Dick, Robert & Thomas Buckner / Flutes & Voices
Album: | Flutes & Voices | Collection: | General | |
Artist: | Dick, Robert & Thomas Buckner | Added: | Dec 2010 | |
Label: | Mutablemusic |
A-File Activity
Add Date: | 2011-12-18 | Pull Date: | 2012-02-19 | Charts: | Classical/Experimental |
---|
Week Ending: | Feb 5 | Jan 15 | Dec 25 |
---|---|---|---|
Airplays: | 1 | 1 | 1 |
Recent Airplay
1. | Jan 30, 2012: | Ghost Trees
Certain Gravities |
3. | Dec 23, 2011: | Memory Select
Makemake |
|
2. | Jan 14, 2012: | Songs: Cantan
Bones Of The Tongue |
Album Review
tyler haddow
Reviewed 2011-12-10
Reviewed 2011-12-10
Review by Tyler Haddow 12/18/11
Some of the furthest out-there improvisation you’ll find. Barren, organic. This album is filled with desperate, panicked, and bizarre sounds; yet, somehow, it seems almost entirely devoid of human feeling. These ambitious nihilists took it upon themselves to PROVE-- by way of sound-- the radical emptiness of... everything. There is no “whole” (album, song, melody, etc.); there are only series of musical moments. The vocalist’s pipes are rich and grandiose at points, which makes it all the more unnerving. Recommended if you have a principled contempt for existence. No FCC’s. Track reviews on the inside.
Asterisks indicate recommended tracks.
1. (6:09) Pained moaning and other creepy mouth noises develop alongside tribal percussion. Flutes enter in last two minutes.
2. (7:03) Fragmented and panicky (sometimes operatic) vocals. Dark, desperate.
3. (9:18) Lots of short sections, all different. Sharp flute squeals; mouth experiments; minimalist moaning; more mouth experiments.
4. ***(7:38) More absurdity. Develops into disjointed melodic vocal/flute interplay.
5. (4:02) Rough, nasally squealing with some delightfully odd percussion.
6. (4:23) More melodic. Actually takes a concrete form toward the end.
7. ***(3:47) Sedated moaning erupts into vocal insanity.
8. (4:56) A fitting end. Crazed gasping/snorting and flute squeals.
Some of the furthest out-there improvisation you’ll find. Barren, organic. This album is filled with desperate, panicked, and bizarre sounds; yet, somehow, it seems almost entirely devoid of human feeling. These ambitious nihilists took it upon themselves to PROVE-- by way of sound-- the radical emptiness of... everything. There is no “whole” (album, song, melody, etc.); there are only series of musical moments. The vocalist’s pipes are rich and grandiose at points, which makes it all the more unnerving. Recommended if you have a principled contempt for existence. No FCC’s. Track reviews on the inside.
Asterisks indicate recommended tracks.
1. (6:09) Pained moaning and other creepy mouth noises develop alongside tribal percussion. Flutes enter in last two minutes.
2. (7:03) Fragmented and panicky (sometimes operatic) vocals. Dark, desperate.
3. (9:18) Lots of short sections, all different. Sharp flute squeals; mouth experiments; minimalist moaning; more mouth experiments.
4. ***(7:38) More absurdity. Develops into disjointed melodic vocal/flute interplay.
5. (4:02) Rough, nasally squealing with some delightfully odd percussion.
6. (4:23) More melodic. Actually takes a concrete form toward the end.
7. ***(3:47) Sedated moaning erupts into vocal insanity.
8. (4:56) A fitting end. Crazed gasping/snorting and flute squeals.
Track Listing
1. | In The Land Of Perfect Days | 5. | We Are The Walrus | |||
2. | Bones Of The Tongue | 6. | The Bird On The Scene Says Yes | |||
3. | Broadcasted Alive | 7. | Takeout Karma | |||
4. | Certain Gravities | 8. | Makemake |