some kinds words from Frans de Waard in the recent issue of Vital Weekly!
"Blake Edwards, the man behind Vertonen, is not someone who does things
by half, as he proves, once again, with three new releases. I am quite
a fan of most of his work, except for some of his noise work. With such
a body of work, you could think that much of it is in the similar
musical territory, but then you are wrong.
The approach Edwards has
towards the world of drones has many faces and here he shows how that
works out. 'Shallows' and 'Shallows II" (not sure why he didn't use a
double CDR release in one package) are work in which he uses field
recordings, drones, small objects and creates some very interesting
sound collages with this material This time it is not all put together
in one big mass of sound, but in a more linear approach. Vertonen
explores a few sound events and then moves on. On 'Shallows' there are
more or fewer breaks within the piece, whereas on 'Shallows II', they
are cross-faded slowly. The cover details the various sections, and
they all have track titles (which reminded me of track titles by Hands
To), so why he didn't go for cutting these into separate tracks, I
don't know. The differences, so I gather from the information, lie in
what sounds are used.
On 'Shallows' this is "raw and processed field
recordings with a focuses on over air recordings from closed, resonant
internal spaces (churches, ventilation systems) external spaces
(fields, forests) and external transmissions (shortwave radio)" and on
'Shallows II' "small manipulated objects and machines (cassette and
microcassette recorded direct, small wood and metal assemblages), and
processed field recordings", but it is not easy to distinguish that
with the result found on these discs. On 'Shallows II" there is a whole
section that I would think is all ventilation systems. Which, perhaps,
only means, what do I know? I very much enjoyed the quiet approach
Vertonen has here, bringing a much-needed rest in the headspace here,
following some turmoil of a few days.
The linear approach as well as
the collage-like style of using different elements to tell his story
works wonderfully well. The covers are hand-painted gouaches and will
disappear over time, depending on how you handle them. I love that idea.
'Elettra' is a somewhat different work, a bit louder
and working with 'raw and processed shortwave signals'. I love the use
of shortwave signals a lot. It is, next to the human voice, one very
easy instrument to play (although it needs practice and creativity;
that goes without saying). I have no idea if Vertonen uses a real radio
or uses the one from the University of Twente, which allows you to tap
deep into all short, mid and long frequencies worldwide. Also, I don't
know what Edwards does with these radio waves in terms of the
processing; analogue or digital or perhaps a combination. He does
something, that I am sure of. I believe I hear in each of the six
sections to hear a mix of various signals and a few additional sound
effects. Throughout this album is all a bit louder than the other two,
or rather more present in the overall sound approach, but at the same
time, it is effectively music of a similar quiet approach and deep
listening. This is closer to the more usual drone approach of Vertonen,
and it has the usual intense and mysterious sound that I know and love
so much from him. There are so many voices on this release, just radio
waves in many layers, and coloured by the use of sound effects.
Excellent release. It once again made me think that a book on the
historical use of radio signals as instruments is something I would
welcome a lot, providing people such as Vertonen will get a place in
there too!