mercredi 14 avril 2010

Daniel Menche - Concussions (Asphodel, 2006)










1-1 CD1 Track 01 8:26
1-2 CD1 Track 02 2:33
1-3 CD1 Track 03 2:29
1-4 CD1 Track 04 8:26
1-5 CD1 Track 05 7:49
1-6 CD1 Track 06 11:20
1-7 CD1 Track 07 4:52
1-8 CD1 Track 08 8:03
1-9 CD1 Track 09 3:15
2-1 CD2 Track 01 3:04
2-2 CD2 Track 02 1:44
2-3 CD2 Track 03 7:43
2-4 CD2 Track 04 8:16
2-5 CD2 Track 05 11:56
2-6 CD2 Track 06 3:31
2-7 CD2 Track 07 6:05
2-8 CD2 Track 08 2:14
2-9 CD2 Track 09 7:08
2-10 CD2 Track 10 3:14
2-11 CD2 Track 11 2:09

“All percussions and concussions created by Daniel Menche.” So says the inner sleeve and truer words were never spoken. What starts out sounding like a cover version of Steve Reich's Drumming—layer upon layer of pulsating percussion patterns—rapidly escalates into a thunderous inferno of Dionysian proportions. Once a gargantuan level of density is reached and the listener finds him/herself wholly trapped at the center of the vortex, the relentless onslaught becomes a Rorschach, its pummeling throb resembling the amplified patter of pelting rain at one moment and the violent thrum of rabid animal scratching the next. Disc one's track seven sounds as if the Portland-based sound artist placed a microphone at the center of a roaring fireplace or a hornet's nest (no surprise that the title of Menche's 1993 debut is Incineration).

Still, though Concussions adheres to its strict conceptual principle throughout, contrasts regularly emerge during the twenty untitled tracks. Patterns mirror one another in disc one's track three as their repetitions alternate from left to right while track four gathers them up and drops them into the center of a hellish cauldron, reducing them to a howling mass. It's at such moments that Menche's repudiation of the label 'noise artist' for 'sound sculptor' has merit and his so-called quest for 'vehement beauty' achieved. Interestingly, though the churning Concussions generally makes Reich's Drumming seem a microsound outing by comparison, Menche's drumming patterns move in and out of sync with one another in a manner that's not wholly unlike its renowned precursor. Yes, it's an overwhelming experience—literally so when the two discs total 114 minutes—and not a ride I plan on taking more than once, yet incredible nonetheless.
Textura

visit Daniel Menche

try cd1
try cd2
(well if asphodel is a dead label, it seems this release can always be purchase here: http://asphodel.com/releases/view.php?Id=89)

4 commentaires:

Anonyme a dit…

Yaeah, the title is from (The) Swans... is it not? Or it is not? A couple of things to pose whilst on the way to buy yellow tape and a bucket of cement for my head. Love from Brussels city of ex-bohemian depravity.

Daniel Menche a dit…

Thanks for the salute!

Ashodel is DEAD but you can still buy this release...I prefer it as a CD listening becuase the tracks don't pause...but any hooo.... RUN over HERE for the CD purchase...or not.

http://asphodel.com/releases/view.php?Id=89

My Official web site over here.

http://danielmenche.blogspot.com/

And very soon my entire discography will be available on Itunes

Thanks for the support and EARS!

Anonyme a dit…

I had a listen to this and it put my illness back two years.

Anonyme a dit…

Aupa.
Pero a los que nos gusta los CDs fisicos........ seguremos comprando discos...... como The Progeny of Flies.

Luis (sinapenascoxis)