Label: VENTIL RECORDS
超傑作!!電子音楽史における二代巨頭ピエール・シェフェール & ピエール・アンリへのアンチテーゼ的作品!!オーストリアのグラーツ出身、ウィーン音楽大学でピアノ、作曲、エレクトロアコースティックを学び、現在も作曲、電子音楽、即興、器楽の分野で様々な活躍を展開、主にプリペアドピアノ及びライブエレクトロニクス録音を80年代より発信し続ける孤高の女性コンポーザーKatharina Klement。長きに渡る活動の中で初の個人名義LPと思われる電子音楽作品[Vessel 1.2 / Suite Pour Une Femme Seule]。タイトルから分かる様に、ピエール・シェフェール & ピエール・アンリの楽曲[symphony pour un homme seul]への70年後のアンチテーゼとして作曲、近年行った数多くのソロ演奏、また伝統的なオーストリアの民族楽器であるツィターを素材とした爆音ミュージック・コンクレート長編。お見逃しなく。
»If Pierre Schaeffer and Pierre Henry could invent a symphony pour un homme seul in 1950, I feel compelled to launch a suite pour une femme seule 70 years later.« (Katharina Klement)
With »vessel 1.2« & »suite pour une femme seule«, the Vienna based composer Katharina Klement presents a precise arranged album where instrumental approaches (piano on Side A and Zither on Side B) are almost invisibly connected to electronic manipulations. Due to Klement’s compositional skills, each of the two pieces easily keeps up the tension over the whole duration. The quality and focus she puts into each single sound, it’s appearance as well as it’s disappearance is eerie, but especially shows off in the first section of vessel 1.2. Though improvisation plays a main part in her work and also for this record, nothing seems to happen without being well thought of.
Side A, »vessel 1.2« is a condensate of Klement’s numerous solo performances in recent years, which have undergone constant changes and improvements throughout the time. Klement herself describes this as a process of sharpening. In several transcriptions, an originally improvisational sequence was changed and expanded by precisely noting it down, only to be released to the realm of improvisation later on. Klement has defined an individual inner-piano vocabulary and through the use of electronics she stunningly expands and modifies these sounds, till the piano becomes a changeable sounding body; a soft and malleable vessel.
Side B, »suite pour une femme seule« has also developed continuously over the last few years, planned as an alternative live-setup without a piano: the traditional Austrian folk-instrument zither acts as a mediator between instrumental and electronic approaches. At the end of the piece Klement fills the space with a noise that implements a very peculiar sensation of aggression. Maybe an angry side-blow on the two big names of the (french) history electronic music, the inventors of the musique-concréte - Pierre Henry and Pierre Schaeffer. If you know about the troublesome relationship Eliane Radigue had with the two monstrous egos of her big-bosses back in the days, Klement’s subtile punch from a female composer’s perspective, who has been around for years, seems more than accurate.