Irmin Schmidt, keyboarder of Can, will release a new album together with breakbeat musician Kumo on Apr 14th 2008. The title of the album is "Axolotl Eyes".
Here the information from the official homepage of Irmin Schmidt:
Irmin Schmidt, founder of
Can, the experimental rock group whose music has inspired hundreds of
popular acts over the last 30 years from Talking Heads and Public Image
Ltd. to LCD Sound System and Kasabian, has once again teamed up with
breakbeat pioneer Kumo on Axolotl Eyes.
The duo originally got together
in 1997 when Psychomat recording artist Kumo was drafted in by Schmidt
to work on his operatic version of Gormenghast as a co-producer and programmer. As a result of that collaboration, the duo started work on Masters of Confusion,
their 2001 debut LP. Kumo has since been appointed Professor of Popular
Music at the Köln Musikhochschule (Cologne University of Music) where
he runs regular practical workshops ranging from dub to music business,
composing for film to house music.
Schmidt and Kumo's latest
album of electronic experimentalism features Kumo's shimmering grooves,
subterranean bass, theremin and violin providing the perfect foil for
Schmidt's peerless and enduringly adventurous playing. Unlike their
2001 debut - which was largely put together by extrapolating snatches
of music featured in Schmidt's opera Gormenghast - Axolotl Eyes is very much a studio recording.
With several tracks featuring Ian Dixon on trumpet and vocalist Paul J Fredericks, Axolotl Eyes also marks a return to the extended improvisation followed by painstaking editing methods pioneered by Can.
"I went off to a small studio in Cologne and created the seeds that
we could develop together," Kumo says. "We then distilled the ensuing
hours of material into seven songs."
Opener Kick On The Floods rapidly evolves into a churning sea of ghostly, filmic melancholy lightly shaded by menace, while Drifting Days, Crime Pays
kicks in with a melody that could grace any classic detective series
underpinned by subtle atmospherics. A classic Schmidt & Kumo
moment. The mysterious and dense Umbilicus Clear was inspired by sounds from outer space ( http://www-pw.physics.uiowa.edu/space-audio - www-pw.physics.uiowa.edu/space-audio ) and Raketenstadt
melds the vocals of Paul J Fredericks with industrial strength synths,
drifting melodic fragments and trumpeter Dixon summoning the spirit of
Dizzy Gillespie. Despite the fact that Schmidt says he intends to take it easy this year (after completing a ballet, 6 film soundtracks and Axolotl Eyes in 2007) Schmidt & Kumo will be performing selected dates around Europe in 2008.
As a bonus, the studio album is accompanied by a 5.1 surround sound DVD of the sound installation Flies, Guys and Choirs,
first conceived for London's Barbican Centre in 2001. The work combines
surreally treated images from nature with subtle, quietly forceful
environmental music.
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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.
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