Well, if you're going to do your first label showcase event in your 8 year history, you might as well do it BIG, and what better city in the USA to do it BIG than the BIGGEST city in the country: NEW YORK CITY!
I should clarify that the Diapason date is $10 suggested donation, which implies a sliding scale policy.
Special thanks to Shannon Fields (of Stars Like Fleas) for being the person who kindly initiated the first show at The Stone, Michael Schumacher for kindly setting us up at Diapason and Richard Garet for his generous help on various fronts.
Corey Fuller talks with oSone about their work and the latest CD entitled "Passerelle" released on and/OAR. *This is the second of an ongoing series of artist interviews revolving around the latest releases on the and/OAR label, conducted by sound artist Corey Fuller. CF: Could you please briefly explain your individual/collective activities previous to this work?
O: We all have a musical background connected to musique concrète, field recordings and improvisation. Listening to the most usual and being open to the unexpected is the most important for all of us. Recording environments and composing with these sounds is a common element in our practices. But Christophe has also an instrument-based background, meanwhile Hughes has experience in sound installations, and Yannick has an obsession for nature sounds...
CF: Could you briefly explain the background of this particular ensemble/group? How did this particular collaboration come about? Do you all have a shared interested in site specific works?
O: The first experiments we did were the answer to an invitation to make a site-specific work in Passerelle, a center of art in Brest. This beautiful building is quite wide and is a former fruit and vegetable cooperative. For preparing this work, Christophe let us invade his mother's farm. There, in an abandonned shed, we experimented all together with vibrations of found materials. Separately we already had tried alternative ways of producing sounds without the help of regular loudspeakers : Hughes was using parabolic home-made speakers, Christophe was working with piezo-ceramic discs buried into polystirene stuff, and Yannick was enjoying objects resonance with the use of low-frequency vibrators. We wanted to confront our first attempts into a collective work that would be specifically connected to an architectural place. As field recordists, all of us have a high interest for uncontrolled recording sessions, outdoor. Because field recording is a kind of dialogue, of a real-time relationship to our environment, through listening. Site-specific works are, in a way, the composer's counterpart of these field recording activities.
CF: Regarding, 'Passerelle', what was your inspiration for coaxing sounds/harmonies/melodies from this building/structure? Was your intention to draw/direct one's attention to the sounds inherent and imbedded in structures like this, or was your intention to coax music out of these structures, or something else?
O: Usually when invited into a gallery, one would make a plan then realize it, then open the space to the public. Because we were invited to make a one-week long intervention we could not use such a process. So we decided to make a hybrid between a performance, an exhibition and some pedagogic activities. Which means that we didn't stop working in the place, sleeping inside, during one week. Sometimes some musicians were coming to work with us, temporarily, sometimes some students with their teachers were visiting us. Three persons is enough to make these parallel activities. And moreover, we were able to test different acoustic systems (from home-made speakers to microphone feedback), improvising on them, composing in the space for the space. We had a series of recording sessions, by night, documenting the various steps of the work. Nothing was planned in term of sounds or composition before entering the place, we just had intuitions about how to make the space resonate.
CF: There are moments in the work where you seem to be 'playing' the building/structure and the space as if it were an instrument. How did you approach this structure in creating this work? Was it treated as a fourth member of your ensemble that you were collaborating with, more like an instrument or something entirely else?
O: In this space, we had about 6 or 7 places ready for playing with. Each one had its own specificities, offering its own way of playing-the-building. We wandered through long improvisations, it gave us a lot of combinations to play with. It's so interresting to react to what the others are doing while hearing them through two rooms with 20 seconds of concrete reverberation! Working in this way also avoids keeping a kind of center room, from where we would control all the sounds. It forces us to move and test different locations, in a similar way to the audience.
For sure the building was much more than an acoustic space or an instrument. We built a very strange relationship to this architecture: because we almost didn't get out of it during one week, permanently listening to it and thinking of its sound. And trying to reveal its potential voices, testing its reaction to our own electronic voices. We were using it as an extension of our musical tools, as an extension of our equipment. But, of course, it had its own resistance, its limitations. Or maybe we felt like if we were ourselves the sonic extension of this building. Maybe not unlike a boat for a sailor...
CF: I'm curious as to the process behind 'Passerelle'....Are these sounds purely amplified and rendered in their raw state or are they processed further? How much processing/post-processing of the sounds did you do? How much arranging/organizing of sounds took place?
O: The CD published by Dale Lloyd is a recorded walk through the sound installation, an extract, an overview of some moments of this work. It is a selection amongst our recordings done in the space. They were realized acoustically in the space with two condenser microphones, using ORTF stereo configuration. We didn't feel the need for rebuilding something from the recordings. We thought it was self-sufficient. We consider that site-specific sites like sound-installations can't be represented through a CD. Therefore, we are quite aware that this recording is not a documentation but has its own life... For this reason, we didn't want to include explanation and descriptions about the situation in the real space. The listener of the CD may rebuild it.
CF: What current or upcoming projects are you presently working on?
O: We recently finished a project which is a kind of survey about the soundscape of a small village which hosts a thermo-electric plant, "Cordemais écoute l'électricité". And now we are trying to be physically present in the same area ! Our collaborations are the most interesting when we are together in the same location and these days we are living quite far away from each other. Yannick lives in Taiwan, Hughes is regularly visiting Burkina Faso and Christophe stays at home working with the sounds he recorded during a road-movie style trip in the United States... We each develop some activities related to environment, site, architectures and soundscapes. The list is a little bit too long to be described there. We hope to develop another project, Phono3graphy, which is based on field recordings: each of us recording a space simultaneously but from different moving points. The only way for us to develop our project is a long period of collective work and experimentation, possible only as artist residency, and we would like to spend time in Taiwan or in Northern Europe. So we are waiting for a good meeting opportunity!
The annual page is finally up and usually stays up until early March. If you haven't contributed your list yet, send it to the e-mail address on the "contact" page of the a/O site.
A recording label committed to releasing unique and interesting environmental recordings and a range of avant-garde sound art. With the addition of the subdivisions either/OAR and mOAR, a broader spectrum of work was presented than before, from genre-melding electronic music to instrument-based improvisation and composition.
www.and-oar.org