VARIOUS - MUSICAL OFFERING

CD, https://coldspring.co.uk/

A new batch of Cold Spring CDs, and I must say… At least with one of them, they stole my mathematic sound nerdish heart. “Musical Offering” is a sampler with Russian composers using the ANS, probably entirely up to its limits. Two tracks by Eduard Artemiev and one track each by Oleg Buloshkin, Sofia Gubaidulina, Edison Denisov and Alfred Schnittke. I only knew about Artemiev on this list because of his movie soundtracks. So to hear his work without a movie and, of course, images of empty landscapes, a brutalist-themed forgotten society and demise and a void enter my head, but fair is fair: all images were in colour. Nothing bleak or grey but the richness of the ANS is all over the place.

So for those who don’t know what an ANS is all about, it’s a Russian synthesizer designed over 20 years by Evgeny Murzin, and there is only one. It works with drawings on glass plates and devices that transform light into voltages, and those voltages create sounds. The glass discs spin, and well … Wiki / YouTube is your friend here. Many artists have worked with the ANS, including Coil, The Anti Group Communications. Yes, [law-rah] also used original sounds from the ANS on their split with Cisfinitum (released on Fario). Maybe working on that release is the reason why I have a personal weakness for this machine. I just couldn’t get over how rich the sounds were that we got to use. Sure: A completely different thing than Coil being in the museum and drawing on the discs and us ‘just’ working with some recordings one of the museum guys did for us. Yet still … I was impressed then, and I’m still impressed now.

For this disc, I am keeping the review smallish. Why? Because you already know if you are a) interested in neo-classical compositions by Russian composers. If you are, you will get this release and not be disappointed. It’s as simple as that. If you are b) a nerd who loves different forms of synthesis like me, this album is one to consider. Because it’s very varied and shows a lot of the ANS in ‘its original environment’: Russian composers on a Russian synth, and if you are c) curious about composition techniques, this will break your mind. Because from the ritualistic rhythmic parts in “Sacrament” (by Buloshkin), the ‘voices’ in “Vivente-Non Vivente” (by Artemiev) and the birds and frogs in “Birds Singing” (by Denisov), can you tell what is the origin of the sound? Is it a bird? Is it a recording? Or is it super ANS?

For me, it’s not one of those reasons to love this album, and it’s d) all of the above.

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