Phil Minton - A Doughnut's End (2015)
Artist: Phil Minton
Title Of Album: A Doughnut's End
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Fataka
Genre: free improvisation
Quality: FLAC
Total Time: 38:01 min
Total Size: 390 MB
WebSite:
Tracklist:
A1 How Grand
A2 This Is A Good Place To Stay
A3 Breaking News
A4 Wilkins Rejoice
A5 Can I Stay Here For A Time?
A6 Still Breathing
A7 I Didn't Catch That
B1 There's A Reason
B2 Set In Stone
B3 Can I Help?
B4 I Was There When It Happened
B5 Is It Safe?
B6 Doughnut Results
B7 Delight
B8 Grandish
"Many of the sounds on the album’s 15 short tracks are unpleasant, but they’re all the more powerful for it. This work is in no way deprived of wonder, and you have to marvel at the breadth of what Minton can do. “Breaking News” bleeds from high pitched warbling to multiphonic density, the throat pushed to the weirdest limits of its potential. “There’s A Reason” reprises this sonic field, almost electronic in texture, while “Set In Stone” takes these techniques and flirts with the operatic. “Grandish”, the album’s final track, works through a series of high pitched peeps that could come from an as yet unidentified beast." - Matt Krefting, The Wire
"Things flap and billow a bit more than they used to, which Minton accentuates in the formation of starker, more striking vocal shapes – unstable vibratos, phlegmy belching baritones. What if it isn’t volume and clear articulation that renders a voice audible amongst the masses, but visceral wordless eccentricity?" - Jack Chuter, ATTN Magazine
~~~
At times barely more than breathing, at others breaking into full-throated song, A Doughnut's End is a highly concentrated sequence of solo improvisations that captures the full range of Minton's vocal powers.
As he says in the accompanying notes, while there is continuity between this record and previous "doughnut" albums, this latest offering is "less optimistic than forty years ago" when he still "thought stuff would get better", an optimism diminished by the continued political dominance of "slush-spraying doughnut-scoffers".
A Doughnut's End is a stark and affecting testament to one man's ongoing exploration of the potential of the human voice.
"Things flap and billow a bit more than they used to, which Minton accentuates in the formation of starker, more striking vocal shapes – unstable vibratos, phlegmy belching baritones. What if it isn’t volume and clear articulation that renders a voice audible amongst the masses, but visceral wordless eccentricity?" - Jack Chuter, ATTN Magazine
~~~
At times barely more than breathing, at others breaking into full-throated song, A Doughnut's End is a highly concentrated sequence of solo improvisations that captures the full range of Minton's vocal powers.
As he says in the accompanying notes, while there is continuity between this record and previous "doughnut" albums, this latest offering is "less optimistic than forty years ago" when he still "thought stuff would get better", an optimism diminished by the continued political dominance of "slush-spraying doughnut-scoffers".
A Doughnut's End is a stark and affecting testament to one man's ongoing exploration of the potential of the human voice.
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