SCORES III by INTERSTELLAR FUNK / GUENTER RÅLER

SKU118498
ArtistINTERSTELLAR FUNK / GUENTER RÅLER
TitleSCORES III
LabelDEKMANTEL
Catalog #DKMNTL069
Tag
ReleaseW 20 - 2021
FormatVinyl - EU12''
Exclusive
 € 11,99 incl. VAT, excl. shipping

Tracks

  1. interstellar funk - seasonshore sequences
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/d/dkmntl069_scores_iii/a1_interstellar_funk_-_seasonshore_sequences_120sec.mp3
  2. guenter raler - ecotone
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/d/dkmntl069_scores_iii/b1_guenter_raler_-_ecotone_120sec.mp3

Description

Label Text "Dekmantel once again teams up with RE:VIVE, the cultural initiative setup by the The Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision, to pair modern electronic talent with Dutch archival footage. The third EP in the Scores series sees Interstellar Funk and Italian producer Guenter Råler create innovative, modular soundscapes to the graceful visual arts unearthed from the EYE Filmmuseum archives.

As Interstellar Funk, Olf van Elden uses his production competency to craft a heavenly arpeggiated, synth composition to the amateur aquarium movies by J.L. Clement which are edited for this project by Sjoerd Martens. Filmed in the 1940’s, the video’s turn-of-the-century black-and-white style aquatic footage is reanimated through van Elden’s tacit polyphonic, modular sonic soundtrack. Layering together multiple sequences, van Elden pieces together the music as a whole, to mimic the way in which the film was created.

On the B-Side, Italian abstract artist and Dutch native Guenter Raler concocts a deeply introspective, and perfectly choreographed, ambient soundtrack to a select series of pieced together clips from the Collectie Natuurbeelden, [the Institute’s Collection of Natural Images]. The music plays against the depiction of multiple biological communities in transition; what is referred to as an ecotone. The title itself not only recalls that of a musical tone, but represents the ever-evolving aspect of life and nature as similar colours, along with movements of animals and plants pass on from one image to the next.

Within their own right, the new scores not only give the age-old films new context and sonic character, but exist as creative works as their own, full of resonance and individualism that highlight the retrospective artists’ voices to their fullest."

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