| $17.01
back in stock as of december 12th, 2011
first in stock on may 4th, 2009
threads: electro-acoustic-improvisation electro-acoustic-composition beat-research machine-music minimalism-drones
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| | | editions mego (austria) #emego 098 cd mika vainio / lucio capece “trahnie” compact disc - ujeilus (3:23)
- juurake (5:32)
- escapes (6:05)
- hondonada (7:25)
- valontuo (6:10)
- hobojungle (3:18)
- ahuyenta temores (9:00)
- sahalaitainen (6:19)
- tolmavuo (3:06)
- sigilo (3:38)
- manana (5:19)
| | march 2009 release ; eminently noisy collaboration between panasonic’s mika vainio & free-improviser lucio capece, with plenty of mika’s raw electricity-wave synthesis (listen to the sound-sample for a taste) ... |
| | editions mego press release... |
| emego 098 lucio capece & mika vainio: trahnie cd release date: 02.03.2009
11 tracks total time: 59:15
lucio capece: soprano saxophone, bass clarinet, preparations, mixer-sax feedback, sruti box mika vainio: electronics and treatments, electric guitar, cymbal
recorded in berlin 2006-2008 artwork: tina frank
on first glance lucio capece and mika vainio seem unlikely partners. two standard bearers at opposing poles of extremity, both sonically and geographically. lucio from argentina and rooted in a traditions of jazz and improv, while mika hailing from finland sourced in early 90s electronic and industrial scenes.
however, they both share an alarming attention to detail when it comes to their audio compositions, and neither are afraid of pushing boundaries of abstraction to the limit. with this in mind its with great pleasure that editions mego issues their first album as a duo. recorded over a 2 year period in berlin (their common chosen home), its as startling as it is visceral. delicate as it is extreme. huge blasting slabs of concrete sax geometrically oppose sonic taps of electronic sound, which bring about a fascinating sound palette.
the opening ‘ujellus’ is both piercing and soothing; ‘juurake’ combines pure sweat with cold emotion; tense environmental scrapes flesh out on ‘ahuyenta temores’. from the pounding machinist overdrive on ‘tolmavuo’ to the poignant melancholy of ‘mañana’.
its all here. |
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