četvrtak, 25. prosinca 2014.

Adrian Corker - Start Merge Fade (2014)

   

 

Kirurgija sablasnih aparata.

www.adriancorker.com/ 

  

It's been a while since we've heard from Adrian Corker, half of erstwhile duo Corker/Conboy, a pairing responsible for one of our favourite albums from the early 00's - the largely forgotten but still utterly beautiful "In Light Of That Learnt Later". He returns here with a new label and this excellent new release, featuring an extended piece for bowed strings "Start Merge Fade" that's required listening for those of you with a thing for Richard Skelton. Performed by cellist Lucy Railton, it's a fragile drone piece imbued with substance in the low-registers by those extended and plush layered strings, with additional overlays kept to a sparse, well-judged minimum. Five Easy Pieces and Opit luminaries Circle Traps re-contextualise the source material into a shimmering electronic variation complete with drum machine and bleep overlays, but it's left to Richard Skelton to close the EP off in fine style with his typically sublime reworking of 'Shifting Grains', a hazy wash of strings and synths that's at once serene and unnerving. It's the second remix from Skelton we've come across this year following on from that Houndstooth appearance some months back, and the second time he's stolen the show. Great EP.- boomkat

This week, composer Adrian Corker has released his new EP, Start Merge Fade. Alongside an extensive body of work producing music for films, Corker has previously formed one half of Corker/Conboy, a duo with Paul Conboy, and last year put out a solo full-length, Raise. As well as Start Merge Fade's title track (listen below), a piece written for hammer dulcimer, tape and Moog performed with cellist and LCMF curator Lucy Railton, it also features two remixes of tracks from Raise. Circle Traps, the electronics trio of Jack Wyllie, Duncan Bellamy and Will Ward give 'Charged' a glitchy, shard-like remix, while Quietus favourite Richard Skelton provides his take on 'Shifting Grains', distilling the piece into a spectral, circular surging. The EP also marks the inaugural release on SN Variations, Corker's new label "set up to document dialogues between various strands of electronic and new music". We asked him to tell us a bit more about the record, and he's been kind enough to give us a first play of the reworks, which you can hear below.
Can you tell us a little about your background as a soundtrack composer, and how you came to these compositions? What's been the biggest learning curve moving from soundtracks to standalone pieces?
Adrian Corker: The director Antonia Bird found an album I did as part of a band and asked us to write the music to a film called Face, which strangely had Damon Albarn acting in it. This opened the door to that world and my relationship continued with her up to her death last year. The new EP is dedicated to her. She was a special person in the film world, with strong, compassionate politics central to her work and a real care for the people she worked with. I think there is going to be a retrospective of her films next year at the BFI curated by Mark Cousins.
So my standalone music has always existed before I wrote film music but then they have kind of run parallel to each other. When I started as a solo artist a few years ago, the first few projects I did were for film but I was already writing my own material for an album release. I was just slowly working out my sound, since my work up to then had always been part of bands. My music always has seemed to have some affinity to picture but I feel my solo standalone work points in different directions... Maybe my interest goes back to growing up in an era of great, less generic film and TV music, everything from the Radiophonic Workshop through to some of seventies American cinema which percolated through from an early age. I have been less into the language of a lot of modern film music but films like Under The Skin and Mica Levi's score maybe hint that things are hopefully changing again.
You've worked with members of the Portico Quartet, Elysian Quartet and Lucy Railton, among others; what do you look for in collaborators?
AC: On a practical level these relationships usually start with some mutual friend who initiates the hook up. Then you get in a room and it either works or it doesn't. All those musicians you mentioned are amazing improvisers with strong attitudes and diverse musical tastes. I guess you have to get on too for the collaborative relationship to continue. I have worked with Lucy quite a bit over the last year on a number of things and I am just reaching the end of a project I am writing with Jack Wyllie of Portico Quartet, which is for processed sax and electronics. When I wrote my album Raise I almost got addicted to going into rooms with musicians that I hardly knew, but felt intuitively good about and writing whole pieces very quickly through improvisation with little over-conceptualisation. I was doing my film work like that too. Sometimes there would be editing and processing but I tried to keep it to a minimum and quite often things were left pretty much as they happened. My new track on this EP was very different and took three months of recording, processing, more recording, more processing, etc...
What are your key non musical influences and inspirations to the Start Merge Fade EP?
AC: Just trying to do something with conviction and heart.
Why start a label?
AC: Autonomy. Not having to answer to anyone else except the artists you work with. I will still put out some of my projects on other labels if it makes sense. Also, the label will release new recordings of contemporary new music by current and older composers alongside music from the world of current electronic music, so it isn't just about my music. These are new kinds of collaborations for me and I find that exciting. We are talking about recording pieces by Lucier and Scelsi, recordings of Shakuhachi as well as working with people working in other more electronic/digital forms.
And can you tell us how you connected with Richard Skelton, and what it is you admire about his work that made you want to ask him to rework 'Shifting Grains'?
AC: I liked his music and writing and his whole aesthetic with Autumn and Corbel Stone Press and bought some of his editions off him. Then the year before last as part of these sound art installations in London I have been curating called The Silence Between, I asked Richard to do a show. While talking to him about this I asked him to do a remix at the same time. I finally met him and Autumn while installing the show last year and liked them very much as people as well. I was interested as to what he would do with a piece written for a string quartet and in the end he did something I didn't expect at all, which was great. - Luke Turner thequietus.com/articles/15508-adrian-corker-start-merge-fade-richard-skelton-circle-traps-reworks-interview

   Raise

Raise (2013)





 

  A decade since Adrian Corker's excellent albums with Paul Conboy for Vertical Form, he now returns to pursue more cinematic angles with 'Raise', the latest in his line of expansive, soundtrack focused works. There's no film to accompany this album, unlike his previous 'Way Of The Morris' (2011), so it's up to you and your imagination to fill in the visual gaps. The nine pieces of 'Raise' utilise the inherent atmosphere of the spaces he recorded in, from his local pub to Valgeir Sigurdsson's legendary Greenhouse Studios in Iceland, to subtly colour the sterling performances of The Elysian Quartet, Lucy Railton and members of The Portico Quartet, rendering tranquil moments of widescreen beauty alongside intimate piano and sweeping strings sure to light up the curiosity of fans of Nico Muhly, Stars Of The Lid, or Fennesz.- boomkat



Corker/Conboy, In Light Of That Learnt Later (2003)





Having first made an appearance on the excellent 'pro bono publico' project alongside kim hiorthoy, pan american and iso68 last summer, Corker / Conboy have developed a sound which dips into all manner of acoustic / electronic variations, bringing to life a deep understanding and yearning for sounds brought to a cinemascopic blend of grandeur and intimacy. Head straight for the breathtaking 'Akka' for a concise decimation of why these two artists have created something so utterly special with this album : the intuitively complex, necessary layers of percusiion, a shimmering glow of guitars, evocative slivers of ambience that uplift in introspection to that warm, thoughtful place that music of this kind so rarely takes us to. 'From The Hip' partners itself with the sublime trumpet playing of Ian Dixon, taking as its influence everything from the Tortoise-fuelled hybrids of the Chicago post rock scene, to a sprinkle of Brazillian exuberance, sweltering mariachi embellishments, and layer upon layer of timeless melody making and what seems like an endless supply of soul. 'Under a Perfect Sky' is another highlight, a soothing cocophany of clashing finger cymbals, shimmering acoustic guitars, evocative double bassline, an oriental agenda treated with modern variation and an ear for melody that's both timeless and completely unique. Gorgeous music.

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