The Squid's Ear Magazine


Loris: Farmer / Hughes / Jones: the cat from cat hill (Another Timbre)

Electronics and natural objects with a common love for the E Bow from this electroacoustic improvising trio recording at Middlesex University in 2009.
 

Price: $15.95


Quantity:

Out of Stock

Quantity in Basket: None

Log In to use our Wish List
Shipping Weight: 5.00 units

Sample The Album:





product information:

Personnel:



Patrick Farmer-natural objects, E Bow snare, tapes, wood

Sarah Hughes-chorded zither, piano, E Bow

Daniel Jones-turntable, E Bow, piezo discs, electronics


Click an artist name above to see in-stock items for that artist.




Label: Another Timbre
Catalog ID: at21
Squidco Product Code: 12421

Format: CD
Condition: New
Released: 2009
Country: UK
Packaging: Jewel tray, not sealed.
Recorded by Patrick Farmer at Middlesex University 09.

Descriptions, Reviews, &c.

Electronics and natural objects with a common love for the E Bow from the electroacoustic improvising trio recording at Middlesex University in 2009.



"Another Timbre Interview with Patrick Farmer on the release of 'The Cat from Cat Hill'"

First of all when and how did you get into experimental music?

For me all paths lead back to Tom Waits; he's just one of those intriguing figures you gravitate

towards. Waits obviously plays with a revolving cast of wonderful musicians, and for me the most

significant of said musicians would be Gino Robair. Gino's responsible for a large part of my early

'percussive' development through his album 'Singular Pleasures' . From there on I remember John

Zorn being quite a major figure as I was starting to investigate experimental music, and then of

course Richard Pinnell with his warmly received and copious recommendations. I'll still happily

listen to Waits and Robair, but I seem to have lost whatever drew me towards Zorn.

I love the disc 'apis mellifera' that you released on Kostis Kilimis' Organised Music from Thessaloniki label.

You use recordings of bees that you gently and beautifully transform in various ways. It's very effectively

achieved, but is a very simple, ecologically minimal idea. Is there an ecological aspect to your approach

to music?

I've slowly come to the realisation that everything I do resides under a biophilic roof. I very much dislike

the attitude that some people maintain as to artists being above any degree of responsibility except to

their own art, that they are above picking up after themselves and can live within an utterly selfish

manner because of the very fact that they are artists. It's all commonsense really, and is not, of course,

solely applicable to artists; it applies to anyone who is in a position to be able to consider things such as

this. Listening, looking, using any of the senses whether indoors or out, to me, is a series of constantly

humbling experiences, a neverending plateau of significance that instills in one a wonderful sense of

how insignificant we really are, and a realisation of the joy and significance that can arise from such

perceived insignificance. I've asked myself time and time again as to whether there is any ecological

purpose within what I do and I've never really come up with anything that is any way satisfactory, and

I think that is one of the main reasons why I keep working. I can't see myself ever coming up with an

answer.

Since 'apis mellifera' was released I've often had the good fortune to observe and record honeybees,

and after a few recording trips I found myself presented with quite a lot of diverse sound material, I did

think about perhaps letting my own ways of hearing the world come into play again and editing the

material down, chopping it up, etc. But after a lot of daydreaming I decided to just leave the material as

it was, chop off a little at the beginning and at the end and try and leave my interference to a minimum.

What I was left with were about eight excerpts of sound that I think represent what can be heard in a

hive much more honestly than any piece that I could have edited or processed myself. The range of

sounds these insects create is really quite staggering, which leads me to a very large factor in my

reasons for recording micro environments such as these, pure intrigue, a curiosity borne out of constant

questioning and a respect for the world around us, especially the world we can not see or hear.

I decided to put the recordings up on compost and height as the ethic of the site seemed in keeping with

my recording intentions.

Your activities as a musician seem to cover a wide range, from field recording to percussion through

electronics to the use of found objects and unconventional instruments. Is this diversity something you

consciously choose, or does it just happen?

The degree of similarity within varying approaches, techniques and so forth, the environments that dictate

most of what I record or collect, to whatever surface I may choose to utilise with whatever series of objects,

I believe to be all intrinsically linked. During my degree I realised how similar many of the drones that I try to

create with various drum heads are to a lot of the field recordings that I go out 'searching' for, and also the

techniques utilised in engaging them. I like to spend a lot of time walking and thinking about the dense

unification between the processes of finding materials for preparation, how my field recordings inform my

playing, and how the walks inform what objects I use. It's all so hypersensitive. When you're out location-

scouting you are given the chance to get to know an area, to survey it intimately, and the particular desire

or desires you approach a soundscape with can shape your evaluation of it. Viewing common elements of

life, such as a stretch of fencing or honeybees, in this way imbibes you with an altered perspective. Walking

throughout the day to find a particular area where the fence's sonority matches that of the wind power can

encompass you entirely. Such prolonged periods of observation and quiet inevitably create many questions

and lend themselves too much confusion, a great deal of which appears in my work, but it is a confusion I

am happy to accommodate.

Many contemporary music fans of my generation have gone through years of weighing up the pros and cons

of improvisation versus composed music. I get the impression that for you there is no 'versus' about it; you

seem happy and refreshingly open to working in improvised contexts and to perform scored pieces. Do you

have preferences either way? Is it an issue for you at all?

I have much more experience working in improvised contexts than I do with scored pieces, but I definitely

don't have a preference as that depicts some sort of hierarchy. Let's say that I lean towards a rhizomic train

of thought, a kind of fugue whereby these varying processes are all indubitably connected and branch off as

often as they return, the varying boughs bringing and taking with them various new experiences trying to

recapture the naïve amazement of initial observation, and the joy that new sounds can bring. Intermingled

within improvised and composed musics I also find a constant source of inspiration in literature. In recent

times there has been no larger influence on me than the writings of Philippe Jaccottet, Francis Ponge, Italo

Calvino, Andrei Platonov, Emile Zola, etc etc.

Are there any musicians or composers who you feel have particularly shaped your approach to music?

I feel that pretty much every musician I've had the good fortune to play with has altered me in some way or

another. I've been so lucky to play with people like Ryan Jewell, Jez riley French, Angharad Davies, Matt

Milton, Dominic Lash, etc etc, and knowing people like Lee Patterson, Jeph Jerman, Benedict Drew, Seymour

Wright, David Lacey, Michael Pisaro, Mark Wastell, I'm just some kind of quasi constant amorphous existent

that has simply imbibed all these joyous occurrences. Most of the people I have met through such music are

very warm, friendly and positive, microcosms of the music itself.

Can you tell us about the group Loris, and how the recording session that became 'The Cat from Cat Hill'

came about?

Originally I'd arranged with Dan Jones to record him solo at the university where I was studying at the time,

as he is woefully under-recorded for someone of such genuine ability. Then we also arranged to record a

few duo sets. I was talking to Sarah the night before the recording, saying how much I dislike having to

record whilst playing and monitoring everything at the same time, so she offered to come down and help

out. Events transpired and she, thankfully, brought her zither down to the studio. I can't really imagine the

recording without her presence; a lot of the soundworlds that Dan and I share are very similar, and having

Sarah there just threw our playing out the door and enabled us to treat the situation with a lot more clarity

and animation.

The title is a little nostalgic, as the campus we recorded in is called Cat Hill, and for the last two years in

university a cat was adopted by the university, a cat of ample proportions that would happily sit on top of

the bookshelves in the library and once, I believe, sat on Sarah's lap for about an hour.

You arrived in London with a whirlwind of energy and set up or got involved very quickly in lots of projects.

What did you make of the London scene, and is it going to be hard being away from the metropolis where,

for better or worse, the vast majority of experimental musicians in the uk live and work?

None of it was conscious at first, it just all seemed to happen. I can't remember my first gig at Cafe Oto,

which was pretty much where I played all of my London shows. I was touring a lot more then than I am

now and had made a lot of good friends through putting on shows in Nottingham, and when I moved down

obviously they were all playing in and around London at some point or another, so things just really took

off from there. I don't miss London, I love being in the country. I obviously miss the people there, but it's

just another way of looking at the same picture.

This does feel like an exciting time in contemporary music, with new figures emerging and new connections

being made betweendifferent 'schools' or groups of musicians and composers. You yourself are shortly going

to perform works by two of the Wandelweiser group of composers (Michael Pisaro and Manfred Werder) at

a concert in Bristol with the musicians from Loris plus Matt Davies and David Thomas. Is this at least one of

the directions that you see yourself moving in?

Reading over Manfred and Michael's text-based scores is a wonderful string of experiences in itself, regardless

of realising them in the public domain, and I think a lot of it comes down to the period before the recording or

the performance itself. A dominant aspect of field recording is the location scouting, the searching, standing

still, revisiting a location time and time again with varying intent, the thoughts that present themselves to you

and the thoughts you present yourself to, and I think a lot of what appeals to me about scores by people like

Manfred and Michael is just that: the time spent beforehand, the consideration and the varying moments spent

in their presence.

As well as making music you (together with Sarah Hughes) run the remarkable Compost and Height label /

Website (http://compostandheight.blogspot.com/). You seem to have a commendably open policy in terms

of accepting material on the website from a wide variety of musicians. Do you seek out submissions, or

simply take things that are sent to you? Do you have clear criteria for taking material, and are there things

that fall within the general area of experimental music that you wouldn't put on the website?

Both Sarah and I used to put on shows, in Sheffield and in Nottingham, and when we moved to London we

wanted to carry on doing something but we didn't really want to carry on promoting, so we came up with

the idea for the label. It developed a lot quicker than we thought. I remember us looking through the 'Logic

of Sense' by Deleuze and trying to come up with a name for the label, developing some kind of environ-

mentally aware manifesto that we could work from, and then simply asking a few people whom we both

admired to send us some of their work. From then on the response has been really overwhelming. So many people have helped us get the label off the ground, and so many people continue to introduce themselves to us through their wonderful work. We haven't really sought out a submission for a while now, although one thing we would love to do, and have wanted to do since the label's conception, is be host to more writing! As in keeping with the ethos of the label, the content of the writing would be very open, but we are certainly after a more, shall we say, conscientious, consilient, approach to a work...

Having said all that, the best thing for us about the label has been getting to know people like Ben Owen and Adam Sonderberg through their submissions, and then the friendships that develop from that point. Friendships that probably wouldn't have existed if it were not for the label. That's really a wonderful thing."

Email interview conducted by Simon Reynell, November 2009



This album has been reviewed on our magazine:

The Squid
The Squid's Ear!

Artist Biographies

"Patrick Farmer (b.1983) is a musician and sound artist working within improvisation and composition. Commonly referred to as a percussionist, Farmer will often enlist the help of a drum or turntable to act as a resonator for natural materials or filtering field recordings. He has performed throughout Europe and America, including concerts at the ICA, Stockholm National Gallery, and The Radiator Festival. He has recently spent time as artist in residence at Q-O2 in Belgium and MOKS in Estonia, with a forthcoming residency at Soundfjord, London."

-Sounds of Europe (http://www.soundsofeurope.eu/artist/patrick-farmer/)
3/27/2024

Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.

"Sarah Hughes is a London-based improviser playing the chorded zither, piano and e-bow. she is part of the Loris ensemble."

-Squidco 3/27/2024

Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.


Track Listing:



1. A Heron and a Terrapin 18:29

2. Sophie 15:23

3. Newts under concrete 11:14

Related Categories of Interest:


Improvised Music
Electro-Acoustic
Electro-Acoustic Improv
European Improv, Free Jazz & Related
London & UK Improv & Related Scenes
Free Improvisation
Turntablists
Trio Recordings
Objects and Home-made Instruments

Search for other titles on the label:
Another Timbre.


Recommended & Related Releases:
Other Recommended Releases:
Hughes, Sarah
I Love This City And Its Outlying Lands [SINGLE SIDED CASSETTE]
(Mappa)
A contemplative solo work of subtle nuance and laden atmospheres, slowly drifting through a virtual landscape of dampened details, from London composer and improviser Sarah Hughes, performing on zither, piano, Hammond organ, sine tones, white noise, electric harpsichord, and objects, using an eBow to draw sustained tones over which delicate progressions advance.
Farmer, Patrick
Wild Horses Think Of Nothing Else The Sea - Tape Readings [2 CASSETTES + TEXT]
(Winds Measure)
During 2012 Patrick Farmer walked half of the Welsh Coast, writing a series of observations, which on this release are read in environmental settings by Antoine Beuger, Jeph Jerman, Bruno Guastalla, Sally Ann McIntyre, Holly Pester, Daniela Cascella, & Michael Pisaro-Liu.



Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought:
Granberg, Magnus / Skogen
Nun, es wird nicht weit mehr gehn
(Another Timbre)
Composer Magnus Granberg took influences from Schubert's song cycle "Die Winterreise", extracting tonal material, which he merged with rhythmic influences from medieval English folk music and a song by Dowland, merging them into a temporal framework for this large and subtle composition, executed by a setpet including Angharad Davies, Erik Carlsson, Henrik Olsson, d'incise, &c.
Eastman, Julius / Apartment House
Femenine
(Another Timbre)
A live recording of Julius Eastman's 1974 work "Femenine" performed by Apartment House led by cellist Anton Lukoszevieze, with Simon Limbrick on vibraphone, Kerry Yong on piano, Mark Knoop on keyboard, Mira Benjamin on violin, and Gavin Morrison and Emma Williams on flute, an ecstatic and intricate work using a repeating figure contrasted with both asynchronous and complementing backgrounds.
Davies, Angharad / Rie Nakajima / Alice Purton
Dethick
(Another Timbre)
Three free improvising women--Angharad Davies, Rie Nakajima, and Alice Purton--met in the church in the tiny hamlet of Dethick, near Matlock, Derbyshire, over the course of two days developing the ten pieces of this album using an impressive set of stringed and percussive instruments, objects, and mysterious sources to create these fascinating sonic evocations.
Fages, Ferran
Un lloc entre dos records
(Another Timbre)
Submerging the listener into the immediacy of pure perception through the economy of materials and atemporality, Catalan guitarist Ferran Fages presents the 3rd piece of his trilogy for guitar and sinteones, referencing Feldman, Lucier and Szlavnics as he specifies tunings for the guitar accompanied by pure resonating sinetones used as memory vehicles or shadows.
Smith, Linda Catlin
Wanderer
(Another Timbre)
Eight sophisticated chamber pieces composed by Linda Catlin Smith and realized by the Canadian Apartment House ensemble, including a solo piano performed by Philip Thomas, a piano duo with Thomas and Mark Knoop, and works for percussion & cello, 2 quintet pieces for strings, percussion and winds, and two 7-piece conducted works with two percussionists, strings and brass.
Granberg, Magnus
Es Schwindelt Mir, Es Brennt Mein Eingweide
(Another Timbre)
An hour-long work for an ensemble of six musicians by Swedish composer Magnus Granberg performed by Anna Lindal on baroque violin, d incise on vibraphonen electronics, Cyril Bondi on percussion, Anna Kaisa Meklin on viola da gamba, Christoph Schiller on spinet, and Magnus Granberg himself on prepared piano, transforming material from a song by Franz Schubert.
Frey, Jurg / Magnus Granberg
Early to Late
(Another Timbre)
New ensemble pieces by Jurg Frey and Magnus Granberg played by Ensemble Grizzana, commissioned by Another Timbre with the request that both start from the same two fragments of early music, one by Johannes Ockeghem, the other by William Byrd, each composer producing fascinatingly different pieces that both contain echoes of the source material.
Cage, John
Winter Music
(Another Timbre)
John Cage's 1957 composition in a visceral realisation for four pianos, played by John Tilbury, Philip Thomas, Mark Knoop and Catherine Laws, using chance procedures to assign each of the pianist's five of the twenty pages of the score, the pianists agreeing on an overall duration of 40 minutes and preparing their parts independently, performed without rehearsal.
Insub Meta Orchestra
13 & 27
(Another Timbre)
Coordinated and composed by d'incise and Cyril Bondi, this incredible Swiss-based collective of 30 to 40 experimental musicians was founded in 2010 and has presented concerts and recordings since; this CD presents two works, "13 unissons" splitting the orchestra into 13 subgroups; and "27 times" where each musician plays 27 times in 30 minutes; phenomenal.
Frey, Jurg
Collection Gustave Roud [2 CDs]
(Another Timbre)
A double CD with five beautiful pieces that engage with the work of the extraordinary French-Swiss poet Gustave Roud, with performers including Dante Boon, Stefan Thut, Andrew McIntosh and Jurg Frey himself, 10 compositions that Frey wrote in the manner that Roud would, roaming with a sketchbook and developing the pieces based on impressions of his surroundings.
Feldman, Morton
Piano, Violin, Viola, Cello
(Another Timbre)
Morton Feldman's final composition, originally premiered in 1987, here performed by pianist Mark Knoop, violinist Aisha Orazbayeva, violist Bridget Carey, and cellist Anton Lukoszevieze, recording a year after their successful performance at London's Cafe Oto, maintaining focus and concentration on this large, unhurried work of micro-variations.
Szlavnics, Chiyoko
During a Lifetime
(Another Timbre)
Three works from Canadian composer Chiyoko Szlavnics, two electroacoustic compositions incorporating sinewaves, one with a saxophone quartet and the other with two accordions, two flutes and two percussionists; and a string trio of long sustained tones and slow glissandi.
d'incise / Cristian Alvear
Appalachian Anatolia (14th Century)
(Another Timbre)
A composition for solo 'modified guitar' from Swiss composer d'incise peformed by guitarist Cristian Alvear, music "at the confluence of sound, melody and rhythm. Something quiet but somehow driven by a pulse, existing somewhere between the electroacoustic and the tonal conceptions of music."
Harrison, Bryn
Receiving the Approaching Memory
(Another Timbre)
Bryn Harrison's highly acclaimed, labyrinthine composition for violin & piano from 2014, expertly realised by violinist Aisha Orazbayeva and pianist Mark Knoop, for whom this 5-part work of beautiful repetitions reflecting tapestries of sound was written.
Frey, Jurg
Circles and Landscapes - works for solo piano played by Philip Thomas
(Another Timbre)
Five new or recent pieces from composer Jurg Frey, alongside his 1993 work "In Memoriam Cornelius Cardew", all performed by pianist Philip Thomas, presenting slowly unfolding compositions emphasizing the physical space and time within which sounds are situated.
Feldman, Morton played by John Tilbury & Philip Thomas
Two Pianos And Other Pieces 1953-1969 [2 CDs]
(Another Timbre)
"Two Pianos" is one of Morton Feldman's most experimental and radical works, performed here by John Tilbury & Philip Thomas; plus lesser known works including 'Piece for Four Pianos', 'Between Categories', 'False Relationships and the Extended Ending' and 'Two Pieces for Three Pianos'.
Chang / Davies / Drouin / Durrant / Patterson / Tilbury
Variable Formations
(Another Timbre)
A live recording at Cafe Oto in 2013 from this sextet in an extended and dynamic piece in which the musicians develop material they had presented in small groups in the first half of the concert, mixing improvised and prepared elements.
Dahl, Anders & Skogen
Rows
(Another Timbre)
Sweden's Skogen returns with a beautiful work for chamber ensemble with Magnus Granberg, Angharad Davies, Toshimaru Nakamura, Ko Ishikawa, Anna Lindal, Henrik Olsson, Petter wastberg and Erik Carlsson, interpreting a piece by Anders Dahl using a 12 tone system.
Chabala / Jones / Martin / Mukarji / Nakamura
Unbalanced In (Unbalanced Out)
(Another Timbre)
Six musicians from around the world (Chabala / Jones / Martin / Mukarji / Nakamura) created this 50-minute track over the course of a year by collaborating and file-sharing online.
Taus (Klaus Filip & Tim Blechmann)
Pinna
(Another Timbre)
An improvisation for two laptop computers performed by Tim Blechmann and Klaus Filip, recorded live in Vienna at "neue musik in st ruprecht", 2010, contrasting minimal tones with massive bass rumble and frothing frequencies.
Tierce #2
Caisson
(Another Timbre)
A 2nd outing for this electronics-based trio using field recordings, zithers, turntables, amplified knitting machine, &c.; a 60 minute improvisation recorded in concert in Hull in November 2010.
Malaby, Tony
Tamarindo Live
(Clean Feed)
Saxophonist Tony Malaby's incredible Tamarindo trio with William Parker on bass and Nasheet Waits on drums is transformed to a quartet with trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith, performing live in NYC, 2010.
Jaruzelski's Dream
Jazz Gawronski
(Clean Feed)
Italian Transalpine reedist Piero Bittolo (El Gallo Rojo) in his oddly named trio playing freeform jazz with a groovy accent, refined technique, imagination, soul and guts.
Bauder, Matt
Day in Pictures
(Clean Feed)
A brilliant NY quintet led by reedist Matt Bauder, with trumpeter Nate Wooley, pianist Angelica Sanxhez, bassist Jason Ajemian & dummer Tomas Fujiwara, an album dedicated to Donald Walden, Bill Dixon & Fred Anderson.



The Squid's Ear Magazine

The Squid's Ear Magazine

© 2002-, Squidco LLC