OTN … update

Posted by Bea Cloke on Sunday Jun 30, 2013 Under Album, Music

Q2 Album Of The Week
On the Nature of Electricity & Acoustics is a somewhat disjunct thrill-ride of a listen. But that’s the point. Few listeners outside of Ireland’s academic or underground scenes will have heard this music, but as the compilation proves, it’s a rich and diverse world worth visiting.
Hannis Brown, Q2 MUSIC

… a pleasingly varied showcase… which combines the virtues of discipline and diversity. The music is for the most part (surprisingly?) euphonious… (and who wouldn’t want to hear a band called Princess Tinymeat?)…
Roger Thomas, INTERNATIONAL RECORD REVIEW

mind-bending twists and turns… in the presence of (a) tradition whose indelible spirit penetrates through time, technologies and trends.
Wendalyn Bartley, theWHOLENOTE

… pieces dip and weave, refusing to be pinned down; the listener must come to the music, rather than the other way around.
IRISH INDEPENDENT

A fascinating anthology… excellently curated by Daniel Figgis
BP Fallon

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On The Nature Of Electricity & Acoustics released today

Posted by Bea Cloke on Tuesday Mar 26, 2013 Under Album, Music

Daniel has curated an extensive anthology of Electro-Acoustic music from Ireland. We are proud to announce its arrival in the world. On The Nature Of Electricity & Acoustics (Various Artists) receives its international release today.

The iTunes special edition features an extra 12 tracks, making 35 in all!

Visit Heresy Records for the full track listing and purchase details: http://heresyrecords.com/on-the-nature-of-electricity-and-acoustics.

Some comments so far …

This album is a wake up call for the senses… impossible to pigeonhole or classify.
Winifried Dulisch, AUDIO MAGAZIN, Germany

Irish electro-acoustic music has developed from the academic pursuit of pointy/beardy types into something that lives, breathes and makes sense. These are clever, cogent dispatches from the fringes… See you on the other side?
Tony Clayton-Lea, THE IRISH TIMES

On The Nature Of Electricity & Acoustics: what an album! So much diversity and energy. A veritable smorgasbord.
@NiallCrumlish

CD OF THE MONTH
Contemporary Music Centre, Ireland

From the delicate works of Dennehy and Wilson through to the post-punk furore of Figgis’ own Princess Tinymeat, there is presumably something for everyone – a wide-ranging and intelligent overview of outsider electronic music in Ireland.
As an introduction to the work of a diverse group of artists and composers, On The Nature Of Electricity & Acoustics is unparalleled…
Ian Maleney, THE QUIETUS

… it is wildly ambitious, incredible, fantastic … magnificent and illuminating
Stephen McCauley, BBC RADIO ULSTER

Have a listen. I’m glad to be part of it.
Roger Doyle on Facebook

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dimmerswitch live at Galway Arts Festival

Posted by Bea Cloke on Monday Jul 23, 2012 Under Live events, Music, Video

dimmerswitch (excerpt) by Daniel Figgis, performed by Crash Ensemble at the Galway Arts Festival 2012

galway arts festival 2012 logo

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All Ears

Posted by Bea Cloke on Thursday May 10, 2012 Under Music

We’re pleased to announce that the Listening Post is back. Take a peek at All Ears to see what Daniel has been listening to lately.

All Ears

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Realised

Posted by Bea Cloke on Wednesday Nov 30, 2011 Under Live events, Music, Video

the battle of speeds realised november 2011

…as Santa’s Grotto meets The Time Tunnel!

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1st past the post

Posted by Bea Cloke on Tuesday Nov 29, 2011 Under Live events, Music, Video

the battle of speeds 1st

you say hello and I say goodbye…

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Done, Dusty

Posted by Bea Cloke on Monday Nov 28, 2011 Under Live events, Music, Video

dusty

forest dweller…saw you Sunday.

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THE BATTLE oF SPEEDS – two days to go

Posted by Bea Cloke on Friday Nov 25, 2011 Under Live events, Music, Video

THE BATTLE oF SPEEDS postcard

forest dweller … see you Sunday.

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Dusk

Posted by Bea Cloke on Friday Nov 18, 2011 Under Live events, Music, Video

dusk

forest dweller Anticipation.

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Daniel’s interview with Contemporary Music Centre

Posted by Bea Cloke on Thursday Nov 10, 2011 Under Interview, Live events, Music, Video

forest dwellers point of view

forest dwellerEvonne Ferguson, director of the Contemporary Music Centre, interviewed Daniel about THE BATTLE oF SPEEDS -phase 1.

EF: What is the THE BATTLE oF SPEEDS -phase 1?

the OrangeryTHE BATTLE oF SPEEDS -phase 1 explores how we have listened to and enjoyed recorded music down the years, investigating how musical content has always been informed by recording technology and playback media. I am particularly interested in looking at the limitations thus imposed and the long-term archival and experiential possibilities.

The work consists of six recompositions each soundtracking a short video piece shot in Marlay Park boathouse. The recompositions reference different playback media. The event takes place in the Orangery, Marlay Park on 27 November between 10am and 4pm. Family tickets are €5 and are available from tickets.ie.

EF: Are the six short fantasy videos playing at the same time?

DF: Yes -above, below and all around the audient. 6 movies. 6 surfaces (four walls, ceiling and floor). Above, below, behind and front of… The White Cube experience in extremis.

EF: How does the soundtrack to each integrate? or are they intended to clash with each other ?

DF: Of course not. They harmonise. Hopefully rather beautifully.

EF: Why are you so intrigued by the battle of speeds? Why do you consider it a battle?

DF: 1. I am intrigued but 2. I don’t. The original legal case popularly known as T.B.O.S. simply sparked an unrelated notion.

It struck me that it would be intriguing to recompose my back catalogue for this investigation into recording and playback systems. THE BATTLE oF SPEEDS was envisaged, from the off, as an auto-recomposition project because as recomposers of my work go, I’m a shoo-in.

EF: We’ve all heard of remixing and revising of composition, but what exactly is recomposition? You have had an entire double CD album/online spinoff where other artists recomposed your works… Were you flattered by that?

DF: Spitroast Records asked me in 2002  for permission to commission a Various Artists remix album: When It’s Ajar: the music of Daniel Figgis?. This marked the inception of my recomposition concept. The Skipper album and a further 10 tracks  provided the reference material -the latter 10 formed the backbone for 5 years or so of my concert events.

As to the how and why I originated the recomposition concept, it came down to the fact that I was strongly averse to the standard remix as commonly understood and I wished, out of respect for the composers concerned, to avoid the classic compilation album mismatch. I therefore decided that the pieces should be based exclusively on recordings that I alone had made. That meant that these recorded component parts became the available lexicon for the commissioned composers, enabling them to write in their own vernacular, yet making for a coherent listening experience.

Flattered? Yes, I was appropriately flattered by the project. Equally flattering is the fact that I am told that one or two of the original artists commissioned are presenting a concert further interrogating my original idea -when you plant a seed you expect a little growth….

EF: Are you trying to create a kind of wall of sound for those experiencing it?

DF: This is a completely immersive experience – perhaps analogous to a floatation tank.

EF: How does the space inspire the work?

DF: The Marlay Park boathouse and Orangery determined the visual content and suggested a rather bucolic musical response.

EF: Could this be presented somewhere else?

DF: Yes, in one sense easily, as this work is scalable, ever-evolving and thus both site-specific and site-neutral to each venue but, logistically speaking, the figures don’t add up at the minute. So we’re done here. And I feel compelled, having rather made my point, to return to the traditional concert and recording cycle.

EF: Do you get frustrated that these large scale multi-media works which you spend months (?) working are over within the space of a few hours?..

DF: Yes, it can be frustrating. But that just comes with the territory. You’re essentially working with/in a landscape and, in every sense, the seasons change.

EF: Is that the attraction and you then move on to a new idea?

DF: Yes, that is also an attraction. One moves on very quickly – in this case, onto a major new commission for Crash Ensemble.

But if an artist is to some extent an inventor, then I am, with THE BATTLE oF SPEEDS, truly enjoying my Caractacus Potts moment!

When It’s Ajar: the music of Daniel Figgis? is now available on iTunes. 

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