A collection of five pieces which were not originally planned as an album - and so this is more of a retrospective hoard.
All are based on field recordings, sometimes using binaural or contact microphones, occasionally direct to an iPad and processed on the spot, as well as captured by more traditional means.
The extent of the augmentation varies. On some pieces the location work has been contorted beyond recognition with source material cut up and callously fed through a sampler. Other pieces have been affected in a more subtle manner and the sense of place remains to the fore.
With each production my intention was to work quickly. Overdubs were played live and given only one chance otherwise rejected and nothing was sequenced. Some enhancements were made directly to the recording on location.
Having said that though, each track on this collection has been especially remastered. They have all been floating around on Soundcloud this year, and a couple were included on recent Classwar Karaoke compliations - however you will find differences, especially the alternative take of Improvisation VII.
In a very well designed and printed digipack we find here a limited to 25 copies release of local man Mark Tamea (not local born, but hailing from London all the way to sunny Nijmegen). A man for your finer computer treatments of instruments and field recordings, albeit the latter to a minor extent. As always I am very much interested in his next work. These five new pieces were originally not intended for an album, but the fact they are all based on field recordings give them a connection.
In his previous work he used quite a bit of 'real' instruments both sampled and processed, but this only seems to be the case here with 'Improvisation VII'; the others use field recordings to a larger or smaller extent. Sometimes these recordings are heavily processed and sometimes hardly at all. Tamea says that all five pieces were done rather quickly with overdubs played on the spot, accepted or rejected when needed. These five pieces mark, it seems, a bit of break with his previous work, but it also appears to be of a similar high quality.
I think they are great pieces, evocative, soundtrack like, very much in the spirit of musique concrete, with all of these bigger and smaller processes going on. Seagulls come along with beeps and bops, a church bell is stretched out mildly and then there is a cave which has a great hollow sound, streaming water and some of that melted into a lovely drone, such as in 'Tower Ch-I & Friends'. That sounds delightful and down to earth, while perhaps at the same time also a bit heavenly. Much of this seems relatively easily made, but the beauty lies in simplicity I guess. It even has piece from a local church and last week I realized I might have never been inside this church, which is dead centre in Nijmegen. Odd indeed. Now, encountering the silence of that church with some metallic sounds I realize I should be going inside. Great release, once again. Different than his previous releases, but beautiful.
- Frans de Waard, Vital Weekly
credits
released September 5, 2014
Composed and produced by Mark Tamea 2014 except (3) produced by Tamea / McNaughton 2014.
Lebanese multi-instrumentalist deconstructs classical tropes through an eccentric array of instruments, including disassembled toy pianos. Bandcamp New & Notable Sep 22, 2022