Search - Alastair Galbraith, Matt Degennaro :: Long Wires in Dark Museums 2

Long Wires in Dark Museums 2
Alastair Galbraith, Matt Degennaro
Long Wires in Dark Museums 2
Genres: Alternative Rock, International Music, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (3) - Disc #1

Galbraith is the glue that binds the New Zealand underground. His work ranges from achingly lyrical violin for artists as disparate as Peter Jefferies and The Bats, to the feedback squalls he conjures as a member of A Hand...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Alastair Galbraith, Matt Degennaro
Title: Long Wires in Dark Museums 2
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Table of Elements
Original Release Date: 1/1/2006
Re-Release Date: 4/11/2006
Genres: Alternative Rock, International Music, Pop, Rock
Styles: Indie & Lo-Fi, Australia & New Zealand
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 600401103029

Synopsis

Album Description
Galbraith is the glue that binds the New Zealand underground. His work ranges from achingly lyrical violin for artists as disparate as Peter Jefferies and The Bats, to the feedback squalls he conjures as a member of A Handful Of Dust, to the otherworldly miniatures he crafts for his own solo albums. In recent years, along with American Matt De Gennaro, he's developed another remarkable performance idiom. On "From The Dark", architectural idiosyncrasies are transformed into nuanced and hypnotic audio. Wires are affixed throughout a darkened building, pulled taut and stroked with rosined hands or a piece of leather. The resulting vibrations off the walls, railings, and windows in a veil of total darkness make a beautiful and eerie sound. Says Galbraith, "There is some quite magical feeling of communion turning the lights off and making the building sing."

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CD Reviews

Magnificent, massive - resonates in your bones
Aquarius Records | San Francisco | 04/30/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This is volume two of one of my favorite records EVER, Long Wires In Dark Museums, a sound installation from a few years back where New Zealand underground legend Alastair Galbraith teamed up with American musician Matt De Gennaro and strung long metal wires, some as long as 100 feet, between the walls of the performance space, and thus proceeded to scrape and bow and coax huge reverberant drones and groans from the wires, creating huge metallic dronescapes, informed by the works of Harry Bertoia and the long string experiments of Ellen Fullman.



The cool thing about these Long Wires In Dark Museums, is that when the wires are excited they don't actually produce the sound, it's the points at which the wires are affixed to the space, the vibrations run up the wall, or through the windows, turning the whole space into a natural resonator, where the architecture of the space, the shape of the rooms, the makeup of the walls determine the tone and timbre of the sound. These performances occur in utter darkness as well, so the ears become the only sense that matters.



The sounds these two, and their building of choice create is magnificent, massive, the sort of sound that not only resonates within the space, but also in your ears, in your bones. It's like the idea of bowed metal, the glorious warm sound that makes, expanded and stretched out into a sound at once so natural, but so alien, that it's impossible to not be drawn in and completely mesmerized. It almost sounds like huge violins, or a cello the size of a barn, being tuned and tinkered with. Long notes stretched out for minutes, letting the microtones and sonic subtleties gradually reveal themselves. These metallic drones shift and shimmer, each long strecth of sound full of subtle colors and layer after layer of strange texture. This is seriously deep listening. Very very recommended, as is the first volume."