Damon Krukowski.
Krukowski, Damon
1. Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt, Oblique Strategies Eno and
Schmidt's set of instructional cards for solving creative
problems--originally printed in 1975-is now available as an iPhone
application. Instead of checking messages, you can draw one of its
"worthwhile dilemmas" to direct your next move, such as:
"Fill every beat with something."
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
2. 1970's Algerian Proto-Rai Underground (Sublime Frequencies)
In the pre-synthesizer days of rai music explored by this album, every
beat was filled with driving hand percussion, passionate
call-and-response vocals, and (surprisingly) trumpets. The lyrics
aren't translated, but titles such as "He, Who Doesn't
Own a Car" and "I'm Still Getting Drunk ... Stilt"
tell you everything you need to know.
3. Give Me Love: Songs of the Brokenhearted--Baghdad,
1925-1929(Honest Jon's) An elegy for a cosmopolitan culture lost to
generations of ethnic conflict. As the introductory notes explain,
"By the time the Jews left en masse in the early 1950s, there was a
gap in Baghdad for instrumentalists who could play Iraqi music."
That music turns out to have been part Jewish, part Egyptian, part
Indian, part Turkish--and alt melancholy.
4. Mutant Sounds (http://mutant-sounds.blogspot.com) If music blogs
are the new radio, Mutant Sounds is a pirate station that broadcasts
noise obscurities by and for freaks. Lately they've been on an
'80s cassette kick; I've enjoyed the titles and artwork for
recordings like Deus Ex Machina's SAD and Magic's Marionette Karma so much that I dare not listen, for fear of ruining the dream of
how they might sound.
5. The Music Tapes, Music Tapes for Clouds and Tornadoes (Merge
Records) Billed as the Music Tapes' first release since 1999's
1st Imaginary Symphony for Nomad, this album sounds more like it was
recorded fifty years ago. Turns out that bandleader Julian Koster used a
'30s wire recorder to capture this ghostly, funny,
melodic-yet-atonal pop opera.
6 Conlon Nancarrow, Studies for Player Piano (Other Minds)
Nancarrow (1927-1997) created these compositions--newly available in a
remastered four-CD set--by hand-punching the paper rolls for player
pianos. The more holes, the less space in the music. The most
spectacular examples employ a density and speed that no human player
could achieve.
7 Helena Espvall & Masaki Baton (Drag City) A stylistic and
linguistic surprise from two experimental rock musicians--one based in
Philadelphia and the other in Tokyo--this album consists almost entirely
of traditional folk songs, sung in cellist Espvall's native
Swedish. When Batoh (leader of the psychedelic band Ghost) chimes in
with vocal harmonies, these recordings reach a kind of pan-national
hippie ideal.
8 Allan Kaprow, How to Make a Happening (Primary Information) This
year Kaprow's 1966 instructional LP was reissued for the first time
by the excellent new publishing house Primary Information. Kaprow's
Fluxus infomercial sounds dated to my ears, but when I play it for my
students, they immediately start making music together.
9 Electric Africa Record collectors have flooded into Africa, and
the result has been some dazzling new CD compilations documenting the
sounds of postindependence electric music in Nigeria (Nigeria Special,
Soundway),the Congo (Rumba Rock, African Pearls), and Benin and Togo
(African Scream Contest, Analog Africa), to name just three of my
favorites. The era of cheap global travel may be drawing to a close, but
crate-diggers have already made the most of it.
10 Brian Eno and Peter Chilvers, Bloom (Opal Limited) Another
interactive iPhone application for Eno. (Has he found his new medium?)
Thirty years after the landmark Music for Airports, Eno has again
written an ambient piece for a locus of both high-speed communication
and aimless drift: the cell phone. Bloom, which Eno describes as a
"music box for the 21st century," embraces that drift and
makes it beautiful.
DAMON KRUKOWSKI, A FREQUENT CONTRIBUTOR TO ARTFORUM, IS ONE HALF OF
DAMON & NAOMI, WHOSE SEVENTH ALBUM, WITHIN THESE WALLS, WAS RELEASED
IN 2007. THE GROUP'S 1992 DEBUT ALBUM, MORE SAD HITS, WAS REISSUED
THIS PAST SUMMER.