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Associated Sine Tone Services [CD]

価格: 2,277円(税込)
Label: Flag Day Recordings

ジャケットデザインも素晴らしい電子音楽!!エリアン・ラディーグのオマージュ作品なども作っているアナログ・オシレーターの使い手Jeremy Young、激シブのインスタレーションで知られるカナダのサウンドアーティストNicolas Bernier、オランダの人気作家MachinefabriekことRutger Zuydervelt、個人でも興味深い活動を展開する三者が"正弦波オシレーター"のサウンドを軸にデザインした電子音楽作品[Associated Sine Tone Services]。フィルター、スタック、プロセッシングを使用、アルバム全体をアナログサウンドの創造的アプローチと仕上げた浮遊感と催眠要素の強いピュアなエレクトロニクス集。









Associated Sine Tone Services (ASTS) is a new conceptual collaboration between analog oscillator wielders Jeremy Young (Montreal, CAN), Nicolas Bernier (Montreal, CAN) and Rutger Zuydervelt (Schiedam, NL). This record was entirely generated using sine wave oscillators and an array of electronic filters, stacks, and processing.

Although this project initially started with a bouquet of material put forth by Young to start, each track would eventually coalesce around the vision and momentum of one of the members individually, creating pocket productions that make the album in full, a diverse compendium of creative approaches to analog sound design.

Eschewing the codes and lexicons of “library music” here—despite the tongue-in-cheek reference to a canonical analog tape audio box in the artwork and graphic design, and the cheeky name of the project itself—the trio opted rather for a pop-melodic approach, which elevates each artist’s creative voice and personality. This is music, over sound design, contrary to what listeners might expect from an album entirely built from sine waves and the analog fidelity of vintage studio tools.

Like navigating a strange dreamstate, the score feels moody and cinematic at times, flowing melodically and rhythmically in moments accompanied by velvety textures and dense timbres with tertiary twinkles and artifacts occasionally vying for the listener’s attention. Hilariously, this entire endeavor was actually drafted in a dream by Young in 2023, in which this exact trio was on stage in a dark underground club, all dressed in lab coats, adorned with their signal generators creating music together. The following morning, Young got to work on an initial bank of oscillator loops and sent both the audio and the proposal to Bernier and Zuydervelt.