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CAMPO DE EMISIÓN. 

Emisiones en Streaming de obras generativas de paisaje sonoro

Campo de Emisión son una serie de obras para streaming dedicadas al paisaje sonoro en cuatro contextos determinados. Campo de Emisión consta de cuatro composiciones generadas en tiempo real y a partir de grabaciones de campo extraídas del archivo personal del autor. Cada emisión de 8 horas de duración ofrecerá un paisaje sonoro cambiante, generativo y en constante transformación que re-dibujará a través el sonido, cuatro contextos específicos: el mundo rural, el perfil litoral, la ciudad y los paisajes hídricos o fluviales.

Las cuatro emisiones reunirán una amplísima selección de archivos sonoros del autor, registrados a lo largo de una década en la Comunidad Valenciana, Cataluña, Aragón, País Vasco, Asturias, Andalucía, las Islas Canarias, la isla de Cerdeña, Francia y Escocia.

La obra en su conjunto pretende crear cuatro paisajes sonoros únicos y en permanente transformación de una manera extensiva, sin pausas y generada de forma aleatoria por un sistema informático diseñado específicamente para este proyecto. El resultado es un ejercicio de escucha profunda, de composición aleatoria y de reconocimiento de una realidad acústica que nos rodea y nos define como sociedad.

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CAMPO DE EMISIÓN I
CAMPO EXPANDIDO, TODO ESTO ANTES ERA CAMPO.

Campo de emisión es una composición no-lineal para streaming dedicada al paisaje sonoro. Las cuatro emisiones (de 8 horas de duración) recogen grabaciones de campo realizadas a lo largo de una década por edu comelles. Cada emisión está dedicada a una temática específica. Lo que escuchamos es una obra generativa y sonora que mezcla paisajes sonoros para crear un tapiz acústico y lento en constante cambio y que invita a una escucha profunda.

Esta emisión (la primera de cuatro) se titula “campo expandido, todo esto antes era campo” se apropia libremente del concepto canónico acuñado por Rosalind Krauss para asumir su literalidad y hacer un ejercicio contemplativo en el cual desarrollar a lo largo de 8 horas un paisaje sonoro donde el campo, el mundo rural y espacios limítrofes donde la convivencia del hombre y la naturaleza se funden. Esta primera emisión presentará grabaciones de campo de paisajes sonoros de interior, de secano, silencios, abandono y contextos sonoros rurales. 

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CAMP DE EMISSIÓ I
CAMP EXPANDIT, TOT AIXÒ ABANS ERA CAMP.

Camp d'emissió és una composició no-lineal per a streaming dedicada al paisatge sonor. Les quatre emissions (de 8 hores de durada) recullen enregistraments de camp realitzades al llarg d'una dècada per Edu Comelles. Cada emissió està dedicada a una temàtica específica. El que escoltem és una obra generativa i sonora que mescla paisatges sonors per a crear un tapís acústic i lent en constant canvi i que convida a una escolta profunda.

Aquesta emissió (la primera de quatre) es titula “camp expandit, tot això abans era camp” s'apropia lliurement del concepte canònic encunyat per Rosalind Krauss per a assumir la seva literalitat i fer un exercici contemplatiu en el qual desenvolupar durant 8 hores un paisatge sonor on el camp, el món rural i els espais limítrofs on la convivència de l'home i la naturalesa es fonen. Aquesta primera emissió presentarà enregistraments de camp de paisatges sonors d'interior, de secà, silencis, abandonament i contextos sonors de rurals.

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BROADCAST FIELD I
EXPANDED FIELD, THIS LAND USED TO BE COUNTRYSIDE.

Broadcast field is a series of non-linear compositions for streaming and devoted to field recordings. The four broadcasts (each ranging 8 hours in length) gather soundscapes recorded over a period of a decade by edu comelles. Each broadcast its dedicated to an specific field or topic. What you are listening to right now it is a generative composition based on those field recordings. The aim is to create an idle soundscape that seamlessly changes inviting us to deep listen to it.

This specific broadcast (the first of four) it is entitled “expanded field, this land used to be countryside.” appropriating the canonic term by Rosalind Krauss to assume it literally. By so, the aim is to create a meditative piece to be displayed during 8 continuous hours. The piece features soundscapes from rural areas and liminal spaces where the human presence and the natural world meet halfway through.  This first broadcast encapsules sounds from inland spain, dry lands, silences, abandonment in rural contexts. 

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Emisiones en directo:

24 de noviembre, de 11:00 a 20:00 horas.

15 y 22 de diciembre, de 11:00 a 20:00 horas.

19 de enero, de 11:00 a 20:00 horas.

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+ info:

https://culturaonline.consorcimuseus.gva.es/es/edu-comelles/

https://www.twitch.tv/audiotalaia

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Fotogramas:


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Proyecto seleccionado en la Convocatoria Cultura Online #CMCVaCasa del Consorci de Museus de la Comunitat Valenciana.





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#50 / Riso Printed Postcard Limited Edition + Digital Download

Random risography printed postcards on Muncken paper framed within a Fabriano Paper Passepartout (16x16 cm). Includes download links for the full album and a Live Recording. The item comes folded into a sealed Polypropylene bag.

Includes unlimited streaming of Aquí Llega El Invierno via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.

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Concept.

The 11th of December 2017 snow covered Guadalaviar, a village in Central Spain right in the middle of the most unpopulated area of Southern Europe, the so called Spanish Siberia. After the snow storm 5 days followed and clouds give pass to wind, thaw, water and finally the sun.

The cicle of cold, snow, ice and thaw has been  something rather usual in Guadalaviar, but its starting to become an exeption. It still snows, and the cold is there, but not as before. Climate is fragile and unpredictable.

In Guadalaviar there is a rural school that hosts only 5 children (town population is less than 150 habitants), and two more on its way. According to spanish law, to maintain the school open, there must be exactly that: at least 5 children and the prospect of more to come. The town depends entirely on those fice children, those who, unaware of their role on the hereafter, play in the snow.

While and ecosystem is threatened by climate change, another ecosystem, the human one is theatened by rural depopulation. Both worlds  share, space and time, and both walk the line of an uncertain future. This album is a homage to both.

This albums draws attention on the 5 days following the snow storm of the 11th of December 2017, the landscapes and the small things that shape Guadalaviar and those living there, small things that for locals, sometimes can go unnoticed. "Aquí llega el invierno" (literaly translated as Here Comes The Winter) talks about all the aparently mundane things that on a blink of the eye can become something extraordinary. Its all about the school and those five children sustaining the towns life, the uncanny reverberation at the town sports pavilion, and the music of cowbells and cattle becoming instruments rather than tools. Its about silence, snow, ice, thaw, water and finally the sun on the heart of the most remote and forgotten region of Spain.

Finally this work is a microcosmos of isolated elements on a god-forsaken land that fights to exist.  The album is a claim to the landscape, the region and how its percieved, listened and felt.

There are 100 CD copies of this work, most of then have been distributed among Guadalaviar neighbors. The rest of it can be acquired for free at the Town Hall and the local Museum.


Date of release: 27.04.15
Format: FILE - MP3 / WAV / Video
Length: 23:20 min
Artwork: Sara Galán.

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December 2013 was the last time Cello + Laptop played live. That happened down Las Ramblas in Barcelona at Eufonic Urbà Festival. Since then an awkward silence expanded till today. In between a certain amount of live recordings, studio sessions and infinite mixes wait in line as orphans the endless hesitancy.

During this long period those files have become a burden, witnesses of the absence of bearing of a project apparently way to easy to re-write. Those files were unresolved issues, segments of an exhausting period of real time composition and production that ultimately lead to a crossroad with far too many options.

Awkwardness followed more awkwardness and many attempts of restarting the project happened. The effort was to big and the laziness of confronting the question: “what to do” won over the will of moving forward.

Finally, the answer was easy: lets do it: fast, clean and neat.

So after almost one year here we have a small grasp of what was hidden in the closet a thorough selection of four little gems we have kept for a long time. Those are the outcome of various recordings done in Valencia. All pieces are segments of longer live improvisations between cello and live electronics. The process of work, as usual, is a two-ways stream of cello lines and the re-appropriation of those same string lines, and the dance and dialogue that happens in real time.

Finally the four tracks come with a couple of videos “Waggle Dance” and “Sinia” done by Merisma. "Waggle Dance" is a free depiction of another creative process that hasn’t seen the light yet. This is the creation of live improvised compositions using only acoustic cello and microphones. The piece presents Sara playing live improvisations on an abandoned house, while Edu Comelles records the scene. Through the recording process Comelles re-mixes Galan’s improvisation. Microphones become instruments and panning becomes interpretation and the acoustics of the cello are processed for future re-configuration.

On “Sinia” we can see a sonic intervention that directly relates with Edu Comelles latest album and its track “Dry Land” in which the sound of an abandoned watermill is used to improvise with cello on location. Both works were recorded in two consecutive days in Tarragona (Southern Catalonia) in Summer 2014.

That was it, now they are back to work. This album, apart from closing a period enables a new one. This summer, Cello + Laptop will be recording a new full-length album.

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Tracklist.

01. Welcome
02. Intermission
03. The Garden
04. Farewell

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Bonus content:


Waggle Dance - Cello + Laptop (by Merisma) from Audiotalaia on Vimeo.
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Sínia - Cello + Laptop (by Merisma) from Audiotalaia on Vimeo.

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Credits.

Sara Galán: Cello.
Edu Comelles: Electronics.
Merisma: Vídeo.

Editing and mastering: Edu Comelles.

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Reviews:

The last time we heard anything concrete from Cello + Laptop, the year was 2013 (but only just – it was December). Since their live performance at Barcelona’s Eufonic Urbà Festival, studio sessions, recordings and mixes have taken up much of their time, but in that period there was very little of what you may call a definitive return. As the months went on, the prospect of a new album became dimmer and ever more distant. Multiple attempts were made to restart the successful project, but a kind of malaise had gripped the musical process. Kick-starting the project back into gear seemed like an insurmountable task.

One year later, the four tracks of Segments are thankfully here, and it’s available as a free download at the link below. Recorded in Valencia, Segments is made out of longer, live improvisations. Sara Galán & Edu Comelles blend the incredibly thick, soulful tone of the cello with a subtle electronic sprinkling of loops and drones, and it’s still just as beautiful. The cello’s rich sound sits like a Queen on a golden throne, while the light electronics coolly move around it. Experimental in nature, the cello nonetheless dominates the sound. Sparse lines sit majestically beside the cello’s drone, circling it and progressing the music in a way that’s always unhurried. Segments is the start of a road that will come to define, separate and split the duo’s past from their future. The music is always intelligently played, and that’s one of the reasons why the music resounds with such power.

Segments begins with “Welcome”. It’s grandiose and reassuringly friendly. And it should sound that way, because Segments is a reunion with old friends. The chambers and the halls are once again surrounded by the music of kings. The olive wreaths of “The Garden” wrap around the cello. Vines that snake around the music’s house slowly become notes that echo, diminish and fall away, and then a stuttering electronic rhythm suddenly appears. The time to say “Farewell” comes around too quickly, but it’s a pleasure just to be able to listen to their music once again, and it bodes well for the future. It’s a darker, slower piece that drags its feet; the music has returned. Thankfully, a new album is set to be recorded this summer. Segments is just the right length to get reacquainted with their music. Cello + Laptop have shed their skin; their music has, too. They have been missed.

James Catchpole. A Closer Listen.

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Licencia de Creative Commons




Segments by Cello + Laptop (Sara Galán & Edu Comelles) is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0 Internacional License. Creado a partir de la obra en http://www.audiotalaia.net/catalogue/at078-cello--laptop/.



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Live recording of the concert held by Avelino Saavedra & Edu Comelles at l'Antic Forn de Vallcarca (Barcelona) the 8th of November 2014. The concert was supported by Juan Manuel Castrillo and organised by l'Antic Forn de Vallcarca.

Many thanks to: Juan Manuel Castrillo, L'Antic Forn de Vallcarca, La Rebelión de los Antioxidantes.
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Credits:

Avelino Saavedra: Percussion, objects and pedals.
Edu Comelles: Miss-treated Field Recordings.

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Licencia de Creative Commons
Licencia de Creative Commons Live at l'Antic Forn (Barcelona) by Avelino Saavedra & Edu Comelles) is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0 Internacional License.
Live concert held at Moroder Sound Club in Madrid the 17th of October of 2014. That night also played Madrid-Based Drone duo "Nebelmeer" formed by Marta Sainz and David Area.

Javier Piñango: Korg MS-20 + Rockman XPR.

Edu Comelles: Miss-treated Field Recordings.


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Rally! es la consecuencia adrenalínica de recorrer el DF montados en taxis de dudosa fiabilidad, de quedarse atascado en el Eje Central mientras a tu alrededor vendedores te asaltan con extraños artículos a la venta, martillos, plátanos, snacks y bebidas, en ese orden. Rally! es un viaje, agarrado al asiento de un Volksvagen Escarabajo, mientras el taxista fuerza la caja de cambios maltrecha que asoma por debajo de la tapicería, seis días de viaje por el DF, seis días de descubrimiento y sorpresa, de cúmulo, de saturación, de recuerdo, de horror vacui de altavoces y micrófonos, son seis días en la ciudad electroacústica.

Javier Piñango y Edu Comelles viajaron a México DF para participar en el Festival de Experimentación Sonora Radar / UNAM, dirigido por José Wolffer. Durante 6 días recorrieron la ciudad capturando sonido en varias derivas sonoras, que una vez mezcladas y editadas fueron sometidas a un diálogo acústico con un sintetizador Korg MS-20.

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Credits:

Vídeo: Enrique Zaccagnini.
Audio: Edu Comelles.
Diseño: Audiotalaia.
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Licencia de Creative Commons 

Live at Madrid 17.10.2014 by Rally! (Javier Piñango & Edu Comelles) is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0 Internacional License.
Date of release: 06.10.14
Format: FILE - MP3 / WAV 
Lenght: 1.21:00 min
Artwork: Audiotalaia
Photos: Antonio Pérez.
Vídeos: Caixa Fosca, Paco R. Baños.
Valencia event: Carlos Flores.


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This document is a testimony of 6 Relays that took place in four Spanish cities during May 2014. The events where organized in Valencia by Audiotalaia and the Luis Adelantado Gallery, in Vitoria-Gasteiz by Ainara LeGardon and Artium Museum, in Madrid by Wade Matthews and Espacio Cruce and in Seville by Alejandro Rojas-Marcos and the University of Seville (CICUS).

The recordings here presented are a selection over more than 30hours of recordings done by Edu Comelles. All Relays where statically recorded using three independent digital recorders, each of them placed en each scenario of every Relay. Also a secondary set of recordings was made using binaural microphones technic and while moving.

The final mix here presented is a selection of the Binaural Recordings done during all four Relays. Those recordings are the result of wandering about the spaces in which Relays took place and taking an active position as recordist. This involved fast and slow movements, close-ups to determined gestures and instruments and soundwalks along hallways, corridors and staircases. The outcome of this approach provides a subjective perspective over a multifocal hearing experience that has to be listened through headphones to perceive the dimensionality of binaural sound.

Attached to this document we present three texts by Ainara LeGardon, Wade Matthews and Josep Lluís Galiana who kindly wrote their thoughts on the Relay and all about it. There is also a spanish version of the texts on the PDF booklet.

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Tracklist:

Relay Valencia / 10.05.2014 / Galería Luis Adelantado
Tracks from "Rel01_Vlc_01" to "Rel08_Vlc_08".

Relay Vitoria-Gasteiz / 17-18.05.2014 / Artium
Tracks from "Rel10_VitGas_01" to "Rel10_VitGas_09"

Relay Madrid / 24-25.05.2014 / Espacio Cruce, Galería Liebre, Esto Es una Plaza, Función Lenguaje
Tracks from "Rel18_Mad_01 to Rel24_Mad_07

Relay Sevilla / 28-29.05.2014 / CICUS, Universidad de Sevilla
Tracks from "Rel26_Svq_01" to "Rel34_Svq_09"
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Credits:

Relay VLC:
Venue: Luis Adelantado Gallery

Avelino Saavedra (Percussion, Objects)
Guillermo Torres (Flugelhorn)
Vicent Gómez (Electronics)
Negro (Electric Guitar)
Javier Pedreira (Guitar)
Carlos Edelmiro (No-input mixer, Amplified Objects)
Josep Lluís Galiana (Soprano sax)
Edu Comelles (Laptop, field recordings)
Alejandro Rojas-Marcos (amplified clavichord)
Manolo Rodríguez (Acoustic Guitar, loops)
Wade Matthews (Laptop)
Marta Sainz (Voice)
Ainara LeGardon (Voice, objects)
Antonio Sánchez (No-input mixer)
Francesc Llompart (Violin)
Bartolomé Ferrando (Voice)
Marta González (Viola)
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Relay VIT-GAS:
Venue: Artium, Centro-Museo Vasco de Arte Contemporáneo

Naiel Ibarrola (Visuals)
Javier Pedreira (Guitar)
Iban Urizar (Trumpet, Clarinet)
Ruth Barberán (Trumpet, amplified objects)
Lali Barrière (Objects)
Miguel A. García (Electronics, No-input mixer, laptop)
Mario Sarramián (Laptop, objects)
Edu Comelles (Laptop, field recordings)
Manolo Rodríguez (Acoustic Guitar, loops)
Wade Matthews (Laptop)
Xabier Erkizia (Prepared Percussion)
Ainara LeGardon (Voice, objects)
Idoia Zabaleta (Dance)
Paloma Carrasco (Cello)
Álvaro Barriuso (Voice)
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Relay MAD:
Venues: Cruce, Esto Es Una Plaza, Galería Liebre, Función Lenguaje.

Abdul Moimême (Electric Guitar)
Mario Sarramián (Laptop, Objects)
Naiel Ibarrola (Prepared Piano, Objects)
Guillermo Torres (Flugelhorn)
Lali Barrière (Objects)
Miguel A. García (Electronics, No-input mixer, laptop)
Carlos Costa (Double Bass)
Javier Piñango (Korg MS-20 synth)
Edu Comelles (Laptop, field recordings)
Alejandro Rojas-Marcos (Piano, Trombone)
Manolo Rodríguez (Acoustic Guitar, loops)
Wade Matthews (Laptop)
Marta Sainz (Voice)
Ainara LeGardon (Voice, objects)
Alessandra Rombolà (Flute)
Tomás Gris (Sax)
Paloma Carrasco (Cello)
Rubén Gutirérrez (Amplified surfaces, objects, electronics)
Álvaro Barriuso (Voice)
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Relay SVQ:
Venue: CICUS, University Of Seville.

Ferran Fages (Electronic devices)
Guillermo Torres (Flugelhorn)
Juan Luis Matilla(Dance)
Natalia Jiménez (Body)
Javier Pedreira (Guitar)
Miguel A. García (Electronics, No-input mixer, laptop)
Carlos Costa (Double Bass)
Edu Comelles (Laptop, field recordings)
Alejandro Rojas-Marcos (Piano, amplified clavichord)
Manolo Rodríguez (Acoustic Guitar, loops)
Wade Matthews (Laptop)
Ainara LeGardon (Voice, objects)
María Cabeza de Vaca (Coreographer)
Emilio Salvatierra (Percussion)
Gustavo Dominguez (Clarinet, Bass Clarinet)
Sergio Rojas-Marcos (Bass)
Sara Martín (Flute)
Marta González (Viola)
Antonio Corrales (Double Bass)
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Recorded, mixed and mastered by: Edu Comelles. With occasional gear or help by Ainara LeGardon, Wade Matthews, Alejandro Rojas-Marcos and Miguel A. Garcia.

Recording gear: Audiotalaia Binaural PRO microphones, Zoom H1.

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History of the Relay.



The first Relay took place at 2:13 Club in London, organised by guitarrista and improviser, John Bisset. For many years this was a yearly event. After that first attempt other improviser have been organising Relays in números places.

The german percussionist Burkhard Beins took advantage of an abandoned power plant in Berlin to organize a Relay and cellist Nikos Veliotis did something similar in Athens. Wade Matthews organized a couple of Relays at the Reina Sofia Museum of Madrid, one at a Silk Market from the Sixteen Century in Deir el Kamar at the Shouff Mountains in Lebanon and a fourth one at the Faculty of Arts in Montevideo, Uruguay. As well the swiss violinist Charlotte Hug has organized a memorable Relay that took place inside Paris catacombs (a truly underground event). Finally flutist Jane Rigler organized two Relays at the Museum of Modern Art in New York as a commemoration of the first anniversary of the new building.

One of the main characteristic of the Relays is the acknowledgement of the contribution by other organizers in previous Relays. This who organized the previous Relay are usually included on the organization of the following as a gesture of gratitude. Bisset, Beins and Veliotis participated in all first Relays, while Beins, Veluotis, Hug and Rigler played in all Relays organized by Matthews. Also Beins, Veliotis, Bisset and Matthews participate in both Jane Rigler’s Relays in MOMA and also Matthews played agh the Paris Catacombs Relay organized by Charlotte Hug. Some other participants in all Relays are Robert Dick, Jack Wright, Ikue Mori, Pauline Oliveiros and Jon La Barbara.

Another characteristic of the Relays is that apart from the involvement of music improvisers there is a space for close-by disciplines such as dance through the participation of Valérie Métivier an the choreographer and improviser Elena Alonso among others, there is always a space for other disciplines.

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How it works?




At a given time, three trios of musicians start improvising in three nearby scenarios. Ten minutes later another group of participants join the improvisation. Each of them can choose freely where to go. As soon as someone joins an ongoing improvisation one of the musicians has to move to another location to relay someone else. This process takes approximately 2 hours in which music is constantly changing as musicians come and go. At last, its also possible that all musicians join in a given point and end up the event playing all together.

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Texts:

In the month of May, hunger and roses. Such disparate bedfellows!

Or so an old Spanish saying would have it, but there is no particular reason to think that hunger and roses will both be present in the same month of May. Maybe these strange bedfellows alternate years. We don’t know, but we don’t really care, either. What matters is that May of 2014 was full of roses. Or maybe I should say rose bushes, because, of everything that blossomed that month, what most captured our attention wasn’t so much the flowers as the gardens themselves. It’s not about the pleasure of contemplating this or that flower, this or that delightful, though fleeting, patch of color. It’s about the satisfaction of finally witnessing the emergence of new and fertile terrains, fields where, with a certain degree of effort and determination, roses will blossom, not only this May but many more in the future. We don’t need to sew the seeds of hunger, it is already strongly rooted in our present economic system, and our politicians cultivate it so well that even many job holders are now living beneath the threshold of poverty.

“Write the book you’d like to read” counsels a recent American saying, and that somehow describes what happened last May. Do you want interesting musical activities to take place where you live? Do you want cutting-edge sound artists to visit from all over the country, and to play with the finest local musicians? And, do you want it to be well organized? Then organize it yourself! That’s what happened and that, hopefully, is what will continue to happen. In Valencia, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Madrid and Seville, a handful of musicians with talent, imagination and initiative were tired of looking at photographs of roses, of listening to interesting musicians only on CDs, of preparing their seeds again and again without every having a garden to plant them in. Finally, they discovered that enthusiasm is a surprisingly powerful force for change, especially when it is shared. Musicians—and I do not employ the term lightly—like Ainara LeGardon, Edu Comelles and Alejandro Rojas Marcos chose to collaborate with me and with their own colleagues to carry out a multiple, ambitious and powerful project. Henry David Thoreau wrote: “If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them.” That is exactly what Ainara, Edu, Alejandro and I set out to do. Beneath the castles of our respective musical communities, we have constructed foundations whose cornerstones are clarity and flexibility.

Here, clarity means knowing what you want and how to communicate it to those who cannot help but share your enthusiasm once they understand the project. And so it has been with Olga Adelantado, of the Luis Adelantado Gallery in Valencia; Daniel Castillejo and Mari Fran Machin of Artium in Vitoria-Gasteiz; and in Madrid, Salomé Ramírez, of CRUCE, Mariejo Obeillero, of Esta es una Plaza, and the directors of the Liebre Gallery and Función Lenguaje, respectively. The decision-makers at the CICUS in Seville proved equally open, interested and willing to cooperate.

Clarity also involves something else, something that fosters flexibility. Knowing what you want includes being able to distinguish what is essential from what is merely superficial, understanding that a rose can grow in places that differ considerably from each other, and from where we imagined planting them. That clarity and flexibility imply acting with the agility needed to get twenty musicians to your city so they can share their art, even when the roses decide to show their thorns rather than their flowers, and even when our politicians have depleted cultural subsidies to support causes considerably less noble than the construction of castle foundations.

The result of this dedication, effort, clarity, flexibility and enthusiasm? A Relay of Relays, a harvest of many, many roses with very few thorns. Musicians blossoming in clusters of fifteen or twenty, instrument in hand, sharing their music, enthusiasm and creativity with their own communities and with those of their colleagues, creating another community, a larger garden where, hopefully, new projects will also flourish. None of us could have done this alone, because the lasting project was not the Relay, or even the Relay of Relays. What we were really building was the cooperation that made everything else possible. There is still hunger, and it will not disappear any time soon, but at least we’re starting to see some roses. Hopefully, there are more to come.

Wade Matthews.

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The Aura of Space/time

When guitarist John Bisset and flutist and saxophonist Lester Moses organized the first Relay in the history of sound art at the 2:13 club in London in 1992, they had no idea that their particular “multiple concert of free improvisation projected into the public sphere” would spark similar activities around the world. As an annual event, Relays were subsequently organized by other improvisers in numerous cities. German percussionist Burkhard Beins chose an abandoned power plant in Berlin and cellist Nikos Velliotis did something similar in Athens.

Electro-acoustic improviser Wade Matthews has organized two at the Reina Sofía Museum in Madrid, another in a 16th-century silk market in Deir el Kamar, in the Shouff Mountains of Lebanon, and a fourth in Montevideo, at the National University of Uruguay’s School of the Arts. Swiss violist Charlotte Hug organized one in the catacombs of Paris, the most underground of any so far, and even the city that never sleeps shared this adventure when improvising flutist Jane Rigler organized two at New York’s MoMA to mark the first anniversary of its new building.

This celebration of a place and a moment with the participation of numerous musicians has finally reached Valencia. Sixteen musicians moving freely between three areas in the Luis Adelantado Gallery have carried out a “session of improvised music in constant motion” that faithfully connects the Relay with the dérive, a Situationist practice that Guy Debord defined as “a technique of rapid passage through varied ambiences.” For him, as author of The Society of the Spectacle, the construction of a situation involves building a transitory micro-environment and unfolding artistic, psychological, emotional, acoustic, political, economic and environmental events, among others, to generate a unique moment in the lives of various people.

Hic et nunc, the here and now that constitutes the essence of a Relay, is not the only element connecting this experience with the theory of the dérive, and also with the figure of the flâneur evoked by Baudelaire and later, in the context of the modern city, by Walter Benjamin. Each free improviser is like an installation or sound sculpture created to exist—ephemerally—in a particular space. He or she is thus site-specific, and that site owes its existence to sound, constituting a resonant space where time stops, bringing to mind Benjamin’s aura: “an original tissue made up of space and time.” This sonic aura extends over all of us, enveloping us and drawing us into its exclusive and festive play-space, where there is room for chance situations and unpredictable reactions, where the definitive is avoided, the border between art and everyday life is set aside and life is lived freely through careful listening and intuition. The Relay captures the joy of instantaneous and fleeting creative experience, a participation in collective creation that places both the improviser and the listener/viewer on the path to a liberating and unlimited sound world.

Josep Lluís Galiana

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If I were to describe the Relay with just one word, it would be commitment—an agreement to exercise our responsibility in pursuit of music (and I am tempted to write Music, with a capital “m”).

Another word would be trust—the encouragement from others that potentiates one’s own decisions.

The relay marks our turn to maintain the network, a tightly knotted net with links and connections that insure continuity of movement. We are waves carrying the message in its bottle, and some of us play the role of the wind while others are the Moon’s gravitational pull, or the mass of water on which it floats, or even the foam that cushions its journey… Together, we cradle and transport the idea of commitment.

Following last May’s Relay of Relays, it was a pleasure to collapse after crossing the finish line, because the goal of thrilling, and of thrilling ourselves, had been reached. The seed was sewn and the baton passed to other hands so the adventure could continue.

Enjoy listening

Ainara LeGardon
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With the collaboration, aid and sponsorship of:















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Licencia de Creative Commons



Relay 2014 by Varios Artistas is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0 Internacional License. Creado a partir de la obra en www.audiotalaia.net/catalogue/at075-relay-2014.Puede hallar permisos más allá de los concedidos con esta licencia en www.audiotalaia.net/catalogue/at075-relay-2014
El Espacio Audible (Presentación de proyecto)

Crearqció + Edu Comelles (performance sonora)
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Grabación de la jornada dedicada a Sonido y Espacio, articulada a partir de dos actividades, una charla y una performance sonora. Grabación de la charla y presentación del proyecto "El Espacio Audible" a cargo de Fernando Ortuño y Edu Comelles. Grabación de la performance sonora diseñada por Crearqció para transformar el espacio de La Gallera a través de un proceso creativo y sonoro.

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Off_Herzios, nació en 2012 como circuito itinerante de Arte Sonoro y Músicas Extrañas. A lo largo de 10 meses el certamen recorrió las principales galerías de arte de la Ciudad de Valencia. En su primer año de vida Off_Herzios ofreció a la ciudad más de 25 actuaciones repartidas a lo largo del curso ofreciendo una extensa y variada panorámica sobre el arte sonoro y las músicas experimentales en nuestro país y más concretamente en la Comunidad Valenciana.

Después del éxito de crítica y público, Off_Hz muta en una nueva forma y en vez de itinerar por galerías de arte, asienta su programación en un punto neurálgico, una caja resonante y un referente arquitectónico: La Sala La Gallera del Consorcio de Museos de la Comunidad Valenciana.

La programación de Off_Hz en la Gallera girará entorno a tres ejes principales: conciertos, comisariados de escucha y showrooms. Estas tres actividades se articularán en este singular espacio a lo largo de 4 meses, de enero a abril del 2014.

Esta nueva andadura producida por Audiotalaia pretende generar un espacio de reflexión, escucha y descubrimiento de las artes sonoras, su ambición es la de abrir el mundo del sonido a la ciudadanía llenando La Gallera de sonidos.

Off_Herzios / La Gallera Suena es una invitación a la escucha, un lugar de encuentro y manifestación, un lugar dónde hacer resonar propuestas emergentes y proyectos consagrados, un lugar para la escucha y la transmisión.

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Foto: Manu Marpel.
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Foto: Manu Marpel
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Credits:

Grabación, edición y masterización: Benigno Moreno
Foto: Manu Marpel
Vídeo: Damià Jordà
Diseño: Audiotalaia

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Licencia de Creative Commons
Sonido y Espacio by Fernando Ortuño, Edu Comelles & Crearqció is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0 Internacional License.
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.
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: 02.01.13
Format: CD-R Limited Edition of 25 Copies 
Length: 40:02 min
Artwork: Edu Comelles

SOLD OUT


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Rally! es la consecuencia directa de un proceso de inmersión sensorial en un entorno que para nosotros fue fugaz y transitorio. Es la consecuencia de recorrer y descubrir una pequeñísima porción de Ciudad de México, es el resultado de pequeñas incursiones en taxi del hotel hasta el centro histórico del DF y de la sorpresa en la deriva y el encuentro fortuito con todas las resonancias de una ciudad que vive a través del altavoz, el ruido y la distorsión.

Rally! es la consecuencia adrenalínica de recorrer el DF montados en taxis de dudosa fiabilidad, de quedarse atascado en el Eje Central mientras a tu alrededor vendedores te asaltan con extraños artículos a la venta, martillos, plátanos, snacks y bebidas, en ese orden. Rally! es un viaje, agarrado al asiento de un Volksvagen Escarabajo, mientras el taxista fuerza la caja de cambios maltrecha que asoma por debajo de la tapicería.

Rally son seis días de viaje por el DF, seis días de descubrimiento y sorpresa, de cúmulo, de saturación, de recuerdo, de horror vacui de altavoces y micrófonos, son seis días en la ciudad electroacústica.

Javier Piñango y Edu Comelles viajaron a México DF para participar en el Festival de Experimentación Sonora Radar / UNAM, dirigido por José Wolffer. Durante 6 días recorrieron la ciudad capturando sonido en varias derivas sonoras, que una vez mezcladas y editadas fueron sometidas a un diálogo acústico con un sintetizador Korg MS-20.

Un pequeño embrión de este proyecto pudo ser disfrutado al término de los conciertos de Comelles y Piñango en el Auditorio del MUAC Museo Universitario de Arte Contemporáneo, México DF.
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Credits:

Javier Piñango: MS-20 
Edu Comelles: Field Recordings 

Album originaly released at Exp_Net Netlabel. Free download version of the album aviable at: 
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Licencia de Creative Commons
Rally by Javier Piñango and Edu Comelles is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 3.0 Unported License. Creado a partir de la obra enhttp://www.experimentaclub.com/exp_net/expnet022.htm. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available athttp://www.experimentaclub.com/exp_net/expnet022.htm.
Date of release: 02.01.13
Format: CD-R Limited Edition of 25 Copies 
Length: 36:07 min
Artwork: Edu Comelles

SOLD OUT!


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Camino, Parte Primera is the first part of a full length project based on recordings done along the Way of Saint James, a famous Middle Ages pilgrimage route along the northern regions of Spain. The whole route runs over 740 km and it takes approximately one month to complete it by walking. On this first instalment we walked for 6 days between the traditional beginning of the pilgrimage at Roncesvalles on the Navarre Pyrenees until Logroño the capital of the La Rioja Region. This route goes across Navarre and lengths 137 km. This first walk was made during Easter time, while in many towns and villages celebrations of the Death of Christ take place every year.

The recordings and compositions were made on route trying to gather sounds and soundmarks from every step in the way. Those recordings were captured using a Zoom H2 handy recorder with a Rycote Windshield. Mixing and post-production was delivered using Logic Pro. The final mix and master was made in Valencia (Spain).

This album is dedicated to Eva and Sandra, who walked with me.
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Credits:

All tracks recorded composed and arranged by Edu Comelles on the Way of Saint James between Roncesvalles (Navarra) until Logroño (La Rioja). Edited and Mastered at Valencia. 2013.

Originally released in digital format (MP3-File) By Wandering Ear Netlabel, based on Minesotta, USA.

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Reviews:

Perhaps no other pilgrimage route stirs the restless traveller’s spirit more than El Camino de Santiago, the Way of St James. Walking for weeks, sometimes months, pilgrims historically travelled 800 kilometres from the French side of the Pyrenees to Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, a Spanish cathedral that is said to house the remains of the apostle Saint James. In an extremely sensitive release Spanish field recordist Edu Comelles has documented the first stage of this route in “Camino, parte primera”.

Listening to “Camino, parte primera’s” church bells, country streams, Gregorian chants, and robust Spanish conversations it is easy to imagine ourselves into a distant past. It is here that its success lies, the majority of sounds captured by Comelles remaining true to the medieval period in which the pilgrimage began.

Comelles desire to record the sounds along the way may have stemmed from his recent dissertation exploring walking compositions. In it he says the notion of walking is “a simple activity that in the Western Culture and through the years has been widely regarded as an act of discovery and also as an inspiring or meditational act”. By recording the soundmarks along the way Comelles allows us to partake in his discoveries, exposing us to the spirit of the surrounding countryside, its people, and the sincerity in which the walk is taken. In this context “Camino, parte primera” is a refreshing antidote to the cynicism that taints the 21st century.

“Camino, parte primera” follows a linear path, its sequence of recordings corresponding with Comelles’ own trek. Beginning in Roncesvalles we hear bells ringing from an ancient Abbey; a signal that it is closing to the public. Further along we hear feet as they grind along a gravel path whilst the sound of sheep and animal bells ring alongside.

From a cultural perspective one of the most interesting recordings is of the “carraca”, a wooden instrument with 20 hammers that is rattled during the Easter period; the regional law stating that no bells may ring during the Easter period. The religious context in which the carraca is played is cleverly emphasized by the next stage of the track where somber voices are heard singing part of the Easter mass. This recording sounds timeless, its tone resonating long after it finishes.

At times the bucolic ambience presented in Comelles’ recordings may lull us into the false belief that the walk is without any physical challenge, however a few tracks remind the listener of the harsh elements of the pilgrimage. Strong winds are regularly heard buffeting the microphone, the accompanying photos in the release revealing exposed rainy plains that offer little relief from any discomfort.

“Camino, parte primera” finishes with a recording inside the Logroño cathedral. Here an organist is overheard as he rehearses on the cathedral pipe-organ. Wrong notes are struck yet the musician’s perseverance manages to sustain a measure of stateliness throughout the piece. This track is a perfect place in which to end “Camino, parte primera”, Comelles’ notes stating, “tomorrow we take the train back to Valencia”. It is with great anticipation that we await the second part of this release.

Jay-Dea Lopez, The Field Reporter
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Licencia de Creative Commons

Camino, Parte Primera by Edu Comelles is licensed under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 3.0 Unported License. Creado a partir de la obra en http://www.wanderingear.com/we018.html. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available athttp://www.audiotalaia.net.