(yes, do excuse us please, we haven't run out of music ; ) )
Thanks for that guys, sounds amazing.
Re the long reverb thing, the water reservoir in Cologne had a 45
second reverb as well and the producer of Vor Der Flut writes that
the 'intensity is due to the extremely hard, water-impermeable
coating on the walls and pillars, which stops the sound from being
absorbed, reflecting it with almost no loss intensity.' Looks like
the Deep Listening collaboration experienced something quite similar.
These gongs fascinated me recently when I went to Kassel for the
Dokumenta XII:
http://www.brightcove.tv/title.jsp?title=1130044742&channel=1080171031
On 1 Nov 2007, at 17:03, Nik Stoltzman wrote:
YAY! I do believe that's it!
http://www.newalbion.com/NA022/
I will have to check out the samples online to confirm, but the
description is spot on - the 45
second reverb definitely rings a bell.
Thanks for the help. Much appreciated.
N
Possibly a Pauline Oliveros/Stewart Dempster collaboration?
They did some things with trombones in large metal containers -
possibly
grain silos or water tanks. This might be what you're thinking of.
--
Dennis DeSantis
www.dennisdesantis.com
www.myspace.com/dennisdesantis
Mailing List:
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Nik Stoltzman wrote:
(excuse this little side-conversation)
No, that's not it - but that also sounds worth checking out!
This thing was definitely *not* jazzy and I don't think it was
broken down into tracks. The
piece
I heard was about 30 minutes long. Or maybe it was actually one
minute long and the rest was
echoes choes hoes oes es s..?
N
Very interesting thread this!
Nik, that composition... It wouldn't be "Vor der Flut - Hommage an
einen Wasserspeicher" would it? It's this fab recording made in an
old water 'silo' in Cologne/Germany in 1984, just before the
flooding. I've been trying to find info online but it's all (or
mostly anyway) in German. Here's a site with a clip http://
www.magicmusic.de/shop/de/act/cd/arg/6740/ and here it is on
Discogs
http://www.discogs.com/release/1123083
If this is what you were thinking of I could be persuaded to
scan the
album liner notes, which are in both German and English.
I totally love this album and played the A side almost in its
entirety it at our last party in September. : )
Anya
On 1 Nov 2007, at 11:34, Nik Stoltzman wrote:
Not unprecedented. There are pieces that are centuries old
that call
for brass players positioned all over the auditorium/cathedral/
whatever.
Sorry to hijack the thread (which, incidentally, is very
interesting) temporarily, but this
reminds me of a composition I heard once and have been trying to
track down ever since.
It was written and arranged to be played in an underground grain
silo. I can't remember the
composer. Basically, the concept was a number of horn players
arranged in a circle around the
perimeter of the circular silo, with the conductor in the centre.
Each musician would perform
short stabs such that the echo within the chamber (which could be
timed quite accurately) would
allow them to build layers of sound.
I'd love to know what it was. Any clues or leads?
Peace,
N
P.S: OT: Any Londoners going to The Cinematic Orchestra gig
tomorrow?