The Sound Projector Review |
A further chapter in the Mattin manifesto and his master plan to crush monopoly capitalism through harsh noise. Here he is with Lucio Capece, the Argentinian saxophonist who has also recently made a very quiet record for L'Innomable with Axel Dörner. With his mixing desk and feedback generated from his sax, Capece is matched by the Basque Mattin producing hideous noise from computer feedback and yelling at the top of his voice from time to time. Over 37 minutes, we have four tracks of shrill and repellent sounds recorded in various locations around Europe during 2006; three of them have lyrics, and all are intended as extremely critical diatribes and attacks on various aspects of Western capitalism. As with his Proletarian of Noise, Mattin directs his single-minded hurlements at the listener, with an underlying accusatory tone. ‘Universal Prostitution' (surely a 2006 update on Mark Stewart's ‘We Are All Prostitutes') tells us ‘You get born / you get used / you get fucked / you live in / universal prostitution'. Well, there's a stark message. It's more like a slogan, and some listeners may find it doesn't really convey enough of the specifics of the problem, nor lead to any constructive suggestions for how to improve matters. However, ‘Consumed' presses more sophisticated buttons about the ‘alienation' of consumer society and how, in Mattin's eyes, the only belief system we have left is centred around ownership and money, and that we have all been ‘decimated and betrayed' by this system. The Marxist diktat whence much of this line of thinking is derived is quoted in some seven lines on the back cover, while the front cover deploys a construct of photo-collage, typography and colour-field printing that is clearly intended to invoke the work of the Russian Konstruktivists. It's not quite as powerful in its geometric perfection as Rodchenko and lacks the design impact of the Stenberg brothers, but the point is taken. Not every track here is as harsh as the opening salvo; ‘Consumed' comprises two discrete sound events, both derived I assume from very extreme electronic processing, and both contributing heavily to the listener's malaise. It ends up with further sloganeering and screeching, but that nausea-inducing tactic is a good one, and has been used (to a lesser degree) by earlier Marxist/Socialist musicians such as Chris Cutler, Tim Hodgkinson, and This Heat. The point of it is to persuade the audience, through sound, that all is not well with the world; political statement through dissonance. Third track ‘Work = Decapitated Life' is another noise fest, without any lyrical content at all, and recommended to any curious listeners as an entry route into this harsh new world of Mattin's; it's one damn good slab of tooth-rattling spiky, feedback racket. The same could be said of the ten-minute ‘Blow', which features an astonishingly crude passage of inhuman gravel-voiced bluttering, which I take to be Capece's saxophone filtered through some excessive treatments. Another ‘Anti-Copyright' recording, jointly released by three labels.
Sounds and Silence Review Mattin, dopo una gavetta fatta di infinite autoproduzioni e successivi lavori più o meno ufficiali, si è attirato un seguito di appassionati non indifferente e soprattutto la stima di gran parte degli addetti ai lavori (mi riferisco soprattutto ai musicisti) tanto da essere tirato dentro ogni qual volta si parla di avanguardia europea (e a ciò ha contribuito anche il suo cambio di residenza da Bilbao a Berlino). Tali eventi hanno permesso così al suo palmares di allargarsi a collaborazioni molto importanti, su tutti, il più riuscito, il progetto Sakada. Di Lucio Capece, invece, argentino di nascita, residente attualmente anche lui a Berlino, risalta una discografia più contenuta ma anche accuratamente ‘mirata', vedi il disco per la Creative Sources insieme a Robin Hayward, Rhodri Davies e Julia Eckhardt. “Universal Prostitution” segue di un anno “No More Music”, disco d'esordio dei due con la sigla omonima, e come il predecessore si estrinseca in una mostra di digital noise prodotto dai computer dei due (Capece utilizza anche il sassofono, ovviamente processato al pc). |