Jan St. Werner - Spectric Acid (Fiepblatter Catalogue #5) (2017)
Artist: Jan St. Werner
Title: Spectric Acid (Fiepblatter Catalogue #5)
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: The Fiepblatter Catalogue
Genre: Experimental, Electronic, Noise
Quality: 16bit-44,1kHz FLAC
Total Time: 40:55
Total Size: 302 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Spectric Acid (Fiepblatter Catalogue #5)
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: The Fiepblatter Catalogue
Genre: Experimental, Electronic, Noise
Quality: 16bit-44,1kHz FLAC
Total Time: 40:55
Total Size: 302 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Acideous Welsh (10:43)
2. Victorian Trajectory (09:46)
3. Grains and Grammar (03:04)
4. Insuline (05:58)
5. Solo Winslet (03:15)
6. Gourd Skin Particles (04:33)
7. Bata Punch Bird (03:36)
Jan St. Werner summons flux and fragmentation on Spectric Acid, building up the record's blistering, locomotive beat structures around the correlation of musical spectra. Their movements triggered in part by peaks in frequency envelopes, rhythms buckle and fracture according to a complex logic that slides past aural perception and harmonic resolution; a “phenomenological alchemy” (Rădulescu) takes shape among unsteady synthesizer whirls and stammering percussive phrases. The effect is deadly, paralytic; but listeners willing to surrender to Spectric Acid’s movement might find themselves taken to wider horizons of trance. Crucially, Werner turned also to the ceremonial rhythms of West Africa in his shaping of Spectric Acid’s bending timescales, and one can hear a clear impress of Vodoo drumming in the way rhythmic patterns cross converse, teeter off-beat, and rapidly redouble.
Though it shares with 2016’s Felder (Fiepblatter Catalogue #4) a desire to spill beyond metric linearity and notated time, Spectric Acid strays from that record’s breathy spatiality towards more pointed concerns with motion and the liberation of rhythm. In pursuit of this new direction, Werner borrows, on the one hand, from the structural techniques championed by the Spectralist...
Though it shares with 2016’s Felder (Fiepblatter Catalogue #4) a desire to spill beyond metric linearity and notated time, Spectric Acid strays from that record’s breathy spatiality towards more pointed concerns with motion and the liberation of rhythm. In pursuit of this new direction, Werner borrows, on the one hand, from the structural techniques championed by the Spectralist...