Recommended by us on 15th April 2011
...according to our Ant on Wed 13 Apr, 2011.
Jeff Witscher is back on Type as Rene Hell - one of a zillion pseudonyms he creates/ collaborates under (Secret Abuse, Deep Jew, Madelbrott & Sky, Marble Sky, Impregnable etc.) This record is a little less kosmische revival than the previous album and marks the artist's direction into more composed complex pieces as a fuck you to the wave of minimal drone knocking about these days. He uses a mixture of analogue and digital tools to create more classically influenced structures as can be heard on 'Cello Suite No 3' and 'Baroque Ensemble Coda' for example. Although things have been refined somewhat there is still a rawness which is appealing. I've been enjoying the bleepier tracks with all the little squiggles and pulses going off everywhere.
*Please note that the vinyl edition of this album comes with a 40 minute bonus CD ‘The Hilton’ including previously unreleased material.
*Vinyl cut at Dubpates & Mastering, Berlin
*Amazing second album for Type from Jeffrey D. Witscher, aka Rene Hell
*Since ‘Porcelain Opera’, his debut for Type, Jeff Witscher has put out a whole series of collaborations, 7”s, tapes and splits. Looking to his love of classical minimalism Jeff took it as the starting point for this new record. The result is a deeply electronic rendition of a classical electronic formula; the digital and analogue synthesizer and drum machine sounds that brought ‘Porcelain Opera’ to life are reframed and transferred into a very different compositional structure.
*‘The Terminal Symphony’ is Jeff’s attempt to write tighter, more composed pieces of music – something of a reaction against the glut of long, often-flabby drone compositions that have become a mainstay in the scene. The pieces here are short, concise, and packed full of ideas that can take multiple listens to unravel, and the album, as a whole is almost obsessively structured and complex. Each side of the record is composed very specifically with a beginning, middle and an end, and when we begin with the familiar grunt and grind of ‘Chamber Forte’ it is only mere minutes before the track dissolves into the main theme of the album.
*An appropriate enough comparison might be arch-recluse Aphex Twin, but there is no pandering to dance music culture here. Rather Jeff has used his enviable background in noise, punk and synthesizer music to come up with something totally removed from the current Kosmische revival.
*The album comes to a close with the hauntingly melancholy and purposefully referential ‘Adagio For String Portrait’. The dancing synthetic blips that pirouette across Witscher’s mournful electronic waves not only re-enforce the decades long love affair between electronic and classical music but help to define it in 2011.
1. Chamber Forte 2. Quiet Detail Muse 3. Cello Suite No.3 4. E.S. Des Grauens In Fifths 5. Baroque Ensemble Coda 6.
Lighthouse Marvel 7. Juliard Op. 66 8. Oxford Meter End 9. Detuned Clarinet 10. Adagio For String Portrait
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