Cos I'm
busy listening to the new COLLEEN (French for Colin) CD on Leaf
rather Frenchily titled Colleen Et Les Boites A Musique. This album has been
entirely built using music boxes. I actually really like music boxes a lot and
was seriously considering collecting 'em a while back but decided not to bother
cos it seemed too much like hard work and I'd have no money to buy smack.
(joke....). Wrongness aside this is by far the twinkliest thing I've ever heard
in my life. This makes the famous nursery rhyme 'twinkle twinkle little star'
sound like Extreme Noise Terror. When you end up at the pearly white
gates of heaven all dazed and confused, dripping with blood from the multiple
stab wounds from a bad night in the pub, head concussed from being pushed to the
ground by drunkard idiots, this twinklefest will be on in the background and
you'll soon forget what has happened to you. Also you'll be dead I guess so I'm
not really sure how the whole memory thing works after you've died 'n all. Very
nice indeed.
Love this record? Hate it? Tell us.
What their label says...
It seemed like a dream opportunity to explore further the miniature
continent of sound that music boxes in all their variety generate says
Colleens Ccile Schott in response to the carte blanche handed to her by
national radio station France Cultures Atelier De Cration Radiophonique
to record music for a special broadcast.
The commission would have remained just that, but Schott was so pleased
with the results she decided to give the nod for the recordings to be
released on this 38-minute EP, under a temporarily revised artist name.
No stranger to the use of music boxes in her recordings and live
performance, the consciously limited palette yields extraordinary
dividends; this is arguably the most intimate and wonderfully melodic
release of her career to date. Composed entirely using music boxes (but
for one track), the pieces use everything from miniature boxes hidden
in 1940s birthday cards to large Victorian boxes. Not content with the
orthodox sounds produced by the boxes, Schott hijacked them, playing
them with her fingers or with mallets on the comb. She re-sampled and
affected pitch and delay in a quest to produce unique sounds and
melodies.
Utilising the natural loop in each box, the different boxes move in and
out of time, evoking memories of childhood. This playful nature ebbs
and flows throughout the EP like a stream unsure of its chosen path.
Sounds reminiscent of harps (What Is A Componium? Part 2), xylophones
and Fender Rhodes (Your Heart Is So Loud), and electronics (Calypso In
A Box) appear and then disappear on the landscape, fooling the listener
into believing that the noises emanate from more than one type of
instrument.
This 14-track EP will provide refreshing new material for those
anticipating Colleens third long player, scheduled for release in early
2007. The material is all new with the exception of the final track,
Ill Read You A Story, which can also be found on 2005s The Golden
Morning Breaks.