Thomas Lehn / Marcus Schmickler - Bart (CD)
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Erstwhile 012
The duo of Thomas Lehn (analogue synthesizer) and Marcus Schmickler (digital synthesizer, computer).
OUT OF PRINT
Lossless digital (16/44) is available.
The duo of Thomas Lehn (analogue synthesizer) and Marcus Schmickler (digital synthesizer, computer).
OUT OF PRINT
Lossless digital (16/44) is available.
Sold out
TRACK LIST
1. „gelb” (9:31) 2. Ziege (7:03) 3. OS (7:00) 4. Du Funktion (30:10) 5. temp/close (5:24) (released October 1, 2000) CREDITS
Thomas Lehn, analogue synthesizer Marcus Schmickler, digital synthesizer, computer recorded at Peithopraxis Tonstudio, Cologne in August 2000. front cover design by Heike Sperling |
Thomas Lehn and Marcus Schmickler are both well-known electroacoustic musicians from Cologne, but they come from very different backgrounds. Lehn is from the world of improvisation, while Schmickler's previous work lies predominantly in the world of studio production. Lehn is best known for the CD projects Tom and Gerry (Erstwhile), Konk Pack-Big Deep (Grob), and e-rax-Live at the BIMhuis 1999 (X-Or), as well as for his consistently superb performances on the European festival circuit. Schmickler has been involved with numerous projects, including the seminal collective Kontakta (Odd Size). As a solo artist, Schmickler has created important works such as Wabi Sabi (A-Musik), as well as three CDs under the name Pluramon, all on Mille Plateaux, including the just released remix project Bit Sand Riders. He's also worked extensively in the house and techno scenes, both on his own and with musicians such as Thomas Brinkmann and Cristian Vogel.
In December of 1998, Schmickler joined the MIMEO, of which Lehn was already a member, and the two began to collaborate occasionally within the band. This past summer, the duo recorded Bart over the course of two long studio sessions. A brilliant amalgam of the two musicians' strengths, Bart utilizes both improvisation and studio postproduction techniques to create a lasting work, combining the feel of a classic INA-GRM record with the raw, crackling energy of a free improv session. The unique look of the artwork was created by Cologne graphic designer Heike Sperling, in conjunction with the two musicians and Bianca Strauch. "very cool cd!!! the real sound of cologne! cd of the year potential and all that." -- Pita REVIEWS
Fällt, Christopher Murphy A heightened collaboration in which the (often) freeform world of improvisation meets the (often) precision world of the studio and post-production, 'Bart' occupies a niche all it's own and easily surpasses the sum of its parts. Would it be sacrilege to draw a parallel to the working methodologies that gave us 'Bitches Brew'? Yet, it is precisely in the contrast between tight control and raw, unfocussed energy that Thomas Lehn and Marcus Schmickler's collaboration lies. Packaged in the appropriately lo-tech, glitch-graphics of Cologne designer Heike Sperling lies an hour-long release of stuttering free-form glitch funk. What differentiates 'Bart' however, from the myriad of recent glitch-improvisation releases is its ruthless attention to detail. Both Schmickler and Lehn are well known within their respective circles and the results of this, their first collaboration, are stunning to say the least. 'Du Funktion' sees a return to a thick molasses of digital smears welded to an ever-present system drone that unfolds over a staggering 30 minutes which, despite its sheer length, never rests. Left/Right tones cascade in waves over bitmapped crackles as Lehn and Schmickler add layer after layer of events into a seductive audio landscape. Closing with a gently unfolding five minute coda 'Temp Close', one can only hope it represents just that: a temporary close. All Music Guide, François Couture Analog synthesizer wizard Thomas Lehn meets studio producer/digital synth improviser Marcus Schmickler. Both played together within MIMEO, a 12-piece electronic orchestra, but this was their first recording session as a duo. The two musicians first improvised freely, than the material wastransformed in postproduction. The resulting music, full of chirps, beeps and tweeps, is a strange mixture of free improvisation (see Lehn's CD Tom & Gerry with drummer Gerry Hemingway or his trio Konk Pack with Tim Hodgkinson and Roger Turner) and electroacoustics. Actually, it sounds like a piece of musique concrete that would have lost its chart -- electroacoustics without the "cinema for the ear", the plan (except maybe for the half-hour long "De Funktion" which feels more organized). Quite exciting and destabilizing, Bart will surprise even the most hardcore Lehn fan: intertwined with Schmickler's, his art never sounded this rich. On the other hand, it lacks part of its organic quality (usually reflected or enhanced by the presence of more acoustic instruments). If anything, Bart takes electronic improvisation one step further. Incursion Music Review, Richard di Santo At first this seems like an unlikely collaboration. Thomas Lehn, an improviser immersed in the "Cologne movement" of improvisational electronics, never seemed to me to be quite in the same musical realm as fellow Cologne resident Marcus Schmickler, probably best known for his work as Pluramon (progressive-postrock-krautrock released on Mille Plateaux). The two had met while working in the improvisational ensemble MIMEO. For their collaborations, Schmickler sheds his Pluramon-Wabi Sabi-Kontakta hats, trading them in for something a little more like-minded with Lehn's improvisational methods. Clusters of clicks, pops and whirrs flutter in and out of these tracks at amazing frequency. There's a lot of energy to these recordings, a lot of movement and detail. And yet still the sounds are not all that diverse; the five tracks that comprise this CD never quite leave the microcosm of analogue versus digital clicks, noise and sound fragments (Thomas Lehn uses an analogue synth while Schmickler uses a digital synth with computer). Which came first, I wonder? Are they mixing each other's output, or are they creating independently? The arrangements range in tone from softer clusters of sound to more harsh and abrasive movements.This music is really quite dense and difficult, heavy on detailing and spontaneity, which means that listening to these tracks takes some effort to get through (for me, at least). Nonetheless a very fine CD of improvised electronics. |