Svalastog: Format: CD press info // reviews |
collaboration with Information Recordings
01 | Corn Power |
02 | Restringer |
03 | Decentralisation |
04 | Blue White Yellow |
05 | Accents Of The Land |
06 | Fish In The Air |
07 | Blow Patching |
08 | Slycing Steel Work |
09 | Slide Work |
10 | Compass |
11 | Silverliner |
Per Henrik Svalastog fra Tromsø er en av veteranene innenfor den norske elektronikaen. Han har levert 3 CDer med bandet Information og en mengde 12-tommere og remikser under forskjellige navn siden 1990. Dette er første gang han presenterer 100 prosent egne arbeider på CD. Svalastog har arbeidet verden rundt som arkitekt, musiker, DJ, stenhugger og performancekunstner, og Silencer kan lett tolkes som et ønske om å komme hjem. Her improviserer han på klassiske norske folkeinstrumenter som langeleik og bukkehorn, for så å klippe dette opp, kjøre det gjennom computeren og sette det sammen til en ny form for folkemusikk. Med Silencer tar han elektronikken ut av byen og langt inn i den norske skogen. Han skyter ikke med kanon, men spiller med lyddemper og befinner seg i et uavklart landskap mellom natur og kultur. Det dreier seg om komplekse komposisjoner som også evner å treffe lytteren genuint og direkte. Silencer er gitt ut i samarbeid med Information Recordings. Selskapet har stått bak få, men eksklusive utgivelser siden de i 1997 gav ut den minimalistiske klassikeren Lack of Memory. | Per Henrik Svalastog from Tromsø in the far north of Norway (hometown of Biosphere, Bel Canto and Röyksopp), is one of the veterans on the Norwegian electronic scene. He has released three albums as a part of the duo Information, and a lot of 12"ers and remixes under various aliases since 1990. This is the first time he is presenting 100 % his own material on CD. Svalastog has been working around the world as an architect, musician, DJ, stoneworker and performance artist, and Silencer can easily be interpreted as a way to return back home. He is improvising on archaic folk instruments like the ram's horn and langeleik, which is a Norwegian form of the zither. He is then cutting up the sound before processing it on the computer. What comes out is described as a new kind of folk music. With Silencer he takes the electronics out of the city and far into the Norwegian woods. He is not shouting out load, rather using a silencer, and is situated in an undefined landscape somewhere between the mountain and the city. It's all about complex compositions that also manages to hit the listener in a genuine and direct way. Silencer is released in collaboration with Information Recordings. The label has done few but exclusive releases since they in 1997 showed us the minimalistic classic Lack of Memory 12". |
Exact
Ved f�rste bekjentskap kan noen kanskje oppfatte dette som st�y. Men det erb�de melodi og rytme i det Per Henrik Svalastog spiller inn, kutter i biter ogforer tilbake gjennom computeren. Stemningen som melder seg mest er norskskog og fjell. Man kan tidvis h�re de folkemusikkinstrumentene som Svalastoghar brukt som utgangspunkt for noe av musikken. Han er ogs� glad i kontraster,og bruker meget bevisst styrke og f�lelse i musikken for � skape reaksoner hoslytteren. For de som ikke tar dette nesten umiddelbart, kan det fort bli i mestelaget, selv om b�de mannen og albumet fortjener en sjanse. De enkelte l�tenekan sette deg i sv�rt ulike stemninger, og f�r du aner det, er du hensatt ethelt annet sted enn der du faktisk sitter.
(5/6) KD
Dagsavisen
Langeleiktronikk
Det er en interessant skikkelse fra norsk elektronika som her gir ut sitt f�rste soloalbum, etter en 15-�rig platekarriere: Per Henrik Svalastog fra Troms� er arkitekt, komponist og multikunstner, han har bl.a lagd musikk til danseforestillinger og gitt ut tre CD-er med duoen Information, og "Silencer" er hans f�rste plate under eget navn. Han har et gjenkjennbart sound basert p� prosseserte samples og helelektroniske klikk og kutt. Her har han originalt nok tatt utgangspunkt i heilnorske instrumenter som bukkehorn og langeleik, som han manipulerer til det ugjenkjennelige, slik at det bare er en vag f�lelse av "norskhet" igjen i bunnen. P� spor som "Decentralisation" (!) h�rer man kildematerialet tydelig, p� andre spor g�r tradisjonsinstrumentene umerkelig inn i en st�rre helhet � de h�res mer ut som signaler fra det ytre rom enn som "Folkemusikkhalvtimen". Dermed blir dette langt fra noe gimmickaktig "folkemusikk m�ter moderne musikk"-prosjekt, slik man har h�rt mindre vellykkede eksempler p� tidligere. "Silencer" er et spennende elektronisk apropos til feiringen av Norge Nasjonen.
(4/6) Bernt Erik Pedersen
The Wire
Having released three albums as part of Norwegian electronic duo Information, as well as a number of 12" releases and remixes under various aliases, Per Henrik Svalastog has produced a work of hushed splendour for his first solo CD. Using traditional folk instruments such as the ram�s horn and the langeleik, a Norwegian variant of the zither, as his source material, Svalastog creates a uniquely crystalline, windblown sound. On first impression, each composition presents a bleak expanse of torn shadows and savage inclines. On closer inspection, their finer details reveal something far more welcoming. Illuminated by the brightness of the tiny events contained within them, tracks like "Accents of the land", "Blow patching", and "Slycing steel work" hint at the vast distances over which light must inevitably travel if it is to have value.
Ken Hollings
Igloo
Per Henrik Svalastog's debut as a solo artist (he was one half of Information, a mainstay on the Norwegian electronic scene who released three records and a number of 12" during the last decade or so) is an excursion into the woods above Troms� where he captures elusive radiation signals from the high atmosphere and plays them back as accompaniment to painstakingly sparse acoustic melodies. Silencer is filled with so much silence that it is almost the main "sound" of the record; everything else is but the infinitesimal movement of particles around the gravid emptiness of atomic space.
Svalastog improvises on archaic folk instruments like the langeleik (the Norwegian version of the zither) and the ram's horn, and he takes the music of these instruments into the bit-space of his computer where he processes all the vibrant energy out of their sounds. The resultant echoes are his grist, the dust and micro-particle that make up his thin electro-static compositions. Brittle hand drums beat slowly in "Restringer," an irregular patter of hollow sound that rises up through a haze of drifting snow. A tiny guitar tuned so high that it is nearly a bell plucks a Yuletide melody in "Silverliner" while a radio beacon sounds its laconic wail in the background. The urgent rise and fall of "Blue White Yellow" is the sonic passage of a solar flare that throws off so much radiation that the wind patterns twitch and turn unexpectedly. "Fish in the Air" is filled with such brittle sounds that the very act of hearing them breaks them. Melodies start and are lost, washes of sound peer through veils of static, and beats stagger three steps like frozen explorers before falling without another sound into bottomless crevasses. The wind and snow cover everything eventually.
Silencer is dub recorded so far past the Arctic Circle that the tropical warmth of the echo is frozen instantly and shatters into micro-filaments of sound. This is the frigid chatter of molecules freezing their electrons off. I'm glad I'm up to date with my heating bill so that I can turn up the thermostat before the sounds of Silencer have a chance to ice over the furniture.
Mat Propek
De Subjectivisten
�Wat doet u in het dagelijks leven?�, vraagt Per Hendrik Svalastog aan zijn drie buren. �Ik maak leuke, populaire indiepop�, antwoord R�yksopp. �Ik maak al jaren etherische wave, maar ook meer dancegericht werk�, zegt Bel Canto. �Ik schijn redelijk succesvol sfeervolle en invloedrijke elektronica te maken�, mompelt Biosphere schuchter. �En jij?�, vragen ze alle drie nieuwsgierig aan hun nieuwe buurman. Svalastog dacht rustig als muzikant in het Noorse plaatsje Troms� te kunnen gaan wonen. Maar kan hij zich meten met zijn buren? Wat zal hij antwoorden? Dat hij al jaren in de redelijk onbekende maar leuke elektronicagroep Information zit? Dat hij graag minimale elektronica maakt die glitch en idm elementen bevatten, waarvan Biosphere zou smullen? Of dat hij nu een soloalbum Silencer uit heeft gebracht waarop hij nog minimaler te werk gaat? Een album waarop hij folkinstrumenten, zoals de langeleik (Noorse sitar), gebruikt en die vervolgens bewerkt met de computer. Hierdoor krijg je bijzondere geluiden, die op minimalistische wijze gepresenteerd worden. Het is spannende, soms zenuwslopende muziek. Alsof je �s nachts dwaalt door de toch al donkere wouden van Noorwegen en alle geluiden onbekend of angstaanjagend zijn. En toch zuigt het dieper het woud in, zonder dat je tegenspartelt. Ja, leg dat maar eens uit. Svalastog antwoord: �Ik doe momenteel niet veel, ik zoek vooral de stilte op.� Biosphere begrijpt dat.
Jan Willem Broek
Main // Information // History // Artists // Releases // Live // Mailorder |