After a two-decade interlude, Jim O’Rourke’s Moikai returns with Spectral Evolution, a major new work by Rafael Toral. Making his name in the mid-1990s with influential guitar drone platters like "Sound Mind Sound Body" and "Wave Field" (both reissued by Drag City in recent years), Toral has never been one to rest on his laurels repeating his past glories. In the early years ...(展开全部) After a two-decade interlude, Jim O’Rourke’s Moikai returns with Spectral Evolution, a major new work by Rafael Toral. Making his name in the mid-1990s with influential guitar drone platters like "Sound Mind Sound Body" and "Wave Field" (both reissued by Drag City in recent years), Toral has never been one to rest on his laurels repeating his past glories. In the early years of the 21st century, Toral laid the guitar aside, along with the focus on extended tones that had defined much of his music until that point. He began his ‘Space Program’, a thirteen-year investigation of the performance possibilities of an ever-expanding set of custom electronic instruments, played with a fluid phrasing and rhythmic flexibility inspired by jazz. Dedicated to honing his skills on these idiosyncratic instruments, Toral has performed with them extensively both solo and in many collaborations, including in his Space Quartet, where his mini-amplifier feedback integrates seamlessly into the frontline of a classic post-free jazz quartet rounded out with saxophone, double bass, and drums.
Since 2017, Toral’s work has been entering a new phase, often still centred around the arsenal of self-built instruments developed in the Space Program, but with a renewed interest in the long tones and almost static textures of his earlier work; he has also, after more than a decade, returned to the electric guitar. Spectral Evolution is undoubtedly Toral’s most sophisticated work to date, bringing together seemingly incompatible threads from his entire career into a powerful new synthesis, both wildly experimental and emotionally affecting.
The record begins with a brief ‘Intro’ that sets the stage for the unique sound world explored throughout the remainder of its duration: over sparkling clean guitar figures, Toral stages a duet between two streams of modulated feedback, seeming less electronic than like mutant takes on a muted trumpet and an ocarina. This segues seamlessly into the stunning ‘Changes’, where a dense array of Space instruments solo with wild abandon over a thick carpet of slowly moving chords, growing increasingly chaotic over the course of eight minutes yet always fastened to the lush harmonic foundation. On these and many other moments on the record, Toral manages the almost miraculous feat of having his self-built electronic instruments (which in the past he had seen as ‘inadequate to play any music based on the Western system’) play in tune. In an unexpected sidestep away from any of his previous work, the chord changes that underpin many of the episodes on Spectral Evolution are derived from classic jazz harmony, including takes on the archetypal Gershwin ‘Rhythm changes’ and Ellington-Strayhorn’s ‘Take the “A” Train’, albeit slowed to such an extent that each chord becomes a kind of environment in its own right.
Threading together twelve distinct episodes into a flowing whole, "Spectral Evolution" alternates moments of airy instrumental interplay with dense sonic mass, breaking up the pieces based on chord changes with ambient ‘Spaces’. At points reduced to almost a whisper, at other moments Toral’s electronics wail, squelch, and squeak like David Tudor’s live-electronic rainforest. Similarly, his use of the guitar encompasses an enormous dynamic and textural range, from chiming chords to expansive drones, from crystal clarity to fuzzy grit: on the beautiful ‘Your Goodbye’, his filtered, distorted soloing recalls Loren Connors in its emotive depth and wandering melodic sensibility. The product of three years of experimentation and recording, and synthesizing the insights of more than thirty years of musical research, "Spectral Evolution" is the quintessential album of guitar music from Rafael Toral. Written and produced by Rafael Toral, Performed on guitars, bass and electronic instruments. Recorded and mixed from 2020 to 2022 at Noise Precision Regada. Designed with kind support from João Paulo Feliciano. Cover photo by Sylvain Georges. Mastered by Stephan Mathieu. Vinyl cut by Carl Saff. Spectral Evolution is tuned to 432 Hz. Thanks: João Paulo Feliciano, Sei Miguel, Jim O’Rourke, Sylvain Georges, Bruno Pernadas, Miguel Pipa, Drag City, You. Special Thanks: Rute Praça, whose enduring support was decisive.
5 有用 hibi 2.0 2024-02-27 11:14:14 美国
它和地铁站轻微的、稍有些尖锐的、像是手指碰到玻璃杯边缘却又触电般的噪音形成了共振,如何形容它呢,它像是一张由空气振动所织成的手绢,上面布满钢琴的琴键、鸟的叫声、噪音的线头、还有撞动钟摆后的余音
1 有用 鹦鹉螺与菊石 2024-03-28 20:16:42 江苏
特别好ambient,听的整轨,15分钟段与kc的Lark‘s tongues in aspic pt.2有异曲同工之处,听到了类似鸟类惨叫的声音。结尾是触电后的翱翔,直至脱力然后坠落。整张既有工业的噪音也有自然的灵动,是电线杆与鸟鸣啾啾。
0 有用 Pablo 2025-01-18 23:17:20 上海
8.5
0 有用 Rosine** 2025-01-30 10:03:09 江西
+
0 有用 how!! 2024-12-21 00:05:01 天津
很好睡
0 有用 Lhurenn 2025-01-11 15:34:06 天津
动机设计上秒了当代作曲
0 有用 金陵野老 2025-01-24 11:43:19 江苏
喜歡
0 有用 Rosine** 2025-01-30 10:03:09 江西
+
1 有用 大葱和臭丫头 2025-01-09 20:41:32 日本
meditations唱片店老板推荐给我的专辑,是这段时间我经常听的,真不知道之后离开京都后,会多让我对这片土地充满回忆,联想到天天在鸭川散步的时候听,之后回国后想都不敢想。
0 有用 just monika 2025-02-09 04:24:20 广东
真有人听得