JGRZINICH (JOHN GRZINICH) — Rudiment of two

Format: CD
Label & Cat.Number: Edition Sonoro es01
Release Year: 2007
Note: lim. 300 and first release on a new british label !
Price (incl. 19% VAT): €13.00
Out of Stock

This release is no longer available in our current inventory. If you are interested in this title and would like to enquire about a possible repress or reorder, we would be very glad to hear from you.

 Get in Touch

More Info

"Das neue Album von JOHN GRZINICH erscheint auf dem neuen englischen Sublabel von 20HERTZ und betört mit dichten field-recording drones, die sich voller metalischer Obertöne & Mikrometallsounds ausbreiten, irgendwann klingt es wie ein Meer aus Metallstäben- oder Röhren... wieder fabulös was GRZINICH hier erschaffen hat, perfekt fürs "aufmerksame Driften"...

"It's easy to get lost in the sounds from John Grizinich, as his slippery compositions for abstracted field recordings impart a stupifying hypnosis when listening to them. While we've had a couple of his solo discs, most of the work that we've encountered by John Grzinich has been through collaborations with the likes of Michael Northam and Seth Nehil. And even though both of those artists have a particular fondness for the drone, it seems as though Grzinich was responsible for directing those collaborations into the depths of sonorous hypnogogia. This was especially true for the impeccable Grzinich / Nehil album Gyre, and the same could be said for the Grzinich / Northam disc The Absurd Evidence. Yet, this sensibility becomes all the more obvious when Grizinich strikes out on his own, as is the case on his stellar 2007 album Rudiment Of Two. Released by the British drone-artist Paul Bradley on his new Edition Sonoro imprint, Rudiment Of Two contains three lengthy tracks, which engage Grzinich's preferred strategy for vulcanizing field recordings into elegantly serpentine tonalities. Through revolving sets of fluctuating bellows and incrementally changing drones, Rudiment Of Two come across as a painterly take on BJ Nilsen or Jonathan Coleclough. Typical of Grzinich's sound is the trickle of rain on the album's massive 30 minute centerpiece, which activates a silvery auditory filigree amidst the reverberation and metallic vibrations. With the rattle of a heavy iron bell, the crackling textures begin to swarm into a full spectrum chorus of miniscule ticklings that eventually condenses into a bleary drone shot towards infinitude. A really fantastic album from an under-recognized artist." [Aquarius Records]