NONPLACE 10TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION

(CD)
Genre Electronica
FormatCD
Cat. noNON28
Label NONPLACE
Artist VARIOUS
Release Date19/04/2010
CarrierCD
Barcode881390257829
With this 10th Anniversary exclusive instrumentals CD Edition, Nonplace celebrates ten years of labeldom. ItÙs not merely a wild mixture of adventurous quality grooves, but an assembly of tunes from extremely different sources. The contributions come from Flanger (Atom¾ and Friedman), Burnt Friedman, Jaki Liebezeit (Can), Hayden Chisholm and The Embassadors, Root 70, Rashad Becker, Mark Ernestus (Rhythm&Sound/Hardwax), Joseph Suchy and Prof Psygrooves. Notoriously not fitting into any category all formations present dubwise instrumental tracks or remixes of the label repertoire, making ambitious musical forms accessible but at the same time enabling the experience of utter foreignness. Ever since Burnt Friedman shortened his pseudonym Nonplace Urban Field to Nonplace back in 2000, the title has provided an ideal formula for music that soars upward with no intention of being pinned down. In sociological terms, Nonplace Urban Field refers to the fragmentation of American cities whose commercial zones moved out to the suburbs, the evolution of post-industrial container deserts devoid of centre. Nonplace can be grasped as the antithesis of commonplace or also in terms of quantum theory. The whole is always more than the sum of its parts. Quantum physics, that most exact of sciences, considers not just the particles but also their interrelationships. When Nonplace music is coming into being, the smallest, even most random event influences the work. Nonplace is a formula for high improbability, since the sounds happen more on the fringes. In this respect, Nonplace is the counter-programme to the ubiquitous striving for higher redundancy (simplification by digitalization, coding, standardization). Details and rhythms are the agents that de-core the songs and potentially transform them into further versions. The attention shifts away from the individual contribution of any one instrument or player, away from the defining hook and towards the micro-elements of the groove with its patterns of linkage that inhabit the musical forms. In music of this kind, the role played by subjects and grand gestures is no longer central. That ties in with Friedmann™s notion of dub: šDub is a method! It allows me to obtain constantly different results on the basis of the same material. The more pronounced the level of improvisation during the mix, the more the raw material, the original, is forced into the background, sometimes even maltreated to the point of being unrecognizable. The procedure allows me to highlight certain musical features of a song while wholly ignoring other ingredients  most likely foreground components such as vocals or instrumental solos. The resultant numbers (tracks) come closer to my own perspective: they™re de-cored, so to speak, no longer have a centre. From this point of view neither jazz nor dub are styles. They are tags made up to avoid the artist™s name, to give them a commonplace, as opposed to a Nonplace!" Accordingly, Friedmann™s music and the process of its creation reveal no explicit place that might aid orientation, no genre codes or recipes. Liebezeit, one of the most important drummers of our times. They joined forces in order to quietly transgress musical idioms without demonstrative gestures of destruction and deconstruction. With breathtaking precision, their cyclical, uneven rhythms intermesh the played with the programmed: sequences, drums, synthesizers. In spite of rules and binding expressive forms, the strangely abstract, improvised ritual music that results falls somewhere between trance, dub, differentiation and reflection. Nonplace has existed as long as they™ve worked together. Since Hayden Chisholm (wind instruments) and Joseph Suchy (electric guitar) began working with Nonplace about seven years ago, they have made their mark on numerous label releases. Moving steadily away from jazz into unknown territory, Chisholm co-authors The Embassadors (Friedmann is the producer), and pops up on numerous other Nonplace tracks. Listen without preconceptions, become a medium, risk playing a game with no rules: the subconscious reactions associated with blind spots in causal history equally hold true for the playing of Joseph Suchy. The compilation also features five tracks by Flanger. This cooperation between Atom¾ and Friedmann began in Chile in 1996 with Atari computers, samplers, and Akai MPC 3000, and resulted in three programmed post-jazz album releases on Ninja Tune. Since 2005, Flanger has been publishing on Nonplace. Rashad Becker, the label™s resident mastering engineer, not only mastered the anniversary CD but re-mixed three back-catalogue tracks at the same time. In addition, Mark Ernestus (rhythm & sound) mixed and co-produced a previously unreleased Embassadors title. Tracklist 01 The Librarian (Friedman Remix) - Friedman & Liebezeit 02 Flow (Friedman Remix) - Prof. Psygrooves 03 Iboga Dreamtime (medium)  The Embassadors 04 Makena (Mark Ernestus Mix)  The Embassadors 05 Where Should I Go ? (Instrumental Remix) - Burnt Friedman 06 Roots Automation - Burnt Friedman 07 Funeral March (Remix) - Flanger 08 Nightbeat (Flanger Remix) - Root 70 (plays Flanger) 09 Crime In The Pale Moonlight (Remix) - Flanger 10 Crime In The Pale Moonlight (Rashad Becker Remix) - Flanger 11 Peninsula (2010 License Version) - Flanger 12 The Sticks (Rashad Becker Remix) - Friedman & Liebezeit 13 Burnt Friedman - Dream Sequence (Soundtrack 14 Gruppenreise (Rashad Becker Remix) - Root 70 (plays Burnt Friedman) 15 Wirklich (Friedman Remix) - Friedman & Liebezeit