DIRAC - emphasis

(CD, spekk)

“Chamber music of the 21st century”, I like that. For being right and wrong at the same time. The melancholic beauty of a Brahms quartet with Piano and Viola or a Chopin Sonata (the largo of op. 65!!!) cannot be beaten by anything on this world, but the overal sanctity and beauty of chamber music finds a mirror in the longwinding atmosphere of electro-accoustic drones in a very postmodern way. In that anything is connected to anything else way. Chamber music never uses percussive elements, as far as I know, though, but from the closeness of a small group of people working together to elaborate on a piece of music and give its atmosphere to the world, there is a connection in the process. Finally, as soon as someone starts to improvise he has clearly left the field of classical music, especially in comparison to the structural codes of chamber music. But if the improvisation draws not on technical versatility and superficial showing-off, rather adds to a piece which in re-listening sounds as if it had been scripted and rehearsed, then what actually is the difference? Even a noted piece of music can never repeated in the same manner, according to dogmatic music theory.

Dirac is a three piece of electro-acoustic improvisors working in Vienna, Austria, with academic backgrounds in music and an open mind for all kinds of sounds and fields of art. I didn’t even know it is possible to study electroacoustics at our university for music and supplied arts here, but what do you want from me, I am an old punkrocker, you know.

The four tracks on emphasis all have a subtle percussive element, the clicking of some mechanic works, a muted bassdrum, and so on, around which a host of various kinds of sounds are strewn. These range from noisy drones to lonely notes on an old piano to field recordings. Everything is very organic, moves as if blown along by the autumn wind. The field recordings of crows in the street help to enhance the impression of autumn, goodbyes, death and bittersweet melancholy. The track perusing the crows is called Augarten, which is a very nice park in the second district of Vienna and it doesn’t take a lot of intuition to guess at least some of the source material comes from there.

Within the four tracks time seems to stand still. Something breaks, notes echo through the vaccum, somewhere in the distance something seems to be burning, childrens voices wave through the mist, resonance and echo play an important role. It is like watching those small white jellyfish in the black tank in the zoo of Vienna. An almost hypnotizing experience that you may watch for half an hour and believe the time that has passed is not more than a few minutes. Everything blurrs in the force field of the music. A muted saxophone brushes over the boundaries to free jazz, dropping piano notes draw from centuries of nocturnes, rising density (“bantu”) in sound as from nowhere makes me think of a decade of listening to Japan Noise as well as the primordial experience of watching a storm accumulate in the mountains, feeling the electricity in the air.

A wonderful way to spend away an hour of your time. Somehow I believe that what “emphasis” wants to tell us is that there is nothing more important than time, expanded time, better used time. Carpe diem and all that. An important lesson that cannot be repeated too often. Another album is planned in early 2010 on the honorable Valeot records.

www.spekk.net

12/2009