] 0:28
Sechstes Kapitel [herausgewunden] 5:07
Siebentes Kapitel [verflochten] 4:08
Letztes Kapitel [halb vermutet, halb gesehen] 1:47


Gruppo
Heike Aumüller: harmonium, synthesizer, sinusgenerator
Christopher »Giga« Brunner: drums
Johannes Frisch: double bass
Thomas Weber: electric guitar, loops, feedbacks

Credits
Production, arrangements & collage: Thomas Weber
Studio: Kinda real cloudy, Karlsruhe, may 2018 – july 2022
Musick: Thomas Weber & Heike Aumüller, publisher: Future World
Mastering: Anne Taegert, D&M Berlin
Cover artwork: Heike Aumüller, deep in the woods
Stills: Iris Drögekamp
Graphic realization: kaidoh

out on april 28th: hÄK/Danzeisen – same

hÄK/Danzeisen – same

Format: 180 gr LP incl. download code / Limited edition tape, 50 handnumbered items / download

Release date: april 28th 2023

https://karlrecords.bandcamp.com/album/h-k-danzeisen

Modular synthesizers / electronics + a drum kit enhanced with triggers and sensors: on its self-titled debut album, the duo hÄK / Danzeisen creates a sonic energy that oscillates between high-precision rhythm patterns, analogue sounds and frenzy climaxes.

One must imagine hÄK / Danzeisen as a man-machine apparatus. A collection of cables, resonating bodies and restless limbs that together question all routines. Who overthrow conventional role of instruments and explore the possibilities of a new sound language. Bernd Norbert Würtz alias hÄK operates modular synthesizers, self-soldered circuits and control knobs. Philipp Danzeisen plays a drum kit enhanced with triggers and sensors. These two poles are connected to an interdependent whole in which a constant musical dialogue takes place. The dependencies within this system have been meticulously defined by hÄK / Danzeisen: Drum rolls and sound modulations are interconnected in such a way that there is no contradiction between the strict technological structure and the creative outburst that is possible at any time.
What drives hÄK / Danzeisen is the basic idea that the contrast between acoustic drums and synthetically produced sounds must be overcome in order to create a new experience. Würtz, Danzeisen and their combined instrumentation simultaneously rub up against the same edges, finding a single, piercing voice.
Ideal manifestations of this approach are the duo’s live performances: raw energy that oscillates as precisely as it surprises between drones, abstraction and noise attacks, driven by an impudent take on jazz. Constantly oscillating between the registers of „composed“ and „improvised“, each performance by hÄK / Danzeisen ultimately becomes one of a kind. (Arno Raffeiner)


hÄK alias B. Norbert Würtz
Norbert is a Berlin based composer, producer and experimental electronic musician working primarily with DIY circuits, modular synths, and found sounds. The music he writes and performs could be placed stylistically somewhere between electroacoustic, noise music and cut up, musique concrète. Besides improvising and performing experimental electronics under the moniker hÄK he produces music for other artists, as well as composing and designing sound for films, visual media and installations.
Norbert has enjoyed successful collaborations with a range of musicians and artists including Marc Teitler, Ayu Okakita, VOOV-Systems and Sayoko Paris (Dosage).
He has scored numerous shorts, films and videos for directors such as Yves Geleyn, Alexander Herzog, Peter Dörfler and Luc Besson, and has been commissioned to create original works for institutions such as La Gaîté Lyrique in Paris and the Royal Opera House in London. In 2004 he co-founded the hÄnschenKlein Experimental Music-VideoProject with his longtime friend, the director Alex Herzog. Their works have been screened in numerous festivals such as Impakt Festival (NL) and European Media Art Festival Osnabrück (DE).
After living for ten years in Paris where hÄK was a regular in the experimental scene, releasing music on underground labels (KommaNull (,0), Exhibitronic), he returned to Berlin in 2018 and soon after co-founded the duo hÄK/Danzeisen with Philipp Danzeisen on drums and himself on his “Molekular Synthesizer”.


Philipp Danzeisen
Born in Essen / Germany, Philipp grew up in Frankfurt Main / Germany. Raised in a family of actors, he developed an interest in combining theatre, dance, and music early on. In 1994 he moved to New York to study drums at the New School University and received his BFA in 1998. 2006 he received a scholarship for the Sound Design program of the Theater and Dance department at UCSD where he studied for one year.
Philipp is based primarily in Berlin. Performing credits include appearances in pieces by Einar Schleef, Jan Fabre, William Forsythe / Ballett Frankfurt, Meg Stuart, Rabih Mroué / Dance On, Tom Kühnel / Schaubühne Berlin, and Walter Fischbacher (New York). In addition, he has designed and performed several of his own sound projects; for example, a piece at the Artaud exhibition at the Kunstpalast in Düsseldorf. He has also worked as a sound designer and musician for fashion shows like Costume National in Milan.
In 2005, Philipp toured his project „Ur Jazz Sonate“ in Europe and was invited for the Kurt Schwitters exhibition at the Museo de Arte Moderno in Mexico City. In 2015 he peformed at the ZERO exibition at the Gropius Bau in Berlin. In Januar 2018 he was performing with the Duo SHARPA (Elektro-Postrock/Pop).
Since 2019 he has been the drummer of the duo hÄK / Danzeisen.

tracklist:
A1. Aufwärts
A2. Kurve (part I & II)
B1. Abwärts
B2. Ungerade


credits:
Philipp Danzeisen: drums, percussion
B. Norbert Würtz alias hÄK: modular synth, electronics
all music by hÄK/Danzeisen
recorded by Ingo Krauss at Candy Bomber Studios, november 2021
edited by B. Norbert Würtz
Kurve / Aufwärts mixed by Ingo Krauss
Abwärts / Ungerade mixed by B.Norbert Würtz
mastered & lacquer cut by Ruy Mariné at D&M, Berlin
cover photo by Beat Halberschmidt
artwork concept by Thomas Herbst
layout by kaidoh