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-   -   Strategies Against Architecture - The Avant Garde/Experimental Album Club (https://www.musicbanter.com/avant-garde-experimental/53783-strategies-against-architecture-avant-garde-experimental-album-club.html)

Ska Lagos Jew Sun Ra 04-05-2011 08:17 AM

link me!

TockTockTock 04-05-2011 03:30 PM

I completely forgot about nominating that album. Good to see it finally won, though.

TockTockTock 04-05-2011 03:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by clutnuckle (Post 1030708)
got this myself recently; haven't yet sunk my teeth into it.

Yea, I've already listened to it twice, and I can tell you I was not disappointed.

clutnuckle 04-08-2011 04:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jack Pat (Post 1031303)
Yea, I've already listened to it twice, and I can tell you I was not disappointed.

Just listened to it myself; I like it. Not an outstanding release but the diversity of the drone as time goes on is very engaging, and the historical value of it is very endearing as well.

dankrsta 04-08-2011 04:20 PM

The poll is open.

dankrsta 04-11-2011 03:54 PM

And this week we're listening to Konstantin Raudive - Voices of the Dead


Quote:

Originally Posted by OccultHawk (Post 1015103)
Since my suggestion won I would like to toss another out there for the next list:

http://cdn.7static.com/static/img/sl...557246_350.jpg

Voices of the Dead
by Konstantin Raudive


Voices of the Dead | CD WOW! Deutschland

Quote:

Voices of the dead - a fascinating project taken out of a mysterious past and relocated in the present - an important documentation and reinterpretation of early recordings, electronic experiments and oral history. featuring DJ Spooky, Scanner, Random Inc, Lee ranaldo, Ensemble, David Toop, CM Von hausswolff, Calla. for many, the first traces of the Raudive Tapes were in William Burroughs fictions and articles. The fact is, these mysterious magnetic tapes, which capture the voices of the dead, and were recorded by the baltic scientist Konstantin Raudive, are not a fiction but a reality (we are not here to judge their scientific objectivity ). featuring archives + exclusive pieces of music based on the Raudive material. Excellent packaging and artwork. Great bio and liner notes in English.


dankrsta 04-15-2011 11:33 AM

You can start voting. The poll is open.

OccultHawk 04-16-2011 09:44 AM

I have a new candidate:

http://images.musicnet.com/albums/049/931/025/a.jpeg

Ives Plays Ives The Complete Recordings of Charles Ives at the Piano, 1933-1943

Amazon.com: Ives Plays Ives The Complete Recordings of Charles Ives at the Piano, 1933-1943: Charles Ives: Music

Quote:

Ives recorded seventeen different pieces, ranging from the early March No. 6 and rejected Largo for Symphony No. 1 to the “improvisations” that indeed may have been freshly created in front of the microphone in 1938. But most of the music recorded—the Four Transcriptions from “Emerson,” the Studies Nos. 2, 9, 11, and 23, and the “Emerson” movement of Sonata No. 2 for Piano: Concord, Mass.—is related closely to Ives’s early, unfinished Emerson Overture for Piano and Orchestra (circa 1910–11). This reissue restores this historic recording, originally issued by CRI but unavailable for several years, to the catalogue

dankrsta 04-16-2011 01:04 PM

It's time I suggest something again. Don't see her mentioned on this forum at all. Therefore, I suggest:

https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-H...olmenMusic.jpg

Meredith Monk - Dolmen Music (1981)

This suggestion is partly inspired by this month's minimalist compilation and partly by the fact that we haven't listened to any vocal acrobatics in this album club. Those of you who are familiar with Meredith Monk, I guess you already know this album. She's a New York minimalist composer best known for her unique and brave vocal explorations. She's also a filmmaker and some of her works include theater and dance. This album is probably best known of her work. It showcases her innovations as a vocalist, accompanied by minimal music. Despite being very adventurous and unpredictable in that regard, it's wonderfully listenable, which is something I admire greatly. No matter how stumped you may be at first, her voice evokes a wide range of emotions, from deeply personal to those universal and archetypal.

starrynight 04-16-2011 03:06 PM

Yes Meredith Monk is good.

But I wonder how you define experimental as it can crossover into over areas like jazz and classical. I would say Charles Ives for instance is classical.


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