Monday, October 13, 2008

Gamelan Pacifica - Trance Gong (Gamelan Pacifica CD-R, originally released in 1995)



If you like gamelan music and those combinations of sound that, as an emotional catalyst, could soothe down and make you feel at home just like discovering a delicate and quiet panorama outside a favorite window, then this may be good for you.

I just discovered this already out of stock record after listening in the past months to some works by this Seattle ensemble's founder Jarrad Powell (which are, i have to say, more interesting for their writing and technical performances, featuring people like Jessika Kenney and Eyvind Kang, but also boring sometimes). An aluminium gamelan version of the enchanting "In a Landscape" by John Cage (originally scored for piano or harp) is featured here, while the most celebrated track in this album is probably Powell's "Gending Erhu", for gamelan and erhu, and echoes of Lou Harrison's most airy works are traceable in Jon Keliehor's "Peaches of Immortality".

13 comments:

gozk October 14, 2008 7:49 AM  

Hi. This is amazing. Is there any chance of higher bitrate? Thanks

Grindfucked,  October 15, 2008 4:14 AM  

well, I wondered how long time it would take before someone of you posted this one :P nice that you finally did; it's a great album.

cretakano October 15, 2008 6:20 AM  

this was the graceful sound i get to hear during my childhood playground. wayang kulit puppet shadows + menora and mak yong theatre + accompanied by gamelan music. thank you for introducing this music to the world. I really appreciate it ^^

Anonymous,  October 18, 2008 6:12 AM  

Fantastic musick! I've been wanting it for ages.

THANK YOU MY DEAR!

Margot

http://moonmusick.blogspot.com/

prince zaleski October 19, 2008 2:08 AM  

this is music i could listen to forever, making me feel like being home.
i loaded up a higher bitrate rip, please visit the KiC page @lastfm (discussion: "post stuff you want...") for it. ^^

Anonymous,  October 20, 2008 5:34 PM  

Damn you guys! I just downloaded this a couple of days ago on a whim, and now you put it up here. Psshaw. Way to take the fun out of things. :P

Dot Eyes October 31, 2008 11:39 PM  

Thankyou KiC

I hope I can musically repay the favour some time.

Arnau November 8, 2008 5:54 PM  

i just don't see where to find the link. could you please re-upload? Thanks!

nine,  November 14, 2008 4:07 AM  

Many thanks! Great record, like a modern testament of gamelan music ;) Peaches of Immortality is my favorite.

...

Ahsan December 3, 2008 4:23 PM  

Nice, found this at a record store up in seattle last year. If I had to pick an album for really pushing the gamelan sound into new terrain, it would be thomas strønen's "pohlitz" album on runegrammofon.

this vid clip doesn't feature gamelan, but may give u an idea of what he's capable of...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OpdU2jlsKt4&feature=related

prince zaleski December 4, 2008 1:11 AM  

thanks for your recommendation Ahsan: as a huge rune grammofon's fan i have moste of their records, but honestly i didn't even have an idea of how thomas strønen's "pohlitz" sounds like, so i will definitely check for it.

Talvi August 29, 2009 9:47 AM  

Where it's the link? I want gamelaaaaaaaaan!

Anonymous,  October 5, 2009 7:38 PM  

Also posted here:
http://vaubu.blogspot.com/search/label/gamelan%20pacifica

MILES DAVIS


By 1973, Miles had gone crazy. I often ask myself, in reference to an athlete lost to excess, or an artist that has burned too brightly, does the caring person in me have the ability to bring myself, should I somehow be granted such powers, to erase great works of art by curing the illness that brought them to be? Here, the case is simple: would I be humane enough to let Miles free of his demons, knowing that doing so would erase all the art he made in the midst of his madness?

If I were alive and asked this in 1975, I would certainly say yes. The music in question was largely, perhaps near-unanimously, reviled by critics. Miles, his health shattered, had just retired for what was to be five years. Dave Liebman was solid, but was also one of very few longstanding sax players to pair with Miles without subsequently gaining worldwide fame (I'm still waiting on a Gary Bartz revival - I'll lead the way). Miles had unleashed masterpieces like On the Corner, Get Up With It, and garnered neither the younger black audience he wanted, nor the sales of his prior albums (namely, Bitches Brew).

However, time has a way of changing things. Miles' work from this period has seen a decade-long critical resuscitation, the dry clicks and repetition of On the Corner a false ancestor of dubstep, the pulsing ambiance of "He Loved Him Madly" was ahead of Eno, ahead of dark jazz, and ahead of about ten other genres. Miles was more mournful in his playing, the searcher was more lost than ever, and his body matched his tone: brittle, thin, static then frenetic (could be the coke there). Given all this, I don't know if I could let Miles go if that meant this art would go away. Whatever was chasing miles over a quarter-century ago, it lead him into areas so far ahead of his time, it is staggering.

EXCEPTIONAL NEW RELEASE

Photobucket
Your Snakelilke King, by the duo of Dylan Nyoukis and Karen Constance under the name Blood Stereo, was a steady climber throughout the year for me. The first thing that caught me, as is often the case, is the stunning cover art, which, luckily for them and for me, came to my attention when I was deeply into dance a while earlier in the year. I also had wanted to check something out by Dylan Nyoukis, as I'd heard his name bandied about by some other writers that I trust, but was kind of put off by the album with the cover of him naked.

Enter Your Snakelilke King. The second track, "The Taking of the Tonic," is what originally caught my ear, as it started off with the sort of high pitched, spare vocal spikes that would be common on a Keiji Haino record. After that portion, there are layered vocals, scratching textures, and a sort of propelled development through the rest of the track that simultaneously has a circular motion to it, a sort of swirling vortex in the speaker array. In a way, the vocals mimic something from Burning Star Core's more saliva-based excursions, which is a good thing.

After I was thoroughly taken by the second track, I gave the opener, "The Giving of the Grape," a more attentive listen. The track starts very similar to Tony Conrads Joan of Arc, so much so that at first I wondered if the track was realized by recording the pedals and keys of an instrument. This descends into the chaos of the remainder of the track, replete with violin scratches, frenzies and abutted by synthetic tones, closely recorded bubbling and crackling. The 20-minute journey can't be summed up completely here, but the message I hope you get is that this record is effective in track development, all the while being texturally complex and dynamic. In short, Your Snakelilke King, sold out in the 330 copy vinyl edition, but still available in other formats on Pan, serves as a perfect entry point to Nyoukis and Constance, and is a fantastic "noise" record, period.

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