Label: Gruenrekorder
エジソンが開発した録音機"ワックス・シリンダー"にて記録された世界各地の自然/環境音を使ったコラージュや、チベット高原に源流のあるメコン川に恩恵を受ける生態系サウンドなど、常に興味深過ぎるコンセプトにて音源制作を行うデュオプロジェクトMerzouga。2019年に発表された本作[De Rerum Natura / Dance of the Elements]は、共和政ローマ期の詩人・哲学者(紀元前99年頃 - 紀元前55年)の思想を音に変換したという、またまた凄い角度からアプローチした面白音響。リスナーが音の広がる世界を旅するというイメージで制作、全編に渡りフィールドレコーディングをネタとした抽象サウンドが飛び交う有機的で心地良い小宇宙。このユニットの作風は素晴らしい。
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In his poem De Rerum Natura (On the Nature of Things) the Roman poet/philosopher Lucretius (c. 99 – c. 55 BCE) explores Epicurean physics and philosophy through richly poetic language and metaphors, as he presents an entire cosmology: based on the principles of atomism, Lucretius tries to explain the nature of the mind and soul, and the development of the world. While some of his ideas have been proven scientifically wrong, some of his thoughts seem strikingly reasonable even for the contemporary reader. Lucretius believes that, while everything in the universe is finite, the smallest elements (“The First Beginnings of Things”) themselves are eternal – moving through the void they collide, create forms and dissolve, just to collide again in order to create new forms.
For Lucretius life is a beautiful chance-driven Dance of the Elements. His ideas, popular and highly controversial in Roman intellectual circles, were soon to be banned and eventually forgotten during the rise of Christianity. The poem was by chance rediscovered in the 15th century by the famous humanist Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459), most likely in the scriptorium of a monastery in Fulda, Germany. During the renaissance it eventually became a foundation stone of modern western philosophy and natural sciences.
When Soila Valkama, the ars acustica-editor of Finnish broadcaster Yleisradio commissioned us to produce a sound-composition, we suggested to her a playful attempt of a sonic translation of Lucretius’ ideas. The listener embarks on a journey in which a universe of sound unfolds. Smallest sonic elements float through space, dark and chaotic, merge to create concrete forms, transform into different consistencies, from water to wind, from stone to dust, steadily in motion in a constant process of becoming and dissolving.
Late in the piece the sounds of mammals and humans arrive, blurring again into a palimpsest-like structure when the circle is closing.
We used field-recordings of nature, as an analogue for the “concrete forms” that are created by the colliding elements, but also concrete musical structures: fragments of melodies, tonalities, and rhythmic patterns in contrast to the more abstract material. Intertwined with the sound-composition we encounter fragments of Lucretius’ text in English and in Latin, carefully adapted and translated by Janko, and spoken by his brother, the actor Stefko Hanushevsky. The radio-piece consists of six chapters, transposing the structure of Lucretius’ six books into the compositional structure.