Akira Rabelais Caduceus

Posted On: May 19, 2010
Posted In: , ,
Comments: No Responses

On his samadisound debut, Spellewauerynsherde, Akira Rabelais crafted austere settings to found recordings of Icelandic songs of lament…

His follow-up, Caduceus, is a different beast – a study of guitar and extreme distortion that’s both harsh and mesmerising. samadhisound founder David Sylvian describes it as “caustically romantic”: “Akira’s recording presents you with an auditory experience quite unlike any other. It’s by turns a brutal and discomforting ride. Outside of the full-on audio assault, there’s unsettling disquiet in its quietude. Once heard it won’t be forgotten and for those seeking out recorded music that is transformative, experiential, this material has that potency.”

Raised in Texas, Rabelais played guitar in a series of Austin-based bands throughout the 80′s before moving into electronic music, going on to study at Bennington College and the California Institute of Arts. Rabelais recalls, “I think the first glimmer of Caduceus came in the summer of 1996, in a Milan hotel as I was suffering through food poisoning and jet lag… all the water trying leave my body at once, while I was working on source for a show. I reverted to a former self, sometime in the late 80′s, an echo of my Austin days spent playing in dreamy industrial bands with aggressive distortion.”

To create Caduceus, Rabelais processed recordings of guitar through the Argeïphontes Lyre, a software instrument of his own design. It’s a decade-old codebase that’s written like a poem and tended like a garden: as Rabelais explains, his work comes from a process of “music driving software, and software feeding music.” “I was always making little instruments as a child, lots of odd stringed things and percussion bits … metal plates along a barbed-wire fence. I think AL descends from this bloodline. It scratches my four year old self’s itch to ring metal plates with a bb-gun.”

Opening cut “seduced by the silence” stretches the guitar into a screeching, unnatural noise, the attack amplified and the sustain panned aggressively back and forth while other tones crest high above it: obvious manipulations without an obvious motive. Fifteen delicate seconds follow before “then the substanceless blue,” a masterful arrangement of textures: a distant, nostalgic minor riff on the guitar that is buried under more sounds, some clean, some hopelessly warped. Its counterpart, “where to let our scars fall in love,” repeats the figure from the first but with far harsher static, groaning like a smashed transistor radio. – Samadhisound

Track List:

1. Seduced by the Silence
2. On the Little In-betweens
3. Then the Substanceless Blue

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.


4. Where to Let Our Scars Fall in Love
5. With the Gift of Your Small Breath
6. And the Permanence of Smoke or Stars
7. Night Dances Through Heaven’s Black Amnesia
8. Comme un Ange Enivré d’un Soleil Radieux
9. Surface of Soft Steps, Violets Whisper
10. In a Cadence of Vanishing
11. And Emptiness Over Eyes
12. As Fingers Trace Around the Rim of a Colourless Sky
13. A Door Opens Backwards

Pre order from Samadhisound store here

www.samadhisound.com
www.akirarabelais.com