- freq.org
(UK):
Star Switch On - sleeve detail taking Chris Watson's field recordings of wildlife
on Outside The Circle Of Fire and Stepping Into The Dark as their starting
point, six artists were ask to do what they willed with the source material,
partly as a resonse to the observation that Watson's recordings of animals
bore a certain relationship to the glitchery emanating from musicians' and
sound artists' laptops. Mika Vainio's crackling minimalism is a sparse abstraction
of Outside The Circle Of Fire into a hollow-filtered rise into dense arrival
at a point of Zen fulfilment. Philip Jeck brings two of the avian subjects
of the same disc together as foregrounded loops and dubs as electrical background
noise crepitates in asynchronous reverbed parallel to a fragmentary melody
to rumbling, hallucinatory effect. "Pannonique" is Fennesz' channelling
of "Mozambique Nightjar" by way of valves into a piece which is
unnervingly similar to the modulation and resonance adjustment of an analogue
synth, a placid pastorale which peaks into a short sharp dissonance. "Goat
Behaviour" provides AER with a rhythmic source of clattering bells and
the deep, rumbling wingbeats of owls to create a suitably Pannish piece of
caprice, the hoots resonating eerily into the jangle. Hazard uses hyenas and
deathwatch beetles for his measured "Debugged", where warm plateaux
of low-end wash to the swarming irritant of electronically-treated insect
life and the arpeggiating laughs of the scavengers; likewise Biosphere's cicada
and bird choral arrangements flicker into life as a multi-layered evocation
of circadian rhythms on "Night & Dawn", charging the result
with a celebratory joie de vive. To compare and contrast, Watson also contributes
two new recordings: timber wolves howling hungrily in the forest as they hear
a human hunter's rifle signal a new source of meat, and the voices of animal
herders in Rajasthan carried and Dopplered on gusts of warmed air as dusk
approaches, and the interplay of environment with inhabitants both human and
avian again reveals the music of the ecosphere in all its glory - perhaps
even to the comparative detriment of the human rearrangements on Star Switch
On themselves. [Richard Fontenoy]
The Wire (UK):
The Compiler -
A vast secret world of natural sounds was revealed on Chris Watson's last
two releases for Touch, Stepping into the
Dark (1996) and Outside the Circle
of Fire (1998). The fruits of his travels across the globe in search
of untainted audio footage of wildlife and unique atmospheres, those discs
documented everything from vultures feasting on a zebra carcass to East African
Hippos at dusk, all captured in disturbingly close focus. Watson's productions
were kept as 'factual' as possible, consciously avoiding human interference.
For Star Switch On (Touch Tone 18 CD), however, Touch invited various artists
to rework this remarkable source material however they wanted. The eight short
pieces here (including two new recordings by Watson) may no longer carry the
authority of being untouched natural documents, but the most effective contributions
stay true to their sources, increasing rather than distorting their impact.
Fennesz takes the call of the Mozambique Nightjar, plugs its elastic tempo-stretching
oscillations through a homemade valve amplifier, and comes out with a heavily
compressed, mindbending aural strobe effect. Philip Jeck morphs Capercaillie
and tinkerbird sounds into brutal rotating industrial loops, cannon blasts
and fuzz storms of grainy ambience. Chris Watson's contributions are equally
haunting. In "Cassarina", voices echo at each other across a chasm
blessed with the strangest acoustics, while the closing "Wolves"
is like visiting Hades, with its hollow tapestry of lost souls howling for
their next meal. It works out of context on a purely 'musical' level, as well
as being a brilliant reflection of a reality that few get to hear. 'Jerome
Maunsell]
Boomkat (Web):
New project from Touch artists (Mika Vainio, Fennesz, Philip Jeck, Hazard,
AER, Biosphere and Chris Watson) joining the dots between Chris Watson's close
up wildlife recordings (in this case from the amazing 'Outside
The Circle Of Fire' and 'Stepping Out
Of The Dark') and baring out the similarities to modern laptop composition.
Mika Vainio explores micro processing - haunted intent, Phillip Jeck amazes,
transforming the sounds of 'Red Rumped Tinkerbird' into a shooting range at
a backward touring funfair. Hazard adds warmth into the late night undergrowth
exploration. Chris Watson splices together his own recordings and adds
a new recording >> Timber wolves respond quickly to changes
in their environment. This pack has learned to associate the sound of a rifle
shot in the forest with the opportunity of a forthcoming meal. They gather
in the creeping darkness using scent and their awesome voices. The Fennesz
re-recording of 'Mozambique Nightjar', adds eerie background noise and
sonic tweaking. Lastly AER conjures up deep sleep dreams of goat herding and
Biosphere coats the transformation from night to dawn in his usual brand of
sleepy ambience, lush. An incredible document. Highly recommended.
Phosphor (The Netherlands):
Chris Watson, who was involved in Cabaret Voltaire (1972 - 1981) and Hafler
Trio (1981 to 1984), is a sound recordist with a particular and passionate
interest in recording the wildlife sounds of animals, habitats and atmospheres
from around the world. When his second album "Outside the Circle of Fire"
(TO:27) was released, Touch thought it a good idea to give
musicians carte-blanche to do what they liked with recordings that had a definite
and undeniable subject, location and atmosphere - the wildlife sound recordings
of Chris Watson. Every artist featured on this album has a different approach.
Mika Vainio, who was the first to respond, contributes a very minimalistic
piece with fine-tuned digital sequences adding a pulsing sound as if a submarine
is slowly approaching. Philip Jeck, who used two recordings as source material,
delivers a much noisier track with lots of scraping sounds and heavy irregular
beats. Benny J. Nilsen (aka Hazard) chose "Deathwatch beetles" and
"Spotted hyena" for his piece, in which a dark drone interchanges
with gentle clicks and a sample of a howling hyena. "Cassarina",
by Chris Watson himself, is dedicated to the moment that the herders drive
their animals to the domestic circles, which must be done before dark, when
the hillside is left to the leopard. Fennesz keeps close to the original,
by transforming the "Mozambique Nightjar", feeding its call through
a home-made valve amplifier. This track reminds of Francisco López's
album "La selva", transforming the jungle nightlife into digital
bits. AER also keeps the typical atmosphere which Chris Watson records intact.
AER's track puts the listener in the middle of a grazing herd. And Biosphere
combines his typical soft pulse with the sound of animal life. With the help
of S.E.T.I., People Like Us, and Oren Ambarchi, the artists featured deliver
a marvellous compilation that proves that Touch releases excellent music.
Other Music (USA):
From what I understand
these are the field recordings (from two previous releases) of former Cabaret
Voltaire member Chris Watson, ground back into aural paste and freshly re-canvassed
by the all-star Team Touch (Biospere, Fennesz, Hazard, et al). One of those
recordings of Watson's, just to apocryphally point out, was of a dead zebra
or some such carrion being feasted upon... recorded from the inside! The quizzical
beauty and banality involved in wild, natural things going on all the time
seems to be a starting point here. Now on this release we see a combination
of random processes both axiomatic of the Serengeti AND the G4. Alternately
wondrous and serene. [DHo]
Incursion [USA]:
A loosely gravitated compilation of sorts for the Touch label, it gives former
Cabaret Voltaire/Hafler Trio member Chris Watson's luminous field recordings
over to their current roster of stars in order to rework them as they will.
Mika Vainio takes some fizzing dabs of flies and transmits them into a cold
dark outer space, emitting low levels of reverb-radiation. Philip Jeck is
a bit more ballistic, with his tracers streaking across the night sky in slowly
revolving motions. Hazard moves in the spaces between the cold crinkling spacesuit
and human skin heat, mixing the temperatures to a fine stasis. Taking frogs
far away from the their boggy terra firma, Fennesz's "Pannonique"
chirps and floats exotically above the pond, albeit too pithy for proper personal
spacing. Always an alien-sounding music form, the Balinese metallic clouds
that AER observes hover exquisitely, if not too precisely, in the far distance.
The looping and cycling that Biosphere is so intimate with shows in the graceful
ripples of "Night & Dawn," which is neither dichotomy nor dichotic,
but a continuously blissful blurring of the two extremes of day. Watson's
most recent globetrotting excursions, "Cassarina" and "Wolves,"
both bisect and end the all too brief proceedings. [andy beta]
stylus (USA):
(9.5)
sifted through by tobias c. van veen
Rare indeed is the compilation that exceeds its remix possibility and exercises
the limits of its potential. Yet even more rare is the gem in the rough, diamond
in Africa, an assembly of acutely talented sound.artists, sculptors of the
sonic, that are gathered here to give reverence and homage to the field recordings
of Chris Watson. This album is composed of treatments by AER, Biosphere, Fennesz,
Hazard, Philip Jeck, Mike Vainio, and Watson himself. Drawn from wildlife
recordings whose 'originals' can be found on Stepping into the Dark (Touch
27) and Outside the Circle of Fire (Touch 37), Star Switch On is a spherical
molding of the sonic, a cupping of the hands in the gesture to hold water.
I wish to say that it is "careful" in the sense we receive from
Heidegger: that our nature is to care. For this is an album of wildlife recordings.
Nature recordings. Not city drones and traffic interruptions, although the
treatmentstreatments not in the sense of the medical establishment's
abuse of the word, but treatments in the way that a painter treats a canvasopen
themselves up to their fractured technologies and the realities of the digital
remix, the particle-ular of sound.
Each in his own way, each sound sculpture holds up the 'sounds themselves'
for contemplation in the way that John Cage spoke of. Sounds be themselves
and become themselves. That the sounds often become other from what one expected
them to be, or become, is testament to the sound sculptor's witnessing of
something-other than their technological mastery. Deleuze thought of this
as en-devenir. Here, I can enter my ears, where the rest of my body follows,
into something-other that molds me as I mold it. Each sound sculptor softly
shapes their particular instinctual imprint into aural actuality... Watson
echoes voices across a desert beach, I imagine from L'Etranger; Fennesz opens
crickets and hums and trilling night-bugs in what is one of his quietist and
most understated works to date; AER submerses the night to a chamber of tonalities
and sonorality that twinkles and sparkles just beyond the range of vision;
Biosphere beckons us in so slowly that we speak Russian words of Nostalghia,
like it was Patashnik filmed by Tarkosvky; and we should not forget that to
begin with, Mike Vainio drops us gently with a bee-bomb into a silent hint
of living underground, of becoming-bug through the sonar-pings of the wolfseeker;
that Philip Jeck destroys this myth with blasts from the shotgun while licking
bloody wounds of beauty; and that Hazard lets loose the lonely cry of the
indeterminate animal that has remained, la bête.
I dislike encouraging any reader to buy anything; I dislike even more acting
as traditional reviewer and passing judgement on sound. I can only witness
great moments of affect, of body-kissing, of muscle massaging. Your own personal
La Monte Young, sometimes here, mixed with a restraint particular to Cage.
Dig, deeper, soil, and hands: live these sonic becomings.
VITAL (The Netherlands):
Was it last week, when I wrote: remix CDs, who needs them? Much else I said
last week, might apply to this compilation. Seven people remix Chris Watson's
wildlife recordings (one of them is Chris Watson), but I must assume none
of these artists come as big surprises, nor do I think that say the Fennesz
fans never heard of Chris Watson or his
releases on Touch. So it's all a bit incestious, humbly me thinks. Also the
website info reads that many more tracks were received but not used (by People
Like Us, Ambarchi and SETI among others), which is a pity since it's a relatively
short CD. So apart from all sour grapes, the music is of course that what
counts. Chris Watson (ex-Cabaret Voltaire and ex-Hafler Trio) spends much
of time going out with a mini disc, doing recordings of animals in exotic
places. Here these recordings are used as source material. Mika Vianio has
a rather dark creepy piece of really low end beeps, Philip Jeck is both rhythmical
aswell as rather noisy for his doings. Hazard is here also not in his usual
ambient territory, but rather tries to sound like Fennesz, with a cracky,
laptop like sound. Fennesz has a short fuzzy piece that is among the best
of the CD, just like AER (Jon Wozencraft's sound project), who processes the
sound of goats in a very nice piece. Also Biosphere's pieces hoovers around
short samples and is lesser ambient then we are used by him. This collection
also includes two unreleased recordings by Chris Watson, of which especially
the last (cramned inside Biosphere's piece) is a haunting pack of wolves -
open for further process? (FdW)
(Belgium):
Op een korte termijn brak het laptop en -gitaarwerk van de Oostenrijker Christian
Fennesz bij een groter publiek door. Zijn output centert zich rond de labels
Mego en Touch. Het Britse Touch heeft de naam reflectief en 'serieus' met
hun artiesten en uitgaven om te gaan en het bundelen van Fennesz' moeilijker
te vinden materiaal ligt dan ook in die lijn.
'Field Recordings 1995-2002' is geen
verzameling van veldopnames die Fennesz nog in de kast had liggen, maar een
compilatie van werk dat eerder op andere bloemlezingen verscheen, remixes
(voor ondermeer Stephan Mathieu en Ekkehard Ehlers) en composities voor (kort)films.
Het werk steekt van wal met de eerste uitgave die de dertiger bij Mego in
1995 bracht: de uitverkochte single 'Instrument'. De vier versies werden aangelengd
met 'Good Man', een werk dat Fennesz recentelijk met de geluidsbronnen van
'Instrument' componeerde. Hoewel de Oostenrijker over de laatste zeven jaar
voornamelijk in de diepte evolueerde, valt het op dat hij vroeger meer naar
ritme en repetitie zocht: 'Instrument 1 & 3' bevatten een uitgevaagde
breakbeat en verwijzen naar de destijds boomende drum 'n' bassesthetiek. De
overige tracks gaan volledig horizontaal en schilderen - zoals gebruikelijk
- traag evoluerende kleurlandschappen waar bijtijds een melancholische kilte
doorwaait. In januari 2003 verschijnt bij Touch een nieuwe soloplaat van Fennesz,
ondertussen is hij ook vertegenwoordigd op de compilatie 'Star Switch On'.
Daarop zijn veldopnames van de Britse geluidsman Chris Watson door een keur
van populaire geluidskunstenaars onder wie Mika Vainio, Philip Jeck, Hazard
en Biosphere onder handen genomen (de originelen werder eerder bij Touch als
de albums 'Stepping into the Dark' en 'Outside the Circle of Fire' uitgebracht).
Fennesz levert een nogal statische bijdrage: op enkele loops na lijken Watsons
registraties van dierengeluiden nauwelijks behandelt. Wel erg intens is het
werk van Vainio en dat van Jeck: met respectievelijk elektronica en vinylmanipulatie
tillen ze het griezelige basismateriaal naar het niveau
van driedimensionale, beklemmende en fascinerende luistertrip. [Ive Stevenheydens]
Weekly Dig (USA):
In recent months, the UK experimental music label Touch has been on a tear,
releasing a slew of impressive records ranging from turntablist Philip Jeck's
Stoke to guitarist/electronician
Fennesz's Field Recordings. Their
latest release Star Switch On collects pieces by Touch workhorses like Mika
Vainio of Pan Sonic, Jeck, Fennesz, Biosphere and field recording specialist,
Chris Watson (formerly of Cabaret Voltaire). The unifying element is that
all of the the tracks were composed using Watson's field recordings as source
material. Perhaps because of this, though many of the contributions vary in
tone - from the piledriving thump and howl of Jeck's "Capriole"
to the soothing hum and buzz of Biosphere's "Night and Dawn" - they
still flow quite seamlessly into one another. Like Watson's original recordings
themselves (available on Touch as well), it's an engrossing, rather meditative
listen. [Susanna Bolle]
Blitz (Portugal):
Also featuring Fennesz, also on Touch and also with field recordings as a
starting point, we have "Star Switch On". The difference is that,
this time, the field recordings are a real, rather than semantic, starting
point. It is the result of an invitation made to several authors to process
the sounds of two prior touch editions: "Stepping Into The Dark"
and "Outside The Circle Of Fire". these are albums signed by Chris
Watson, from Cabaret Voltaire, and they comprise a selection of his archive
of field recordings. Watson travelled through Scotland, Venezuela, England,
Costa Rica, Germany, Kenya and other countries, collecting sounds that captured
the vital matter of those locations. the objects, in themselves, are extraordinary,
but they also reveal the quiet side of someone who has one day pursued the
same through opposite means. Fennesz, AER, Biosphere, Hazard, Philip Jeck
and Mika Vainio were invited for "Star Switch On", Chris Watson
himself joining this list. Having "Star Switch On" [sic] and "Outside
The Circle Of Fire" as sound sources, the authors were given free realm
to follow the paths that their sensitivities determined. And it is precisely
out of the 'stamp' each one of them applies to the original material, out
of that ability to respect the essence of the sounds, that the discreet fascination
of this release is born. As with the originals, we are far from new age territories,
at the opposite end from meditative spirituality. "Star Switch On"
affirms itself as a concrete reality, it dives into that reality for an intensification
of the stimuli. The digital interventions add borders of unease to a bright
path, they bar its progress with manipulative knowledge - there are residues
of life surrounded by darkness, prayers rescued out of a pulsating enclosure.
It comes as no surprise, then, that Chris Watson closes the album with the
nocturnal howling of the wolves. (8/10) [Trans. Heitor Alvelos]
The Sound Projector (UK):
A clutch of Touch 'regulars' were commissioned to make a piece of music using
tracks from Chris Watson's releases Stepping into the Dark and Outside the
Circle of Fire. If this information hadn't been imparted to me, I might have
enjoyed Star Switch On more - as a set of varied and strange soundworkings.
To me, it's slightly marred because I value Watson's work so highly - and
I'm a goddamn purist. His two CDs of natural wildlife and field recordings
have set a benchmark of quality in this area which nobody has yet bettered.
His high standards are shown in the sharpness and clarity of his sound recordings,
and in the contextual documentation he provides for each published work (time,
place, weather conditions, and equipment used are always scrupulously logged);
but also in his unique sensitivity to the environment, his near-spiritual
receptiveness to the elements, both known and unknown, that contribute to
our sense of 'place'. Chris Watson agreed to this present project of course,
and indeed he appears on it with two new works - but many of the above qualities
that I prize have been swept away in this remix project. That off my chest,
let's enjoy the music for what it is. Biosphere and Hazard turn in their usual
melodic-sounding, Ambient-washed styled 'soundscapes', and both simply use
Chris Watson samples as additional elements in something they would normally
do anyway. They're the least useful of the tracks. Philip Jeck's turntables
are reminiscent of the battle of the Somme with soldiers singing in the trenches
- an enjoyable escapade, but where CW is in the midst of it all I couldn't
really say. AER makes a clever and satisfying assemblage by collaging together
several loops of sound until they become resonating bells. Fennesz appears
to be playing tapes of CW recordings in his front room and overlaying them
in simple patterns - and his work involves the least effacement of the original
recordings. Mika Vanio goes to the opposite extreme, abstracting CW's work
so much that only a few minimal blips remain, swimming in a deep pool of compressed
noise - a real 'trip in a submarine' piece of music. In addition, there are
two 'straight' works by Chris Watson - 'Cassarina' is the most eerie, with
echoing voices shouting by the seaside and resonating against a cliff face.
The voices run backwards and create a disconcerting time-travel feeling. And
there's a 'hidden' track at the end of a wolfpack howling and baying. The
uncanniness of the latter reminds one of the main 'selling point' of the original
CDs - that CW had discerned a strange music in nature and was framing and
presenting it AS music, instead of a straight documentary recording. I seem
to recall that many writers were delighted to have mistaken the cries of seals
for an undiscovered minimal-electro track, a phenomenon on which I make no
comment. The point of this record continues to elude me. [Ed Pinsent]