If you've been having problems with the site since last week (Friday 18 May) please read this. (Hide this message)

Andrea Parker & Daz Quayle - Private Dreams And Public Nightmares - Daphne Oram reworked

Recommended by us on 20th January 2012

Private Dreams And Public Nightmares - Daphne Oram reworked by Andrea Parker & Daz Quayle

5...according to our on Thu 19 Jan, 2012.

Now this looks (and sounds) really bloody interesting. The prince and princess of dark electro mood-breaks delve into the life and work of the seminal Daphne Oram and come up with some really spooked and eerie electronic movements and foreboding electro-acoustic soundscapes. It's a really oppressive and chilling listen at times that broaches dark ambient, industrial and avant-garde territory without losing the essence of their inspiration, namely the darker side of Daphne Oram's unreleased archive experiments in sound. I cannot tell you how deliciously ominous and dystopian this sounds on the headphones....once again words cannot convey the way this makes me feel. I'm just gonna put one in our Anthony's stash right now cos this is gonna be right up his street!!!!

This is the third album release on andrea parkers avant-garde aperture label. A label carving it’s own niche in experimental electronic music. Other artists to date have included Oberman Knocks, clifordandcalix, and remixes from the likes of Luke Vibert, Freeform, Majestic 12, Andrea parker and Daz Quayle.

The album at hand is a concept album which re-works and re-interprets original, unheard sounds from the Daphne Oram archives to create eight unique original pieces culminating in an album which includes two live performance's by Andrea Parker and Daz Quayle.

Done purely as a labor of love in their spare time, Parker and Quayle have incorporated some of the less-obvious, unnerving sounds they discovered hidden in the archives to explore a different side of Daphne Oram, a darker side. What developed was a deeply personal album, drawing on Parker's in-depth knowledge of Daphne Oram's life and works, containing pieces created as they hoped Daphne Oram herself would have done with the sounds that she had made.

Daphne Oram  should need no introduction... British pioneer and forerunner of modern electronic music,  founder of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. She’s the genius who built the Oramics machine. She is also one of Parker's idols. It was her obsessive interest in collecting sound effects records and her passion for electronic pioneers that first introduced her to Daphne Oram and the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. A chance meeting with Phil Howlett at The Royal Festival Hall ultimately led to her direct involvement with the Daphne Oram Trust, through trustee Dr. Mick Grierson, who gave Parker permission to create a unique concept album using some of Daphne Oram's original sounds. In doing so she became one of the first people to be given unrestricted access to the Daphne Oram Archives, containing hundreds of tapes ( 211 to be precise ) of original, unheard sounds created by Daphne Oram herself.

Private dreams and public nightmares  starts with an interview featuring Daphne Oram recorded for women’s hour for the BBC. Followed by two pieces performed live by Parker and Quayle, one for the Short Circuit Festival supporting the BBC Radiophonic Workshop at The Roundhouse and also for 'Oramics: The Life and Works of Daphne Oram' at The Royal Festival Hall. The album sounds minimal , yet in some pieces up to 80 insular sounds were used to create a detailed path to lead your ear through the unknown.  

An intense piece of work. This album is challenging, isolationist, using a spectrum of dark sounds running throughout with the occasional beat, lots of bass that certainly weigh it down, giving it a distinctive, moody and ominous sound. There are chords as well as lots of bleeps, electronic clangs and plenty of sinister drones that force their way into your consciousness, leaving you feeling possibly unstable with emotional tension.  Its fearsome, haunting and downright scary at times, certainly not for the faint hearted. Its definitely not easy listening, but be patient and you will find extraordinary pieces delivered in an unnerving way.

Tracks:

1. Women's Hour   2. Frightened of myself   3. are you there..?  ( live from the Roundhouse )  4. Trepidation 5. Oddments   6. Ghost Hamlet 7. Under the sand 8. Now and always here

Be the first to review this record. Best reviewer each month gets £10 off their next order!

You don't have to provide your email address, but without it we can't give you a prize if this is the month's best review!

Keep it civil, please!

Anti-spam question...