Albums: KARLHEINZ ESSL & AGNES HEGINGER – Out of the Blue; CAGE CABARRETT – Covil Radiophonic Workshop; HUI-CHUN LIN – Selected Improvisation Works (all XS Records 2010)

XS Records of Lisbon have been one of the best netlabels around that specialises in what the Wire used to call ‘Outer Limits’ music. All of their recordings have been professionally put together, and all have been available for free. Now, after 72 releases, the label is to shut up shop as the founders concentrate on other things. As a parting shot, they’ve left the world three new albums of improvised music.

Karlheinz Essl has long been a mainstay of the label. His collaboration with soprano Agnes Heginger, Out of the Blue, was recorded at the Essl Museum in Vienna in 2009. The six tracks are comprised of three collaborations, two solo works by Heginger and one by Essl. It’s a distinctly mixed bag. Too much is random clatter (Essl’s solo piece) or irritating vocal tics and general arseing about. There are two tracks, though, that make the project worthwhile. The closing scat ‘n’ drone piece Groovin’ Out comes across as Phill Niblock meets Ella Fitzgerald. It’s Action Rituelle that truly stands out. It’s the one track where Heginger really shows what she can do with her voice. Essl provides a backdrop of loops and samples, including suitably angelic choral bursts that sound like they could have come straight out of an eighties Fairlight emulator. Over this, Heginger pulls out an extraordinary performance of astonishing purity. Like something beamed in from a fourteenth century Latin Mass, she creates an atmosphere of calm wonder and great beauty. Stunning.

Agnes Heginger

Cage Cabarrett create a barrage of electrostatic noise, radio samples and random noise, often built around some distinctly non-musical theme. The three parts of Covil Radiophonic Worshop are dense with the sound of radio stations, static hiss and assorted ephemera. The first closes with an assault on Pink Floyd’s Wish You Were Here that somehow emerges unscathed. The third accompanies a fascinating lecture on the rise of religion in early human society. I found myself listening to that, and found the accompanying sounds more of a distraction than anything else. Final track Persona is a starker thing of doomy recitation and deep drone.

Finally, the one I had the most hope for is actually the most flawed of the three. Hui-Chun Lin is a Taiwanese born cellist who lives in Germany and who specialises in improv works. The four tracks here were recorded with the accompaniment of pianist Dimitrij Golovanov and drummer (the aptly named) Beat Freisen. It’s an audience recording and has a slightly shrill sound, although the main problem is the constant inane chatter that carries on throughout the performance. It may be a ploy to counteract that, but Freisen barely leaves a space unfilled in a barrage of percussion that often sounds like a drum kit falling down a flight of stairs, and equally often bears little relation to what the other two are trying to do. Golovanov is more subtle, bringing in some jazzy flourishes, but at times he also seems to lose patience and start randomly bashing keys. Hui-Chun Lin often sounds like a gooseberry on her own date, but when she rises above the mess she shows her mettle superbly. I’d like to hear more of what she can do in a more sympathetic setting.

Hui-Chun Lin

So, farewell then XS Records. Some of the releases over the past few years were a bit of a trial to listen to. Most were interesting, and some were terrific. What they all shared was a willingness to explore sounds and to always try to come up with something unique.

Website
www.archive.org/details/xs-records

Album: ESSL.BURGER – Live (XS Records XS-59 2009)

esslburger-live_CD

Karlheinz Essl and Klaus Burger are both musicians with a pedigree on the European experimental music scene. Burger is a renowned tuba player from Germany who also plays didgeridoo and cimbasso (pictured above), a brass instrument which is a cross between a trombone and a tuba. Essl is Austrian and plays guitar, as well as being a skilled sound manipulator and electronic musician. The two occasionally collaborate on live improvisations, and Essl.Burger Live contains pieces from two shows that took place in Austria in 2007.

Things don’t start particularly promisingly. The first half of the first track seems to consist mainly of random stabs of brass, didgeridoo drones and clattering, arrhythmic percussion, but as it progresses, it gets increasingly cosmic and atmospheric as the two players seem to find a common wavelength. It ends, frustratingly, just when the two seemed to have found a hypnotic groove – perhaps they sensed they’d taken the piece to a place from where they had nowhere further to go but to repeat themselves. The second piece recorded at the 2007 Artacs festival in St Anton is sinister and brooding, with sporadic episodes of brief violence. It ends in a contemplative calm at odds with what preceded it.

Tracks three and four were recorded three months later, and feel both more structured and paradoxically more adventurous. The first is magnificent, with a filmic atmosphere, lonely brass figures, almost choral drones and an effortless sense of space and malevolence. Slow and drawn out, there are moments of loud terror that keep the listener on edge for the whole 15 minutes. It’s an aural horror movie that segues into the mad march of the final track, where the tuba stomps relentlessly like an unstoppable monster, surrounded by electronic screams that resemble the death rattle of its victims (including one who sounds like Sooty’s mate Sweep). Spooky stuff.

Fans of Supersilent will love this. Those who aren’t generally keen on improv might find that this isn’t as ‘difficult’ as a lot of music in the genre. It has moments of beauty and moments of madness, but you always get the feeling that Burger and Essl know exactly what they’re doing. Give it a listen – it’s free from the XS Records website.

Tracks
1 Live at artacts 07 – take #1 17:19
2 Live at artacts 07 – take #2 15:48
3 Live at the Essl Museum – take #1 14:50
4 Live at the Essl Museum – take #2 7:13

Websites
www.essl.at
www.klaus-burger.com
xsrecordsptnetlabel.blogspot.com