dok by
Oval Thrill Jockey thrill 046 • 1998
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This record is part
one
of a
counter-remix-project
embarked upon by
Berlin-based sound
innovators Oval and
Tokyo-based installation
artist/sound designer
Christophe Charles. The
record is primarily an
Oval record accessing the
soundfile archive of
travel and field
recordings by Christophe
Charles. On previous
records 94diskont and
their debut Systemisch,
Oval explored
deconstruction and
reconstruction, assault
and aesthetics creating a
unique semantic on top of
the exploration of
generic features and bugs
of electronic music
media. Their music has
always been a naturally
occurring phenomenon that
documents their
adaptation process of
digital (music) media as
a whole.
On this new lp, Dok, the
preparation of the
recording process itself
was a challenge in its
own right. The challenge
centers around the widely
static and very delicate
environmental recordings
of sound designer
Christophe Charles and
the difficulty in
creating music out of
sounds with no sustain,
no rhythm, and in no
linear stucture or
relationship to each
other.
Charles, who holds a Phd
from Tsukuba University
and a Phd from Institut
National De Langes et
Civilasations Orientales
in Paris, has spent
considerable time
exploring the often
forgotten aspect of
music, its spatial
dimension; in other words
the effect and/or
location of
amplification, position
of the origin and
dimensions of space in
which music is
performed/played. These
considerations have led
him to work often with
"Found Sounds" or actual
environmental (urban or
otherwise) recordings.
Charles provided Oval
with a selection of field
recordings of bells from
around the world. The
bells' sounds and
monolithic travel
recordings were static
with almost no rhythmic
index. Oval transformed
the static character of
the found sounds and made
them fluid.
The resulting record
documents a compelling
merge of two vast, very
distinctive soundfile
archives, effortlessly
two extreme, sometimes
even contradicting
approaches to both music
and music technology -
encouraging the listener
to see sound shape and
form in entirely new ways
by adding an entirely new
spatial and lively index
to Oval music. Through
the additional processing
of the bell and other
environmental sounds, the
addition of bass tones
and the use of as well as
"as is" environmental
recordings, Oval have
once again created a
complex, yet accessible
soundscape. Dok is
nonetheless still firmly
grounded in what Oval
always was all about:
intervention into
simulation, and theory
and above all a musical
result that may be
enjoyed without any
knowledge of the
technology or theory
behind it.
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