Finnegans Wake |
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SaltyJon
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 08 2008 Location: Location Status: Offline Points: 28772 |
Topic: Finnegans Wake Posted: October 20 2010 at 21:14 |
I enjoy The Bird and the Sky Above, hoping to check out more sometime relatively soon. Great interview!
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memowakeman
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: May 19 2005 Location: Mexico City Status: Offline Points: 13032 |
Posted: October 20 2010 at 21:10 |
Great interview. Earlier this year I listened to this band for the first time, and since then they are on my regular playlist.
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Follow me on twitter @memowakeman |
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Man With Hat
Collaborator Jazz-Rock/Fusion/Canterbury Team Joined: March 12 2005 Location: Neurotica Status: Offline Points: 166183 |
Posted: October 19 2010 at 20:48 |
Nice!
Good to hear another CD will be coming out next year.
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Dig me...But don't...Bury me
I'm running still, I shall until, one day, I hope that I'll arrive Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect. |
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Mellotron Storm
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 27 2006 Location: The Beach Status: Offline Points: 13586 |
Posted: October 19 2010 at 16:16 |
Very cool interview I have the "Blue" cd which is as he says complex chamber music. I'd like to check out one of the early albums now that i know they are in the Canterbury realm.
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"The wind is slowly tearing her apart"
"Sad Rain" ANEKDOTEN |
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toroddfuglesteg
Forum Senior Member Retired Joined: March 04 2008 Location: Retirement Home Status: Offline Points: 3658 |
Posted: October 19 2010 at 14:23 |
Finnegans Wake is an avant-garde band from Belgium led by Henry Krutzen. Their albums is pretty popular among the avant-garde fans in our community. In particular their last album which has won the band a lot of praise. I got in touch with Henry for the story. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Your biography has been covered in your ProgArchives profile so let's bypass the biography details. But which bands were you influenced by and why did you choose that name ? My
influences are many, from old 70's prog bands such as Henry Cow or
other Canterbury scene wonders, such as Hatfield and the North, to
contemporary classical music (Schnittke, Messiaen, Cage, Ravel), fusion
jazz (Squarepusher, Weather Report, Herbie hancock) and contemporary
jazz (Anthony Davis, John Zorn) with a touch of hard rock (Stooges, Blue
Cheer) and world music (East of Eden, Oregon), etc... The
name has a three dimension referential field: irish music (which I like
very much!), the work of James Joyce and the french psychoanalyst
Jacques Lacan (who made a seminary on the topic). Your type of music is pretty special and not mainstream. Why makes this type of music your heart strings sings and/or what makes it so fascinating to you ? Well,
I suppose my music is a result of all the things I liked and listened
until now, all together put in a blending process that follows my moods
and interests of the moment. That is also why the music of FW is in
constant evolution and continues changing with the years going by... Over to your albums. Please tell us more about your first album Yellow from 1994 The
first album is the result of my encounter with Alain Lemaître in the
beginning of the 90's. He had opened a home studio and we decided to
give a try in recording some music. I was without project since the end
of the 80's when an octet jazz project came to an end. We had done many
concerts and I suppose everybody got tired so we split. I stayed a few
years without making music and Alain gave me the oportunity to work in
another way, not aiming all projects for live gigs, as it was the case
with the octet, but working on studio projects. I always had wanted to
do some prog music, so we started with "Yellow" that turned on to be
quite Canterbury oriented, with the arrival of my friend Jean-Louis
Aucremanne, on keyboards. The first piece ever done was "Chamber Music",
from a James Joyce poem. The result of this first album was quite
eclectic but it opened the door for experiencing more on this Canterbury
inspired first period. Please tell us more about your second album Green from 1996 After
"Yellow", we just went on but tried to tighten things up for more
homogenic material, still in this Canterbury vein. "Green" already has
more written material and less "open" solos. It closes the first period
of the band. Please tell us more about your third album Pictures from 2001 With
"Pictures", I entered in a new phase that I would caracterize as
written period. From that point it turned to be Chamber Rock with almost
nothing improvised (except some very rare solos). I started to work
with conterpoint structures ans introduced more instruments. this is
also our first project with real drums and many of the guests were from
the classical music world. This project really put a mark to experiment
with other parameters, harmonies and rythms. I moved to Musea sub label
Gazul, that had interest in producing things in a R.I.O. / Chamber rock
direction. Please tell us more about your fourth album 4^th from 2004 I
moved to Brazil in 2001 and had to reorganize everything from there.
Alain stayed but Jean-Louis didn't want to go on at that point. In
Brazil, I met Alexandre Moura-Barros with whom I worked on the
compositions of "4th". Once again, I continued the new "Pictures"
direction of chamber rock and I started to work with brazilian
musicians, who increased the percussion work of the compositions. As
Gazul didn't have the financial conditions of producing a new, double
CD, I had to move once again from Gazul to my friend's Guy Segers
Carbon-7 label. Please tell us more about your fifth album Blue from 2008 Once
again I had to move inside Brazil to another city and state. Alexandre
Moura-Barros got ill and was in no condition to go on with the project.
So I met Marcílio Onofre, a young contemporary music composer, who was
interested in experiencing with a "rock band" structure. With "Blue" we
achieved very complex compositions, and this was really the final point
put to this second period of written chamber rock music. Unfortunately,
Carbon-7 closed and I managed to enter the very fine italian label,
AltrOck. Please tell us more about your most recent album The Bird And The Sky Above from earlier this year It
was time now for a change and "The Bird and the Sky Above" opens a new
phase in FW work. I thought that it was not interesting anymore to
continue in the same direction. It would have been redundant and,
although I already had a few pieces written in the "Blue" way of
composing, I thought it would be more interesting to change and see
others perspectives in composition. Marcílio agreed totally with that
and we started to work with semi improvised structures,
live-in-the-studio conducted improvisations and edited material. I
started to work with the idea of the recording studio being itself a
musical instrument. We mixed some Messiaen scales inspiration with Cage
structures and conducted improvisations, but still staying inside some
thematic material, such as this imaginary bird references, titles and
moods. It was a challenging experience and it opened to new ideas that
should be realized in the near future. AltrOck couldn't stand the new
direction, too distant from the rock world, and I had to move again to
another label, Fazzul, from swiss experimental saxophonist Markus
Stauss, who entered also in the band's core. How is your creative process from coming up with a theme/riff/idea to you get it down onto an album ? Usually
I compose on the keyboard or piano, let my inspiration flow and then
work on the material produced until coming up to a final project. Just to give those of us who are unknown with your music a bit of a reference point or two: How would you describe your music ? "Yellow"
and "Green" are mostly Canterbury prog rock music. "Pictures", "4th"
and "Blue" are Chamber rock projects. "The Bird and the Sky Above" is
more contemporary music (if this means anything...). You have relocated from Belgium to Brazil. Please tell us why you relocated to Brazil. I married a Brazilian woman! What is your experience with the music industry and the new internet music scene ? I
don't care to much about those things... I just try to get a label for
my projects and, as far as they are released, this opens space for doing
other things, continuing my experimentations. I think quite interesting
the internet evolution and I am glad when I see that my works can be
downloaded as I think that it is a way for my music to gain access and
availability. Are you currently involved in any other bands or projects ? There
is one band here that made contact for colaboration... I will see what
happens.... It is a post-rock project and I could maybe participate as a
guest. What is your plans for the rest of this year and next year ? I am curently recording two CDs: the new FW and a solo project. The
new FW will continue the new direction, working on a "Suite in D-minor"
(this will also be the CD title). I am continuing the experimentaion
with the studio as instrumental function. The suite builds itself from
conducted improvisations and every new part serves as basis for the next
compositions, so that the project is an ever-changing process that
awaits for its own closure moment, that should be in the next months if
things go on like that.... I will also take every imaginary fantasy out
of the project. There will be no birds or whatever but titles expressed
in function of the structures of the band for each piece... It should be
released next year on Fazzul if Markus Stauss agrees. The
solo project is a chamber music project with some tracks that could be
considered as soundtracks for imaginary movies. Therefore the title that
will be "Imaginary Landscapes". It envolves solo piano pieces, a string
quartet, trios, all in a rather melodic way. It is a kind of
compilation of my work during the last years, and envolves pieces that
couldn't enter a FW project. This one too should be available in 2011
but, for the moment, it doesn't have any label yet... I'll have to
search for somone interested.... If no one appears, I'll do it in
selfproduction and put it on the internet for download... To wrap up this interview, is there anything you want to add to this interview ? Thank you very much for your interest in FW music. I hope you'll enjoy the future works and send a warm "abraço" from Brazil. Thank you to Henry for this interview Finnegans Wake's PA profile is here & the homepage is here
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