€27,00
out of stock
about the record
‘Bandiera Di Carta’ represented the ongoing collaboration between instrument builder and composer Pierre Bastien and the London based experimental duo Tomaga (Valentina Magaletti and Tom Relleen). The artistic collaboration between Pierre and Tomaga began with two commissions: from Fructose Festival in Dunkirk and the revered underground festival Supersonic in Birmingham UK. Recording initially at a studio in the industrial port of Dunkirk, the uneasy bond between borders and states seems to have been a theoretical motor to the collaborative sessions, as well as the bleak landscape of the sea port frontier. This inspiration found further manifestation in the cover image for ‘Bandiera Di Carta’. Resembling a white paper flag, it is in fact a photograph of Bastien’s paper and air sound machine installed on stage at Teatro Carignano in Turin as part of the trio’s performance there. This charged, ambivalent image of a blank flag evokes the transcendence of the national, a prescient visual motif that meditates on the contemporary uncertainty around notions of national identity and borders but perhaps also a ‘carte blanche’ for the artists involved, in which they can deviate from the confines of their usual practice into new and strange territories.
For each piece Bastien’s unique sonic style: by turns his kinetic mecanoid motors, capriciously arrhythmic pipes, or the peculiar sussurus of paper, creates a world in which Tomaga introduce their musical pallete. Magaletti’s percussion anchors these sometimes chaotic forces into beguiling syncopations, with Relleen’s synthesizer and organ work creating harmonic counterpoints and interruptive provocations, to which Bastien responds with lyrical turns on prepared trumpet, rubber band, tin foil and bass ocarina.
All three musicians seem to find space to bloom in ways that are markedly different from their individual work and the resulting album is a strikingly original and powerfully bold affirmation of what can happen when venturing beyond the normal in pursuit of the other.
- 1 - Senza 6:58
- 2 - Pipes Of Dunkirk 5:50
- 3 - Bandiera Di Carta 7:48
- 4 - The Meeting 5:26
- 5 - Machines With Ideas 6:05
- 6 - Paper Ritual 4:13
- 7 - Doldrum 6:18
- 8 - Circles In The Ruin 4:37
Embed
Copy and paste this code to your site to embed.
€27,00
out of stock
- 1 - Senza 6:58
- 2 - Pipes Of Dunkirk 5:50
- 3 - Bandiera Di Carta 7:48
- 4 - The Meeting 5:26
- 5 - Machines With Ideas 6:05
- 6 - Paper Ritual 4:13
- 7 - Doldrum 6:18
- 8 - Circles In The Ruin 4:37
Embed
Copy and paste this code to your site to embed.
about the record
‘Bandiera Di Carta’ represented the ongoing collaboration between instrument builder and composer Pierre Bastien and the London based experimental duo Tomaga (Valentina Magaletti and Tom Relleen). The artistic collaboration between Pierre and Tomaga began with two commissions: from Fructose Festival in Dunkirk and the revered underground festival Supersonic in Birmingham UK. Recording initially at a studio in the industrial port of Dunkirk, the uneasy bond between borders and states seems to have been a theoretical motor to the collaborative sessions, as well as the bleak landscape of the sea port frontier. This inspiration found further manifestation in the cover image for ‘Bandiera Di Carta’. Resembling a white paper flag, it is in fact a photograph of Bastien’s paper and air sound machine installed on stage at Teatro Carignano in Turin as part of the trio’s performance there. This charged, ambivalent image of a blank flag evokes the transcendence of the national, a prescient visual motif that meditates on the contemporary uncertainty around notions of national identity and borders but perhaps also a ‘carte blanche’ for the artists involved, in which they can deviate from the confines of their usual practice into new and strange territories.
For each piece Bastien’s unique sonic style: by turns his kinetic mecanoid motors, capriciously arrhythmic pipes, or the peculiar sussurus of paper, creates a world in which Tomaga introduce their musical pallete. Magaletti’s percussion anchors these sometimes chaotic forces into beguiling syncopations, with Relleen’s synthesizer and organ work creating harmonic counterpoints and interruptive provocations, to which Bastien responds with lyrical turns on prepared trumpet, rubber band, tin foil and bass ocarina.
All three musicians seem to find space to bloom in ways that are markedly different from their individual work and the resulting album is a strikingly original and powerfully bold affirmation of what can happen when venturing beyond the normal in pursuit of the other.