why we love this
A collection of sounds recorded directly from a Hohner church organ at the point of collapse, transformed and given new life. A beautiful piece of music exploration for the curious ears.
about the record
Late Style is a collection of live takes recorded directly from a Hohner church organ at the point of collapse. This circuitry of this hulking synth, long-installed at Kit HQ, has inexplicably decayed over time, rendering drum loops and melodies as raptures of white noise, squelches and bizarrely spiralling clangs. These weirdly moving digital swan-songs are clearly labelled after the presets that were triggered during recording - 'waltz', 'flutes', etc.
On the B-side, the pianist Devon Loch and experimental producer Antidröm join forces, arranging recordings from the organ together with contact mic and field recordings, to create four new pieces. In music and art, late style often means an unfettered outpouring in later life. Perhaps these recordings show that circuitry and software have lives too. Like creatures and plants, they change over time, confront mortality and their functions adapt.
- A1 - 8 Beat Variation 5:30
- A2 - Flutes (Upper) 4:41
- A3 - Waltz 4:34
- A4 - I/O 3:56
- B1 - Beguine 3:47
- B2 - Key 3:33
- B3 - Perc 4:23
- B4 - Memory 3:07
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€17,00
out of stock
- A1 - 8 Beat Variation 5:30
- A2 - Flutes (Upper) 4:41
- A3 - Waltz 4:34
- A4 - I/O 3:56
- B1 - Beguine 3:47
- B2 - Key 3:33
- B3 - Perc 4:23
- B4 - Memory 3:07
Embed
Copy and paste this code to your site to embed.
why we love this
A collection of sounds recorded directly from a Hohner church organ at the point of collapse, transformed and given new life. A beautiful piece of music exploration for the curious ears.
about the record
Late Style is a collection of live takes recorded directly from a Hohner church organ at the point of collapse. This circuitry of this hulking synth, long-installed at Kit HQ, has inexplicably decayed over time, rendering drum loops and melodies as raptures of white noise, squelches and bizarrely spiralling clangs. These weirdly moving digital swan-songs are clearly labelled after the presets that were triggered during recording - 'waltz', 'flutes', etc.
On the B-side, the pianist Devon Loch and experimental producer Antidröm join forces, arranging recordings from the organ together with contact mic and field recordings, to create four new pieces. In music and art, late style often means an unfettered outpouring in later life. Perhaps these recordings show that circuitry and software have lives too. Like creatures and plants, they change over time, confront mortality and their functions adapt.