Last Updated 11/15/2024 07:23 PM EST
LOG IN
CART
Cart Items :
Sub Total :
artist
label
title
catalog #
any field
advanced
New Releases
Artists
Labels
Forthcoming
Best Sellers
Reviews
Jobs
soundclips
[All Countries]
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Belgium
Brazil
Canada
Chile
China
Colombia
Croatia
Czech Republic
Denmark
Egypt
Europe
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Korea
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nigeria
Norway
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Puerto Rico
Romania
Russian Federation
Scotland
Senegal
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan
Thailand
Turkey
UK
Ukraine
United States
Uruguay
World's Leading Terrorist State
World's Misleading Terrorist State
[All Formats]
Book
Cassette
CD
Clothing
Digital
DVD
MISC
VHS
Vinyl
[All Genres]
CLASSICAL
COMEDY
ELECTRONIC
EXPERIMENTAL
HIPHOP
JAZZ
Misc
ROCK
WORLD
artist
catalog #
label
title
any field
Tweet
Send Email
PRICE:
$18.50
$18.50
IN STOCK
01. BOCK, LOUISE - Clue Woman
Your browser does not support the audio element.
02. BOCK, LOUISE - Incandescent Misspelled Word
Your browser does not support the audio element.
03. BOCK, LOUISE - Free But Theheartistwisted
Your browser does not support the audio element.
04. BOCK, LOUISE - The Leaf Cutter and The Stick Bug
Your browser does not support the audio element.
ARTIST
BOCK, LOUISE
TITLE
Repetitives in Illocality
FORMAT
LP
LABEL
FEEDING TUBE RECORDS
CATALOG #
FTR 374LP
FTR 374LP
GENRE
ROCK
RELEASE DATE
5/4/2018
"
Louise Bock
is one of the performing names worn by
Taralie Peterson
of that most excellent duo,
Spires That in the Sunset Rise
. And the music on
Repetitives in Illocality
recalls a few aspects of Spires' recent live shows. It's akin to a dreamily aggressive take on the outer fringes of early ECM-style improvisation. A lovely hover between out-chamber-jazz, new music and the unknown tongue. Using cello, sax and treated lap harp, Louise Bock creates surfaces that are sometimes as chopped as ice sculptures made with a chainsaw, and at other moments as smooth as the soft expanse of
Brian Eno
's forehead. Those passages where the cello takes the lead are the most serious. Some passages, with their mournful sweep, almost sound like the slower parts of
Kodály
's 'Solo Cello Sonata.' The treated lap harp has resonance qualities not unlike a jaw harp at times, enabled to produce long tone lines, as well as to wobble like a jaw full of loose teeth. When Taralie's voice comes in, it can almost seem like
Martin Rev
is playing a solo on an old pushbutton phone while
Judy Nylon
blows clouds of aether into his wig. But the vocals combine with the sweet saw of cello in an entirely different way. Suggesting snippets of not-yet-discovered operettas about life elsewhere. Meanwhile, lap harp and sax appear to exist in a post-progressive universe where early '70s
Gong
may have actually had some serious moments. And this is some seriously amazing stuff -- solo, duos, trios and quartets drawn from the deep well of Louise Brock's imagination. Defy illocality. Come close and listen." --
Byron Coley
, 2018 Edition of 300.
Other releases on FEEDING TUBE RECORDS