2013
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Date of release: 28.10.13
Lenght: 41:39 min
Artwork & Image: Edu Comelles.
Format: 80 Copies of a Limited edition. BLACK-CD. Black Carton Sleeve + Free Download Gift (Mp3 320 Kbps)

Extra 20 Copies of a Limited edition. BLACK-CD. Black Carton Sleeve + Free Download Gift (Mp3 320 Kbps)

SOLD OUT
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This work has been assembled and composed following a strict set of rules. No conventional instruments have been used during the production of this album. All sound sources come from various field recordings captured on the described locations.

No DSP effects has been applied apart from slight down-pitching as pointed out forward on this text. All sound sources are related somehow with issues such as dereliction, abandonment or miss use. All sounds recorded in Spain, a country falling apart.

Recorded and mixed by Edu Comelles. Recordings done between 2011 ad 2013 using a Zoom H4n, Contact Mics and a pair of Rode NT5 condenser mics. Some recordings on Dry Land, Stir & Season and Boiro have been down-pitched with Ableton Live and PaulStretch. Mixed and mastered using Ableton Live 8, Logic Pro 8 and Audacity.

Sounds in Chairs for an abandoned classroom performed by Crearqció. No foxes or flies were harmed during the production of Dry Land. The fox was already dead and the flies were feasting on the fox. Recordings on Boiro captured jointly with Juanjo Palacios during production of "Senda Sonora". Additional sound performance by Eva Fauste on Stir & Season.

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Many thanks to: Sara Galán, Crearqció Valencia (Júlia, Maria, Jaume, Manuel, Marta, Ana, Sara and many more...), Juanjo Palacios and Graham Bell.

Para Eva.

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Download Gift:

08. Sinia
09. Elevator
10. Sinking Harbour
11. Farewell

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Images:





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Reviews:

The country in question being Spain, where all the sounds here were recorded under a set of rules which required that no conventional instruments be used. So essentially these are field recordings though I believe some of the sounds have intentional human agency. The elements on each track are described clearly, from chairs being pushed around in a university to the activities of flies around a dead fox to abandoned trucks to railroad friction and much more; all "are related somehow with issues such as dereliction, abandonment or misuse". You almost get the sense the works are composed--the chair piece, for instance, doesn't sound all that far from a contemporary work for string orchestra; there's a sense of orchestral structure at play. The flies serve as a kind of pizzicato over moans from a watermill that carry an amazing feedback quality, again with a real sense of composition. This is the case throughout, making the designation "field recording" feel entirely off the mark. And these are strong, muscular structures as well, quite plastic and forceful. Crucially, Comelles always retains a fine sense of air and space, even if that air is ozone- and mildew-tinged. It allows the pieces to rotate smoothly, to consistently offer different aural vantage points. Really impressive and moving; my qualms about field recordings fall by the wayside when they're as strongly reconfigured as is the case here.

An enclosed code also gives you access to a few excellent downloadable files from the label site.

If you have the slightest interest in this area, don't let "A Country Falling Apart" pass you by.

Brian Olewnick, Just Outside

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How often do you see on a cover that involves a piece of music that has 'flies over a dead fox' for sound source (actually: how often do you get that on a release) that says: 'no foxes or flies were harmed during the production of Dry Land. The fox was already dead and the flies were feasting on the fox'. The liner notes are specific when it comes to recording gear use, which pieces use sounds that have been down pitched with Ableton Live and PaulStretch, but none of the others and that 'all sound sources are related somehow with issues such as dereliction, abandonment or miss use'. This is quite an interesting release as it deals with both locations and location recordings. These recordings have been made using whatever debris was found on the site, and seems to be mainly consisting of sheets of metal. In that respect the music of Edu Comelles, which seems to me someone I never heard of, reminds me of ABGS who recorded inside a bunker ages ago, Lethe's work inside large empty spaces (although Comelles doesn't always use large empty spaces with natural reverb) or Organum but then working outdoors. Lots of bowing metal plates onto metal plates, creating a bunch of rich overtones, with occasionally the strangest field recordings, such as indeed flies on a dead animal, or, more common, a firestove. Lots of banging with metal doors, trucks, containers, even trams and chains, but the result - and I am not sure in what way this was all edited from larger chunks of recordings - is at times a finely cut collage or, in the case of the trams in 'U-Turn' a fine piece of multi-layered tram recordings. Quite a fine release and certainly a new to look out for in the future.

Frans De Ward, Vitaly Weekly.

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Edu Comelles is one half of the duo Cello + Laptop and founder of Audiotalaia, a platform for the diffusion, promotion and production of experimental music, sound art, ambient music and field recordings. He has also released a number of albums of field recording-based sound works, both under his own name and under the alias Mensa. “A Country Falling Apart” is the latest addition to his discography, and was created entirely using sounds recorded out ‘in the field’, with only minimal editing in the form of an occasional shift of pitch. However, it is clear from listening that these sounds have also been carefully scored, either through their arrangement in post-production, their performance on-site, or a mix of both.

As perhaps befits a work intended to convey the chaotic state of Comelles’ native Spain following the economic upheavals of the past few years, the album is dominated by metallic clangs, screeches, throbs, and other sharp sounds. Neglect and abandonment make themselves audible in the squeal of rusted joints echoing in empty spaces, yet do these acoustic phenomena testify to more than this? And how could such testimony be distinguished from the thoughts and emotions we project onto the material at the mere mention of the word ‘crisis’? Treading a thin line between externally-imposed emotional content and the meanings arising from the shape and form of the music itself, “A Country Falling Apart” throws the tired dichotomy of subjective experience and objective document into disarray: the distinctions between projected rage, desolation, and despair, an internal aesthetic logic that necessitates, for example, the irruption of silence to allow reverberate tails to decay, and the groaning of the very architecture under the strain of economic collapse is at times very difficult to draw.

There are quieter moments here too, the gentleness of “Stir & Season” approaching an almost serene beauty; at other times the music’s punch is only complete with the addition of a bitterly ironic title, as in the case of bonus track “The Welfare State” (one minutes of silence followed by two and a half of rubbish being emptied from a dumper truck). The object of a field recording is always fully present and in that sense always already political, as all objects are. Yet getting field recordings to do politics is no easy task, and involves negotiating some tough questions and assumptions regarding the nature of truth, the status of the document, and the ability of both the microphone and its operator to bear witness to empirical events. “A Country Falling Apart” is one of the bravest yet also most competent attempts I’ve heard to grasp this bull by the horns, the moment when literal description tips over into emotional feedback being relentlessly contested, deferred, challenged, and embraced. After catastrophe, what field recording, what art, can henceforth be contemplated? With this release, Comelles brings us a little closer to finding out.

Nathan Thomas, Fluid Radio.

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EL SO DE LA CRISI

S’acostuma a dir que la música experimental viu en la seva pròpia bombolla i que, degut a la seva forma sonora tant abstracta, on moltes vegades no hi ha ni referències harmòniques ni rítmiques, és complicat establir-hi una vinculació directe amb el present més enllà del dia i hora en que es composa o interpreta. El músic i artista sonor Edu Comelles, tarragoní afiançat a València, està obrint nous camins que fan que aquesta aquesta correlació entre la música i el context social en què es produeix sigui més natural i conseqüent.

D’una banda, al costat de Juanjo Palacios va comisariar el projecte discogràfic “Sonidos en recesión” (Lea, 2013), en què 28 artistes sonors i fonografistes aportaven una peça sonora inspirada en la pregunta: “a què sona la crisi econòmica?” L’objectiu, però, era fugir del soroll obvi de la protesta (crits d’una manifestació?) i que “reflecteixin acústicament un temps complexe i convuls com l’actual”.

I d’altra banda, amb el seu darrer disc, “A Country Falling Apart” (Audiotalaia, 2013), set talls de muntatges a base de gravacions de camp realitzades en espais afectats per la crisi econòmica: “totes les fons sonores estan relaciones d’alguna manera amb temes com la negligència, l’abandonament o la deixadesa.” Tots els sons són enregistrats a Espanya, “un país que es fa miques”. I la majoria a València, bressol de la corrupció immobiliària i de la construcció desmesurada. Comelles ha posat el micròfon en una aula sense alumnes, en un molí d’aigua abandonat, locals industrials buits i altres llocs paralitzats. El resultat és un compendi de sons inquietantment familiars –com un grup de mosques al voltant d’una guineu morta– entre els quals, en algun moment, sembla que s’escoli alguna psicofonia. És el nostre jo interior que sembla cridar auxili.

Olga Ábalos, Nativa.
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Licencia de Creative Commons

A Country Falling Apart by Edu Comelles is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 3.0 Unported License. Creado a partir de la obra en http://audiotalaia.bandcamp.com/album/atp003-empra-mots. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available athttp://www.educomelles.con.
Date of release: 03.10.13
Format: FILE - MP3 / WAV 
Lenght: 17:45 min
Artwork: Audiotalaia
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Carlos Suárez is, now a days, one of the most interesting musicians exploring the compositional possibilities of field recordings in Spain. His work has been widely regarded as a revelation on how to present processed field recordings as elements of a very bast and complex symphonic music system or language.

Moreover, Suárez has been able to develop something quite bold in the realm of field recordings, this is his ability to have a certain sound identity that defines his oeuvre. Through the usage of silence, textures and noise, Suárez has been able to create a very personal and creative sound world that ultimately becomes a language by itself.

After his acclaimed work “Transit Mundi” (Luscinia 2012) Suarez has been developing that very own language, following that premise, a month ago Exp_Net released “O Tempo Do Desengano” which explored similar accents and phrases such as the ones found on this album but reversing the sound sources. In the album at Exp_Net Suarez focuses on the us e of a modular synth (Doepfer A-100) and here, with Fin Da Terra, Suárez tries to do the opposite, to work mainly with field recordings and just a bit of analogue synthesis.

Fin da Terra is a compositional exploration of sounds gathered in costal areas, beaches, breakwaters and different locations in the Atlantic galician coast, where Suárez currently lives. What’s interesting of this piece is the usage of those recordings and how they have been moulded to become “voices” at the service of Suárez sound language.

Also, Fin Da Terra uses field recordings as a canvas, a surface where to play different experiments and combinations. The soundscapes are relegated and become background to the sonic accents that define Carlos Suárez oeuvre, even, he allows himself to add, here and there, elements such as a modular synthesizer that appears hidden but present if we carefully listen as a reminder of his previous work on Exp_Net.

The overall conclusion is that Fin Da Terra cannot be understood if not listened after “Transit Mundi” and “O Tempo Do Desengaño”, all of it form a consequent evolution and exemplification of creative process.

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Credits:

Composed and performed by Carlos Suárez. 2013. Field recording and prepared objects with contact mics. All recordings by Carlos Suárez (European Acoustic Heritage project, EAH), except: "?Amarras Velero" Recorded by Chinowski Garachana (Internet archive).? "Praia Barra" recorded by Jesús Otero Seoane (EAH).

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Licencia de Creative Commons



Fin da Terra by Carlos Suárez is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-SinObraDerivada 3.0 Unported License. Creado a partir de la obra en https://archive.org/details/at068CarlosSuarez. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://www.audiotalaia.net.
Date of release: 03.10.13
Format: FILE - MP3 / WAV 
Lenght: 30:54 min
Artwork: Audiotalaia
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Sometimes randomness and serendipity get on the way while doing things, sometimes even, those two concepts take control in beautiful manners. Maybe this is the case, maybe not, but even though here we are sharing the work by Barcelona based artist Lali Barrière.

We have been talking about the work of Lali for quite a few time, I was making very simple questions and Lali answering with many more questions, simple and complicated. At certain point I thought that maybe neither of us had a clue of what we were doing (she doing music, I pretending to be a “producer”). Not because of ignorance, but because in this sound world one can get lost looking for the horizon. Not in terms of loosing your way, just entering in the realm of the unknown, the new; just like if we were entering an off-road territory where anything can happen, even magic.

A few months back in a rather weird encounter with Lali, she was about to begin her concert, preparing all the little objects, spoons, egg cutters, sticks, etc... A child in the audience asked his mother: Is she gonna do some magic?

“Unknotted” is an album about instincts, about moments, about a fabrication of an environment or an event - Lali mentioned that making this album was like if she invented a concert at her studio, trying to get into the audience-musician dialogue -. Unknotted is a canned extract of the work of Lali Barrière, maybe its pure perversion to ask her for this kind of “finished work”, maybe this doesn’t need to be canned, or maybe we can ask ourselves why not.

Finally I think this album is about process, challenge and adaptation to a given situation or request, a triumph of details, a personal confrontation, and finally what we most like in Audiotalaia: to receive a gift like that, the result of a creative process that challenges us and the author herself.

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Live Recording:

Live recording + talk (spanish) of Lali Barrière’s concert at La Envidia, Casa Taller the 16th of February 2013 in Valencia. Recordings mixed an mastered by Edu Comelles.



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Credits:

All tracks performed and mixed by Lali Barrière. 2013

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Licencia de Creative Commons



Unknotted by Lali Barrière is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0 Internacional License. Creado a partir de la obra en https://archive.org/details/at067LaliBarriere. Puede hallar permisos más allá de los concedidos con esta licencia en lalibarriere.net
Date of release: 09.09.13
Format: FILE - MP3 / WAV 
Lenght: 30:54 min
Artwork: Martí Guillem / Audiotalaia
Photo: Antonio Sánchez
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Martí Guillem is one of those thorough musicians always playing, experimenting, mixing, collaborating and even organizing things to do in the realm of sound. As an improviser he has been involved with various ensembles presenting collaborative projects such as the ultra-noise ensemble AttA (with our dear Avelino Saavedra), LOM or ESOC (és amor) a strange project that could be defined as if Lady Gaga and Merzbow were dating in Valencia.

Apart from the variety of collaborative projects Martí is involved, he also has time to work out his personal projects. Those are always a combination of pretty simple elements of our daily live and a very precise study of the sound capabilities of them. It seems that Martí is obsessed by the idea of taking advantage of the most simple elements and to expand them into a whole world of possibilities.

The two pieces Martí Guillem gladly delivered to us are a testimony of his recent explorations on sound and improvisation around two simple objects or ideas. VIBRASÒ is a an improvised piece done using speakers as instruments and instruments as speakers. Through the usage of vibrations and air pressure from synths, Guillem make different surfaces, materials and objects vibrate and therefor resonate. Through a very simple idea Martí is capable of unveiling a whole universe of sonorities, textures, drones made of the very essence of sound: air vibrating.

In RotorNoRoto a modified turntable motor is the mechanism in charge of moving things and therefor make them sound. This improvisation uses the constant rotating movement of a turntable to deliver textures, rhythms and drones. Even simpler than VIBRASÒ but equally powerful if the musician is as skilled as Guillem. And that’s what’s all about: about being able of engaging the listener, viewer, spectator into something as (in terms of sound) raw as this.

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Tracklist:

01. Vibrasò
02. RotorNoRoto

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Video documentation:

Accompanying the two composed versions of VIBRASÒ and RotorNoRoto, we are glad to present two videos by Damià Jordà, recorded at Plutón.cc on June 2013.





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Live Recording:

Live recording of Marti Guillem’s concert at Off_Herzios the last 14th of December 2012 at Kessler Battaglia Gallery in Valencia. Recordings mixed an mastered by Benigno Moreno.



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Credits:

All tracks performed and mixed by Martí Guillem Císcar. All sounds recorded at La Granja, Xàtiva (Spain) between 18th and 20th of July 2013.

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Licencia de Creative Commons



ViBRASÓ - RotorNoRoto by Martí Guillem is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0 Internacional License. Creado a partir de la obra en https://archive.org/details/at066MartiGuillem. Puede hallar permisos más allá de los concedidos con esta licencia en http://marti-net.blogspot.com.es/
Date of release: 15.07.13
Format: FILE - MP3 / WAV 
Lenght: 34:04 min
Artwork: Audiotalaia
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“Uéyiga”, in the local language of Extremadura (bast territory at the Spanish western border with Portugal) means trace, footprint or marks on the ground, left there from past activities. This is what is all about on the fourth album by Jorge Marredo - this time signing in as himself - and leaving apart the “Satisfaccion Lab” nickname, with he has been releasing for the past years.

The four left traces found on this album are a rabbit hole in which Marredo enters, starting up with a clear image, a simple idea, a barely audible soundscape that early is being transformed until no recognition through signal processing with various synthesisers. By the half of the first track we are already in a multilayered scenario of analogue signals processed in various ways. So, the soundscape that started up the album as a clear statement, just fans out, and dissolves into a bast array of textures, rhythms and environments.

Traces are left of various abstract soundscapes present through the album, scenarios in which Marredo, through analogue signal processing devotes himself to the craft of synthesised sound, still even that we hear echoes of the psychodelic and kosmische music he loves to perform an explore (for instance with the duo project Marredo & Montag) this is pretty much a textural, and soundscapist-point-of-view album, even that those electric signals place us in the uncanny territory of machine sound we cannot forget about what started it all, the soundscape, or field recordings. It’s all there, as a trace, a footprint, something that doesn’t needs to be there because Marredo is very capable of listening through soundscapes and present them under his own umbrella, rearranged, transformed and created from nothing but electric signals.

Truly a pleasure to have him in our catalogue, specially when we are very focused on releasing works by our local artists, working neighbourly a few blocks away of the Audiotalaia Headquarters, just like Avelino Saavedra, Jean Montag and a few more.

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Tracklist:

01. Cuatro
02. 4
03. أربعة
04. IV

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Credits:

All tracks produced and arranged by Jorge Marredo in 2013. All sounds produced and treated the following gear Moog LittleFatty, Dave Smith Mopho, Roland JP8080 and a Novation Supernova polyphonic synthesizer.

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Reviews:

Jorge Marredo’s ‘Uyiga’ is a hyperactive work. Pieces jump up and down hysterically. Noise bursts forth with little in the way of conventional structure. Elements suggest an abstract approach akin to Editions Mego’s stranger artists. Most of this appears more interested in analog or older versions of experimentation. Immediate digital pastures are apparent but lack the glossy sheen. Rather these sounds prefer to muck around in lower fidelity, with true grit surrounding them. Little samples occasionally even break through the dense clouds and uneasy frequencies. Instability is the heart of each of these songs as they try (with some success) to tear themselves apart for fun.

‘Cuatro’ starts things off with a near-natural insect sound. This is clouded up with layer upon layer until the original source material is defeated in exchange for an aural field that strongly resembles chaos. By the end everything is stripped away to reveal an extremely grating high pitched noise. On ‘4’ Jorge Marredo approximates the pulse-orientated work of Florian Hecker. Right in the background sounds try to better define themselves yet ultimately fail. Due to the constant pulsating mass this track develops a rhythm of sorts.

‘?’ is a palette cleanser. Little goes on that could be considered outright abrasive. Compared to the previous tracks it is almost mellow. Of course ending it is the colossal ‘IV’ which goes virtually everywhere. A neat little synopsis of everything that precedes it the track handles deep bass rumbles, high pitched noise, grey drones, and assorted filtered samples. ‘Uyiga’ overall is a complete trip of an album.

Beach Slot

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Así empieza la exposición del nuevo trabajo de Jorge Marredo en la web de AUDIOTALAIA, donde lo presentaron hace unos días.

Por lo que respecta a mi humilde opinión y, después de haberle dedicado cuatro escuchas casi cinsecutivas, puedo declarar sin temor a equivocarme, que me encuentro ante el mejor trabajo de Jorge Marredo hasta la fecha. Como bien dice la presentación, Marredo ha dejado rastro durante unos cuantos años, explorando caminos con distintos escenarios, colaborando con otros artistas, haciéndose a sí mismo y aprendiendo sobre la marcha, algo muy significativo y muy elogiable en un artista sonoro.

Ahora, con todas esas huellas, todas esas semillas dejadas por el camino, Marredo ha recolectado sus propios frutos y con ellos ha elaborado la mejor receta hasta el momento, un trabajo que significará, indudablemente, un antes y un después en su trayectoria artística. Son apenas 34 minutos que saben a poco, pero que si se saborean bien te dejan saciado de calidad sonora, algo que muy pocos trabajadores del sonido saben conseguir.

Obviamente estas opiniones son mías y cada cual sacará sus conclusiones después de haber escuchado este disco, pero creo no andar errado si digo que los seguidores de Marredo y de la música electrónica creativa en general, lo vais a disfrutar.

Que así sea...

Stahlabrik, Wet Dreams.

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El músico Jorge Marredo, un habitual por estos lares, ha sacado un nuevo trabajo.

En su blog Satisfaccion Lab (http://satisfaccionlab.blogspot.com.es/) podemos leer su carta de presentación.

" Uéyiga " surge de la profundización en la linea de exploración de " Synthscape ", es decir la (re)creación de paisajes sonoros sintéticos a traves del uso del sintetizador. En este caso con una mayor atención a las texturas y a los timbres, mediante el uso de grabaciones de campo filtradas por los propios sintetizadores, por el uso de distintos sintetizadores y de distinto tipo. Hace unos días Audiotalaia ha publicado mi nuevo trabajo " Uéyiga ", con una fantástica portada diseñada por Edu Comelles , quien además me ayudó con algunas ideas para mejorar el resultado final."

Y hay que reconocer que la portada sí que deja "huella". El tipo de portadas que me llaman la atención. Sencilla, que no simple, pero con ese "algo" que te gusta.

En cuanto al disco, que he tenido que escuchar varias veces, pues como sabe el bueno de Jorge, un servidor es un auténtico inculto en materia electrónica tan experimental y vanguardista, y por tanto intento impregnarme bien de su sonido.

La verdad es que una buena dosis de Uéyiga no viene mal a nadie de vez en cuando.

Tal como él mismo dice, el disco es un continuación en busca de nuevos cauces sonoros que ya inició en Synthscape, y a mi la verdad es que este tipo de cauces me siguen llamando mucho la atención.

Cuatro temas, tres de ellos relativamente cortos para lo que nos tiene acostumbrados.

Y este tipo de minutaje me atrae más, y es el que recomiendo que escuchen profanos en este tipo de música, porque es la mejor manera de adentrarse en el mismo.

Sin embargo, curiosamente, el cuarto tema, el que cierra el álbum, con una duración mucho más larga, es el más me ha atrapado.

Los caminos que recorre, los sutiles cambios sonoros que van avanzando de manera sutil y casi de forma inapreciable, resulta un viaje muy corto.

El lo sabe, y yo lo sé, (y lo peor es que sé mentir nada bien), que no es este el tipo de música que suelo escuchar.

Pero eso no impide que cuando escucho los discos de Jorge Marredo, mi cerebro se desconecta de la realidad, se sumerge en un estado que sólo se recupera cuando pasan segundos de haber finalizado el disco y se percata de que ha vuelto a la realidad.

Gracias por acordarte del blog para poner el disco y espero que tu trayectoria siga siendo tan fructífera como esta siendo hasta ahora.

Tal como están los tiempos para todos, pero para este tipo de sonidos más, que uno vaya saliendo adelante es más que difícil.

Globomedia

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Licencia de Creative Commons



Uéyiga by Jorge Marredo is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-SinObraDerivada 3.0 Unported License. Creado a partir de la obra en https://archive.org/details/at065JorgeMarredo. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://www.audiotalaia.net.

Grabaciones de las dos últimas jornadas del ciclo Off_Herzios en el Museo de Bellas Artes San Pio de Valencia, durante los días 22 y 23 de junio de 2013.



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Credits:

Víctor Trescolí: Toy Piano / Electronica
Sara Galán: Cello / Electrónica
Wade Matthews: Electrónica
Javier Pedreira: Guitarra / Efectos
Jorge Marredo: Electrónica
LOM:Antonio Sánchez: Electrónica / Avelino Saavedra: Objetos, efectos / Jean Montag: Sintetizadores / Edu Comelles: Ipad / Grabaciones de Campo / Martí Guillem: Objetos, efectos. / Jorge Marredo: Electrónica.

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Date of release: 10.06.13
Format: FILE - MP3 / AIFF 
Lenght: 33:19 min
Artwork: Audiotalaia
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It’s been a while since Javier Piñango released his first instalment of the I.r.real project on Exp_Net (label run by himself and Jaime Munárriz). Since the first of the I.r.real series we have been able to see a ascent evolution on the language, characteristics and aesthetics of the solo project by Javier Piñango. If you hear each of the releases one can grasp this evolution, and the subsequent improvement of each of the works. Still, this doesn’t mean that the first ones weren’t good enough, just an evolution, that seen in perspective it can be considered as a tremendous achievement.

So after approaching the “I.r.real” issue from various points of views until the latest “I.r.real Metal Music”, here we have the “Space Music” instalment in which Piñango aims to present a very personal homage to space messaging and transmission systems. As stated by Piñango:

Transmission and listening ...

I.r.real Space Music is a sound approach to spatial messaging poetic and mysterious dimension of the act of transmitting and listening ...

I.r.real Space Music explores certain romanticism places, objects and frequencies that are part of this iconography ...

I.r.real Space Music does not play but creates new satellite transmissions and receptions synth sound inspired by those same messages that referred to ...

So, here we have this five track album full of extreme and gritty textures and frequencies, cliffhangers (yeh, cliffhangers, why not?) and noise-alike aesthetics. No doubt that this work process has been achieved by embracing free improvisation and the gradual inclusion of the Korg MS-20 as a fundamental part of this project.

A new I.r.real set up, a new opportunity to enjoy one of the finest and complex projects on noise and experimentation that one can have the chance to listen to southern from the Pyrenees.

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Tracklist:

01. SETI WAV
02. ARECIBO
03. BIG EAR
04. SEÑAL WOW!
05. SHGb02+14a

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Credits:

All tracks composed and performed by Javier Piñango. 2013.

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Reviews:

There is in this work a constant sense of movement, as if sounds explain the story of a journey of exploration, perhaps a search.


Miquel Parera, Music Numbers.

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Licencia de Creative Commons



I.r.real Space Music by Javier Piñango is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-SinObraDerivada 3.0 Unported License. Creado a partir de la obra en https://archive.org/details/at064JavierPinango. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://www.audiotalaia.net.
Grabación realizada por Edu Comelles del concierto de Nigul y Rauelsson en la Galería Espacio de Ruzafa. Registro realizado el pasado 17 de Mayo de 2013.

+ info:
nigul.bandcamp.com 
www.rauelsson.com 



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Credits:

Nigul (Jaume Muntsant): Laptop.
Rauelsson ( Raúl Pastor): Laptop, synths, pedals, Xilophone.

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Foto: Manu Marpel

Foto: Manu Marpel

Foto: Manu Marpel

Foto: Manu Marpel

Foto: Manu Marpel


Date of release: 13.05.13
Format: FILE - MP3 / AIFF 
Length: 30:20 min
Artwork: Avelino Saavedra / Audiotalaia
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Avelino Saavedra, a well known multidisciplinary artist living in Valencia. He delivers his second album for Audiotalaia. As usual in Saavedra’s work, each album comes with a thorough exploration of one single instrument. In this case, Saavedra choose a “Udu drum” with exceptional size and weight.

Saavedra found this massive version of a “Udu drum” on a road-shop somewhere in Galicia, and brought it back to Valencia. As soon as the “Udu drum” was on Saavedra’s studio, the research, improvisation and processing of sounds taken from this instrument began.

I had the chance to attend the first concert of Saavedra with this new project a few months ago at Plutón in Valencia. Impressed by the resources and intuition of Saavedra playing this massive ceramics drum I asked him to deliver an album based on that instrument. After a few months here we have this MUD a sound composition synthesis of this project.

MUD, is basically a systemic study of an instrument and its resonance capabilities. Also is the culmination of the mixture between sound processing and live improvisation with a very limited palette of sounds and effects.

As usual in Saavedra’s work one can grasp the enormous amount of time invested on developing, to get the finest results, in terms of sound. Earlier in spring, Saavedra stated (while talking about this album) that his idea was to squeeze all the capabilities of this instrument until depletion. So he did, and this is the modus operandi of Saavedra, to be able to extract the most of it of his instruments and deliver a closed-up project, without cracks, a full album, enclosed and finished.

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Tracklist:

01. Melting Point
02. Uranium
03. Dust

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Video:

 
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Credits:

All tracks composed and performed by Avelino Saavedra. All sound produced using a Udu Drum and analogue effect pedals. 2013.

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Licencia de Creative Commons



MUD by Avelino Saavedra is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0 Internacional License. Creado a partir de la obra en http://archive.org/details/at063mud. Puede hallar permisos más allá de los concedidos con esta licencia en avelinosaavedra.blogspot.com
Grabación realizada por Benigno Moreno del concierto de L'Eix y Quartet A La Deriva en la Galería Luís Adelantado de Valencia. Registro realizado el pasado 26 de Abril de 2013.

Junto a la grabación del concierto, Benigno Moreno ha realizado una introducción fonográfica al ambiente sonoro previo y posterior al concierto.

+ info:
www.audiotalaia.net/store/atp003-leix



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Credits:

L'Eix: Ferran Fages (Guitarra), Oriol Rosell (Electrónica), Julià Carboneras (Dispositivos)
Quartet A La Deriva: Josep Lluís Galiana (Saxo), Gregorio Jiménez (Electrónica), Vicent Gómez (Electrónica) y Sisco Aparici (Percusión objetos).

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Vídeo: Damià Jordà.

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Foto: Manu Marpel


Foto: Manu Marpel

Foto: Manu Marpel

Foto: Manu Marpel

Foto: Manu Marpel

































Date of release: 21.04.13
Lenght: 32:20 min
Format:  200 Copies of a Limited edition. BLACK-CD. B/W Printed Carton Sleeve + Free Download Remixes Album (Mp3 320 Kbps)

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Price: 6€ + Shipping Fees (4€ Digital Release).

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After many years releasing online music under Creative Commons Licenses we finally decided to go physical. This happens after being so confident that Audiotalaia has become much more than a netlabel and we still have a lot to offer.

We start this new adventure with the outstanding quality of the artists delivering the first physical edition in Audiotalaia: L’Eix’s “Empra Mots”.

L’Eix (“The Axis” in Catalan language) is a Barcelona based ensemble founded by internationally acclaimed improv & experimental guitarist and sound artist Ferran Fages and electronic music producer and critic Oriol Rosell.

L’Eix’s third member, although not a “sounding” one, is Julià Carboneras, who is in charge of developing specific interactive devices for the trio live concerts.

But beyond the different and well known characters forming it, L’Eix is not a joint venture, nor a “project”. L’Eix is a band in its most traditional sense. A group unit producing songs from an experimental point of view.

Far from experimental music’s usual gimmicks, L’Eix seeks to establish a work flow mixing its members’ background on experimental philosophy and practice and their love and open ears towards other kinds of music. In that sense, L’Eix is a constant dialogue between disciplines, languages and ways to understand sound and music under the song-composing condition.  

The very structure of the tracklist on “Empra Mots”, the addition of a Re-do album as a download gift involving a long array of friends and collaborators, from classical players to poets to pop musicians and IDM producers— and even some not-so-inside jokes... all of these help show that L’Eix is looking forward to generating both discussion and complicities within the sonic arts. But, above all that, they want to make great, memorable songs.

“Empra Mots” is a listening experience that drifts between pop, folk and experimental minimalism flirting with various genres and styles, wrapped in a subjacent, extremely ironic sense of humour based on the trio members’ condition as Catalan speakers. A very unique record brought to you by a no less unique label.

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Gift Download:

"Refet" Re-worked versions:
(Download Gift, purchasing a copy of "Empra Mots")

1. MOIX (Re-worked by Árbol)
2. L'EUGA ESGUERRADA (Re-worked by Kenneth Kirschner)
3. L'EIX GARRELL (Re-worked by Refree)
4. DE PLE ("Fressa i Xiuxiueig" Re-worked by Eduard Escoffet)
5. L'ANGOIXA DEL PROÏSME (Re-worked by Sara Galán)
6. EL GOIG DE L'ENZE (Re-worked by Mark Cunningham)

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Credits:

Ferran Fages: Acoustic Guitar
Oriol Rosell: Electronics
Julià Carboneras: Interactive devices

Artwork: Audiotalaia & L'Eix
Photo: Roger Rosell
Mastered by: Ives Rousel.

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Images:







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Reviews:

Clean, simple acoustic guitar melodies combine with various electronic buzzes, hums and wooshes across the album’s eight tracks, a basic but nonetheless effective formula. At times the interactions between guitar and electronics lack sufficient complexity or subtlety to keep me interested; my favourite track, album closer “Barjaules, Barralers i Enredaires”, is also the most developed in terms of structure and establishing a sense of musical cohesion. However, the general feel is relaxed and playful, reminding me a little of Japanese ensemble Minamo, which is no bad thing at all. Presumably many of the electronic sounds came from devices made by Carboneras; if so, it would have been nice to find out more about them, perhaps through a video included in the gift download.

Wait a minute, “gift download”? Ah yes, this is “Empra Mots”’s secret weapon: though released on CD, the album includes a gift download code for a collection of reworkings entitled “Refet”, in which six different artists take tracks from “Empra Mots” and present their own unique slant on them. There’s a variety of top-notch contributions here, from Kenneth Kirschner’s minimal piano interventions, to Sara Galán (of Cello + Laptop)’s lyrical cello melodies, to Eduard Escoffet’s rhythmically arresting spoken word delivery. Far from being a superfluous add-on, the album of reworks makes a good release even better, especially considering that “Empra Mots” itself is somewhat on the short side. An interesting package, then, and well worth checking out.

- Nathan Thomas for Fluid Radio

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Cuando L'eix comenzaba a dar sus primeros pasos hace un par de años, Oriol Rossell confesó en estas mismas páginas que al juntarse con Ferran Fages su intención era la de “hacer canciones, me atrevería a decir que canciones bonitas”. Una declaración que en aquel momento cuando sólo era posible escuchar un puñado de cortes rasposos colgados en un Soundcloud podía sonar a boutade, pero que con la cuidada edición de “Empra mots" entre las manos cobra todo el sentido del mundo. Ocho cortes que siguen plegados a la misma fórmula: Fages aporta sencillas lineas de guitarra acústica. breves apuntes melódicos que resuenan como sedimentos de canciones perdidas en la memoria (importa tanto lo que toca como lo que calla, es decir). y Rossell envuelve todo con un manto de zumbidos digitales de reverberaciones y cruiidos ocasionales que reaccionan ante los movimientos de la guitarra. Y digo que reaccionan porque se nota que existen estructuras ocultas en el fondo de la mezcla; se nota que existe una voluntad narrativa. que añade una pátina de calidez a la música. A una música cruda y abstracta en la superficie, pero que en el fondo gasta un corazón sensible. Un segundo disco, con estupendas remezclas a cargo de amigotes como Árbol, Kenneth Kirschner, Refree o Sara Galán, redondea un debut mucho más que notable.

Vidal Romero. Go Mag.

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Vuit temes d'experimental calmat, de força acústica on la guitarra explora nous llenguatges amb l'electrònica i el sorollisme.

Nuria R. Scoop It

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Strange name might confuse, but the name of one of the three members of the band is widely known in narrow circles of fans of modern Improv - it Ferrand Fazhes (Ferran Fages). Here, he plays the acoustic guitar, by the way, usually Fazhes played on this instrument solo, and not in collaborations. The other two members were unknown to me until this disc: Oriol Rosell (Oriol Rosell) uses electronics and Julia Carboneras (Julià Carboneras) - interactive devices. It is difficult to say what exactly is meant by these things: both on stage (yes, Julia - this is a man's name) standing with laptops and they gaze wistfully.

At first sight it may seem that Fazhes pulls the blanket over himself. However, this is not the case. Yes, of course, that the acoustic instrument is more mobile and agile in improvised music. Ferrand has a very musical and it instantly reminds himself he is on solo albums, where a melancholic mood as if forcing him to play sparingly and with long pauses. Ambient, you say? Not at all. Ferrand one of those musicians who can play sometimes banal prettiness, perfect getting into a serious and highly abstruse almost context. So in this trio of electronic engineers build oppressive or crackling canvas, and the acoustic guitar that follows them, it plays as if in defiance, but in both cases the right and manages to find the right combination of electronic timbres. Often becomes clear, for anyone who is going. In this case, they both follow exactly where they need that confidence is felt throughout the album.

This is important because without it the quality of the canvas immediately be broken up into two parts: on the one hand, speakers, on the other electronics. At this need to focus, it's not so often manage to find that balance, without falling into the girl's ambient noise or very radical. Spanish trio musically, this property is inherent even in electronics.

And another important point - the trio works with small forms, managing for 3-5 minutes to tell the full story. And there are stories on the drive eight.

Ilya Belorukov, CM Magazine.

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L’EIX is an electro-acoustic trio based in Barcelona. On their debut record, Empra Mots (which only features 2/3 of the trio contributing), L’EIX prudently cross lush, dreamy acoustic guitar passages with electronic soundscapes in an unobtrusive fashion.

Empra Mots is a minimal affair in which space and stasis are integral to the atmosphere constructed on each piece. The acoustic guitar, for most of this record, is played with a focus on simple melodies and chord voicing’s. Guitarist Ferran Fages supplements this simplicity though with free-form rhythms and dynamics that are determined by gesture. Opposite member, Orio Rossell, counters Fages pastoral guitar passages with electronic textures that fluctuate from being sparse crackles, clicks, stutters and pops to dense low frequencies that pulsate and drone at the bottom of the mix.

L’EIX’s Empra Mots is neatly crafted and well executed. Both artists have a clear conceptual underpinning when creating music and it is exemplified readily throughout the album with conviction and honesty.

Luke Bozzetto, Cyclic Defrost.

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L'Eix formen un curiós trio que vol entendre's post-rockero. però que en realitat sona més «post» que "rock". No es tracta del rock dens i resposat amb textures gruixudes que tots tenim en ment sino més aviat ?una amalgama de sons heteris, electrònica lleugera, turisme experimental y atmosferes filmiques. Diu Oriol Rossell: "La improvisació va ser capdal quan vàrem començar, el dia que vam trobar-nos per veure què passava quan tocàvem jur?ts. Però es va imposar un mètode de composició més relaxat: el Ferran m'envia una frase de guitarra i a partir ?allà es construeix el tema “. Aixi sona la seva carta de presentació, "Empra Mots”. toti que res millor que el seu hipnotic directe per gaudir de L'Eix. “ Volem arribar a gent que potser mai ha escoltat aquest tipus de música. però a la que estem convençuts que podem agradar".

Ramón Marc. Mondosonoro

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Licencia de Creative Commons
Empra Mots by L'Eix (Fages, Rosell, Carboneras) is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 3.0 Unported License. Creado a partir de la obra en http://audiotalaia.bandcamp.com/album/atp003-empra-mots.