|
|
Knoxville by
Fennesz Daniell Buck Thrill Jockey Thrill 246 • 2010
|
Pricing: |
| MP3 | $10.00 | | CD | $13.00 | | LP | out of stock | | CD+SYCAMORE CD | $23.00 |
Ready to buy? Head over to your left and select your desired format! |
|
CD version comes in a mini-LP style gatefold package
LP version comes in a full color high gloss jacket limited to 1,000 copies with a coupon for DRM-free MP3s
LIMITED TIME SALE : For an additional $10 you can receive the 2009 album Sycamore from David Daniell & Douglas McCombs (joined by drummers John Herndon, Frank Rosaly, and Steven Hess). This is an incredible value and excellent companion album to Knoxville. Select "CD+SYCAMORE CD" to your left.
Recorded on February 7th, 2009, at the Big Ears Festival in Knoxville,
Tennessee, the aptly named Knoxville, documents the first meeting of
three of the most recognized players in experimental music. Christian
Fennesz (guitar and electronics), David Daniell (guitar), and Tony Buck
(drums) were brought together and encouraged to collaborate by the
festival, and used the opportunity to channel their collective energies
into a darkly atmospheric piece of music that ebbs and flows with
remarkable cohesion. Minimalist drum passages scatter over the top
of textured layers of guitar and subsumed melodic sequences, eventually giving way to warm beds of evolving, tactile
drones. Sonic rain showers roll into full-blown thunderstorms of effected guitar and pounding drums only to yield a
field of shattered electronic and percussive debris. For never having played together (aside from a brief soundcheck),
the three retain a remarkable sense of unity while allowing plenty of room for each person to express their individual
personality.
Christian Fennesz is known for creating his own intricate musical world and for his impeccable work in crafting
beautiful compositions for guitar. Somewhere between concrete music, classical and ambient sounds, he stretches
musical resources and effects to create melodies and atmospheres that fuse classical and orchestral concepts
with conceptual musical research and complex digital structures, resulting in dense multilayered sheets of sound
underpinned by a strong melodic sensibility. He has recorded and performed with Ryuichi Sakamoto, Keith Rowe,
David Sylvian, Sparklehorse, Mike Patton and many others. Fennesz has also worked for nearly a decade alongside
Peter Rehberg and Jim O’Rourke in the improvisational trio Fenn O’Berg.
David Daniell recently recorded his Thrill Jockey debut Sycamore with Douglas McCombs of Tortoise. As a duo, the
two create a delicate tapestry of spacious and ethereal guitar lines woven into abstract, slow-burning and multilayered
textural improvisations. The sounds blend and overlap to create richly faceted and thickly psychedelic
passages, unveiling new layers of detail with each and every listen. Over the years, Daniell has collaborated with
many notable musicians, including Loren Connors, Rhys Chatham, Tim Barnes, Jeph Jerman, Thurston Moore, Greg
Davis, and Jonathan Kane, as well as releasing numerous albums under his own name and with his band San Agustin
on labels such as Table of the Elements, Family Vineyard, and Antiopic.
Born in Sydney, Tony Buck is regarded as one of Australia’s most creative and adventurous exports, with vast
experience across the globe. He is best known as the drummer for the award-winning piano/bass/drums trio The
Necks, with fifteen albums over their 20-year history. The Necks work in extended forms featuring lengthy pieces
which slowly unravel in the most mesmerizing fashion, founded in a confluence of avant-garde, minimalist, jazz and
ambient approaches. Early in his musical life, after having graduated from the New South Wales Conservatorium of
Music, he became very involved in the jazz scene in Australia, often touring with visiting international artists such as
Vincent Herring, Branford Marsalis and Ernie Watts. Tony has played, toured or recorded with, among others, Otomo
Yoshihide, John Zorn, Tom Cora, Haino, The Ex, Peter Brotzmann, Han Bennink, and Wayne Horvitz.
|

|