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Jan Bang - ... And Poppies From Kandahar


And Poppies From kandahar
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Label info: sound cd ss018

Date: May 24, 2010

Type: CD

Copyright: P & C 2010 samadhisound llc.

Released on Samadhi Sound and not only did David the art direction for this great album, but he also made up the title of the album *and* all the titles of the tracks..... hmmm.


CD released by Samadhisound (sound-cd ss018) on 24.05.10.

  1. The Drug Mule
    Composed by Bang
    Jan Bang: Samples, Programming
    Samples:
    Jon S. Lunde: Exhaust Fan
    Muta: Percussion
    Contains elements of “Daylight Black” as performed by Muta
    Composed by Rombolá / Davies / Zach. Courtesy of Sofa Music
    Provided by Ingar Zach. Used by kind permission

  2. Self Injury
    Composed by Bang / Henriksen
    Jan Bang: Samples, Programming
    Lars Danielsson: Double Bass
    Samples:
    Lykke B. Bang: Voice, Bottles
    Arve Henriksen: Trumpet, Voice
    Peter Tornquist: Orchestra
    Eivind Aarset: Guitar
    Trumpet and voice recorded live at concert in Justinuskirche, Frankfurt ’09

  3. The Midwife’s Dilemma
    Composed by Bang / Endresen
    Jan Bang: Samples, MPC, Claps
    Sidsel Endresen: Vocal
    Samples:
    Eivind Aarset: Guitar

  4. Passport Control
    Composed by Bang / Hassell / Henriksen
    Jan Bang: Samples, MPC
    Eivind Aarset: Guitar
    Samples:
    Jon Hassell: Trumpet
    Arve Henriksen: Trumpet
    Kammerflimmer Kollektief: Loops
    Ági Szalóki: Voice
    Contains elements of “Gammler, Zen & Hohe Berge” by Kammerflimmer Kollektief
    Provided by Thomas Weber. Used by kind permission

  5. Who Grooms The Child ?
    Composed by Bang /Aarset
    Jan Bang: Samples, Programming
    Eivind Aarset: Guitars
    Samples:
    Jon S. Lunde: Exhaust Fan
    Rolf-Erik Nystrøm: Sax

  6. Heidegger’s Silence
    Composed by Jan Bang from the music of Richard Wagner
    Jan Bang: Samples, Percussion, Programming
    Samples:
    Pål “Strangefruit” Nyhus: Turntables
    Vytas Sondeckis: Liepaja Symphony Orchestra
    Eivind Aarset: Guitar

  7. Abdication And Coronation
    Composed by Bang / Honoré / Molvær from the music of Robert Schumann
    Jan Bang: Samples:
    Erik Honoré: Synthesizer, Programming, Field Recording
    Nils Petter Molvær: Trumpet

  8. Suicide Bomber
    Composed by Bang
    Jan Bang: Samples, Synthesizer

  9. Taking Life
    Composed by Bang / Henriksen
    Jan Bang: Samples, Synthesizer, Dictaphone, Percussion, Field Recording
    Arve Henriksen: Trumpet
    Samples:
    Anne Marie Almedal: Voice
    Voice sample taken from “Death Restored” composed by
    Almedal / Bang / Honoré / Moe-Repstad. Used by permission.

  10. Ululations
    Composed by Bang
    Jan Bang: Samples
    Samples:
    Jon Hassell: Trumpet
    Arve Henriksen: Soft Synth
    Ági Szalóki: Voice

  11. Exile From Paradise
    Composed by Bang/Hassell /Endresen
    Jan Bang: Samples
    Jon Hassell: Trumpet
    Erik Honoré: Live Sampling
    Peter Freeman: Bass, Electronics
    Samples:
    Sidsel Endresen: Voice

Produced by Jan Bang
Titles: David Sylvian
Art direction: David Sylvian
Design: Chris Bigg
Artwork: Denise Schatz (www.deniseschatz.net)
Supported by Fond for Utøvende Kunstnere and Lyd og Bilde
Mastered at Audio Virus LAB, Oslo by Helge Sten
Jan Bang is represented by Kjell Kalleklev
Special thanks to: Arne Chr. Bang, John Cumming, Erik Honoré, Kjell Kalleklev, Pål “Strangefruit” Nyhus, Beate Schüler, Vytas Sondeckis, David Sylvian, Fiona Talkington

We can read on The Prague Post

Several of the tracks on ...And Poppies From Kandahar, like "Drug Mule" and "Exile From Paradise," have a distinctly Middle Eastern feel in keeping with the title's reference to Afghanistan. A definite sense of place - in philosophical and emotional rather than geographic terms - is conjured throughout the album by the music as well as the track titles and Endresen's vocals. Producer and composer David Sylvian also collaborated on the album, writing the title of each track and of the album itself. Asked whether the sound of the album influenced Sylvian's choices of titles or vice versa, Bang again refers to the fluidity of his working method, as well as to the famous collaborations between John Cage and Merce Cunningham, saying the key element of successful collaboration comes from "letting go."

"What David came up with worked really well, and I wanted to continue that path. The idea is not so different from the way Cage and Cunningham worked, where they wrote the music and dance separately. It's not a one-to-one way of working, but the point is for the different disciplines to work separately without one being a comment on the other," he says.

For a sound artist like Bang, the possibilities on each track seem limitless, but therein lies the difficulty. The composer utilizes live sampling in his performances, wherein he records and mixes musical phrases from the other musicians onstage and replays them almost immediately in new contexts. Such spontaneity is nearly impossible to recreate in the studio, but Bang says he always allows his instincts to guide him.


exile from paradise / undertow:

Video

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The track exile from paradise / undertow for listening and download is made available by SamadhiSound on Soundcloud.com

A beautiful live recording taken from last year's Punkt festival featuring a remarkable line up of musicians

(bang/ endresen/hassell)

jan bang: samples
lars danielsson: double bass
sidsel endresen: vocals
jon hassell: trumpet, keyboards
arve henriksen: trumpet
erik honoré: live sampling

recorded by geir østensjø at punkt, september, 2010.
mixed by erik honoré and jan bang at punkt studio kristiansand.

From samadhisound:

Acclaimed producer and Punkt Festival co-founder releases expansive, lush production featuring Jon Hassell, Nils Petter Molvær, Arve Henriksen, and Sidsel Endresen

… And Poppies From Kandahar, Jan Bang’s first album under his own name, evokes a powerful sense of place – but it’s not a place you would recognize, or ever expect to find.  A descendent of Jon Hassell’s “fourth world” concept, it sketches scenes of struggle and malice, in locales both primitive and urbane.   As a producer, Bang stitches it together like a patchwork atlas and then makes the seams disappear: live recordings and studio constructions, old samples and new solos come together to form an exquisite whole.

Bang recruits a cast of collaborators from Norway and beyond, who will be familiar to anyone who’s followed his recent productions: trumpeter and vocalist Arve Henriksen, whose albums Cartography and Chiaroscuro were co-produced by Bang; the stunning vocalist Sidsel Endresen, whose captivating turn on “The Midwife’s Dilemma” grows out of a moan and a half-croak; and samadhisound founder David Sylvian, who wrote the titles for each piece and the album as a whole, setting these abstract scenes in a disruptive context.  

This is music of the world, but it’s rooted in Kristiansand, Norway, Bang’s home and workplace.  His musical career began in the late ‘80s, when he cut his first albums in a synth-and-vocals duo with Erik  Honoré.  By the ‘90s he was a producer of Norwegian pop acts, when pianist Bugge Wesseltoft invited him on stage with an improvising ensemble.  “I had the idea of using musicians as ‘input’ to my sampler instead of vinyl,” recalls Bang.  “We called it ‘live sampling.’ I found it appealing to work in a live situation with improvised music where things change at the blink of an eye …  .  I was able to work in past, present and future, according to what the other musicians were doing and how they reacted to what I was throwing back into the mix.”

Bang started writing the material for … And Poppies From Kandahar in January 2009.   “As I often do, I started working on instrumentals which I then presented to the musician that I thought might benefit the track – not unlike the process of making the Cartography album with Arve. … I knew I wanted to write music that had references to my influences, but where I could use my own dialect.  I wanted to work with both composition and improvisation on an equal level – using contrasting forms, different dimensions, randomness, parallel directions which weren’t necessarily meant to express anything specific other than to work within the frame of the piece itself.”

The sounds on  … And Poppies From Kandahar come from the studio and the stage, close-mic’d instruments and field recordings, the clank of a bottle and the grandeur of an orchestra.   Says Bang, “As a ‘samplist’ I collect sounds that may become useful in other situations. It´s much like collecting sand shells without knowing how to use them – just keeping them because of their pure beauty.”  

The result transcends idiom or genre.  A sample of guitarist Eivind Aarset clicks over humble handclaps on “The Midwife’s Dilemma”; trumpeter Nils Petter Molvær solos over a melody by Robert Schumann.  “Self Injury” is a hybrid of live and studio tapes, where upright bass casts a pall over Arve Henriksen’s monastic falsetto.   And “Passport Control” excerpts  “Gammler Zen + Hohe Berge” by Germany’s Kammerflimmer Kollektief, marrying its urgent tempo to wary brass.

The conclusion, “Exile from Paradise,” is a performance of Sidsel Endresen’s “Undertow” that was taped at Punkt Festival 2008 – and that features Jon Hassell on trumpet.  “To me, Jon is one of the most important philosophers of our time.  I can hear his influence in a lot of peoples work, including my own.” Hassell’s solo, sweeping and pacifistic, blesses an unforgettable journey across borders and eras, from the fictional to the indescribable. 

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