Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Tim Hecker - Ravedeath, 1972



Montreal is not only home to some internationally acclaimed musicians in the fields of indie rock and electronic music, but also in the abstract world of ambient musics. As Montrealer Tim Hecker is set to release his 8th record in 10 years, his name has become synonymous with the genre.

Via Insound:

Recorded over the period of mostly one day & assisted by Ben Frost in Reykjavik, Iceland & using a pipe organ as the primary sound source, this new piece exists in a nether world between captured live performance & meticulous studio work, melding the two approaches to sonic artifice as a unity. The album is partly an attempt to confront a pervasive negativity surrounding music. Historical rituals of destroying pianos, mountains of pirated CDRs pushed by bulldozers in Eastern Europe, or the melancholy of the digital music era began as sideline motifs which quickly informed the work on this record. Despite that the context is wide open in such a form of musical abstraction, the substance of these immersive compositions showcases Hecker's continued mastery of organizing sound into a visceral near entity.


Montreal's own Professor of Sound Culture at Mcgill University and internationally revered ambient music composer is set to release his new record Ravedeath, 1972 on Kranky February 14th (preorder here).

MP3: Tim Hecker - Hatred Of Music I

(via Altered Zones)

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