THE SINISTER LOW NOTE OF JOHN CARPENTER

Filed under:John Carpenter,Music — posted by I J Wilson on September 3, 2011 @ 12:18 pm

John Carpenter and Alan Howarth at work on Season of the Witch (scan courtesy of Mike Conway)

The growing interest in John Carpenter as a composer of electronic music, and not just a director of horror films, seems to be reaching a critical point at the moment: his music is celebrated in The Sound of Fear festival in London this weekend; the latest issue of Wire magazine features an interview with his composing partner, Alan Howarth (who will appear at the Sound of Fear festival); and French duo Zombie Zombie released an album late last year called “Zombie Zombie Play John Carpenter”.

A reknowned hardworker, John Carpenter may not be aware of just how much of an impact he has had on a successive number of generations of electronic musicians. Regarded in the same league as Giorgio Moroder and Vangelis, whose soundtracks for Midnight Express and Blade Runner, respectively, have had a life of their own, Carpenter is often cited as a major inspiration by many electronic musicians.

The real interest in John Carpenter’s music began with his soundtrack for his 1976 film Assault on Precinct-13. For its title theme, he used a simple electronic riff that he had pinched from a Led Zeppelin song, and a spare percussive line composed on a drum machine, giving the film an unusual texture, slightly cold and synthetic, and pre-dating the new-wave/industrial sound of bands like Throbbing Gristle and Coil.

Of course it was the Halloween theme (and the film) that put him on the map, acting as a kind of surrogate audio cue for anything spooky over the last couple of decades (along with the Twilight Zone theme and “Tubular Bells” from the Exorcist).

But Carpenter had also composed a number of other exceptional horror soundtracks – The Fog was amazing, and so was the score to the third “Halloween” film, Season of the Witch, even though it was unrelated to the original. With each successive film, he seemed to go deeper into the music, and his elongated sounds – drones, and wide bending bass notes – toyed with parts of the brain rarely used outside of sleep.

              Zombie Zombie’s version of the Halloween theme live in Glasgow

John Carpenter’s music first started being covered by European groups who wanted to recreate what they had heard in Assault on Precinct 13. German producer Ralf Hennings, as The Splash Band released his own 12″ of the “End Theme” in 1983, near the height of John Carpenter’s influence on the film world.

Strangely, in 2003 – twenty years later – a limited edition CDr came out, entitled The European Tribute to John Carpenter, using the same pumpkin orange colour that the Splash Band had used. It was a compilation of different electronic artists from around Europe, covering and composing tracks in his style, but with a decided dark wave bent. This was at the height of the electroclash movement, where an interest in the origins of modern electronic dance music, in new-wave, EBM, New York electro, and Euro-pop (like italo-disco) was underway. This interest also bought synthesizers back into the standard band line-up, something that hadn’t really been seen since the eighties.

A number of musicians like Holland’s Legowelt, Germany’s Anthony Rother and Booka Shade, and Australian band Midnight Juggernauts have acknowledged Carpenter’s influence on their music. Although Carpenter rarely composes music for films now – the workload is just too great – he has left behind a considerable body of music to be enjoyed.

Most of his music is still available. Besides the bigger Varese Sarabande releases, niche labels like Record Makers (home of Sebastian Tellier) released his Assault on Precinct 13 for the first time back in 2003, while La-La Land Records put out Big Trouble in Little China a couple of years back.

For more information about John Carpenter and his music you can visit the Official John Carpenter site.

Number 47 of 110 … Sleeve for European Tribute to John Carpenter

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ARCTIC MEMORIES: THE LOST ART OF THE CHILL-OUT

Filed under:Johan Agebjörn,Music — posted by I J Wilson on March 5, 2011 @ 9:09 am

The Mountain Lake is the second ambient album from Swedish producer/composer Johan Agebjörn to be released on the US ambient label, Lotuspike. His first album, Mossebo, came out in 2008. Johan is also the producer behind the neo-italo disco project, Sally Shapiro, who have gained a solid international reputation after releasing their Disco Romance album back in 2006.

Johan’s musical interests have their roots in 90s ambient music with artists like Autechre, The KLF, and Biosphere. But he also has a number of other influences coming through in his work like Hi-NRG dance music, Scandinavian pop (he was a big fan of A-Ha growing up) and French House.

Ambient music was a massive genre of the early nineties, with the chill-out room being a major feature of the rave scene. This was a productive period for new ambient music, but it also drew in the earlier ambient artists like Klaus Schulze, Tangerine Dream and Vangelis, introducing them to a new generation of kids.

Johan is also tapping into the art of sound-sculpting the Scandinavian landscape, which has a pedigree heritage in that part of the world. In 1992 there was the brilliant album Polar Region by the duo Cosmic Trigger which captured the musical equivalent of fjord mists evaporating in the morning sun. Glacial ambient music has also come to be regarded as a sub-genre of ambient and experimental music.

The title of The Mountain Lake is a literal English translation of the name of the suburb that Johan lived in when he started working on material for this album, an area known for being rough. But that is one of the beauties of art, that it has the power to transform things by viewing them in a new light.

He has worked with a number of people in putting this album together: Lisa Barra returns to provide vocals on ‘Love Ray’ (having originally provided vocals on a number of key tracks on Mossebo).  Also, Steve Moore of Pittsburgh duo Zombi, who has worked with Johan before under his Lovelock guise, provides a remix of ’Siberian Train’ from Johan’s first album.

Clockwise from top left: Johan Agebjörn, Sally Shapiro, Glass Candy, Lisa Barra

But there is also a couple of new names that pop up: Sylwia van der Wonderland is a singer based in Amsterdam, originally from Poland, as well as NeonCoil from Germany who make industrial electro in the style of Soft Cell and Anthony Rother.

This is one of Johan’s skills: choosing good people to work with. The list of names that Sally Shapiro has been associated with — The Juan Maclean, Junior Boys, Lindstrøm, as well as some of the lesser known names, Bottin, CFCF, and Bogdan Irkük  – is absolutely amazing.

As for The Mountain Lake, this new album is a  mixture of new tracks as well as some re-worked material:

‘Spacer Woman from Mars’ is an ambient version of a sparkling italo-disco track that Sally Shapiro released back in 2008 as a 12” on Lo Recordings (also appearing on the first Milky Disco compilation).

‘Amylium Casparium’ is Johan’s track with NeonCoil, and has the synthesized choir sound made famous on Brian Eno’s Music for Airports.

‘The Stones are Blasted’ is a new track, show-casing Johan’s talent for staging his songs like journeys, full of musical twists and turns, and a palpable sense of excitement. (There is a free 128k MP3 of it at the end of this post). 

‘Spiral Staircase’ is a downbeat track with a de-tuned melody, chip-tune squelches and Asian bells.

‘Swimming through the Blue Lagoon’ was the atmospheric opener for My Guilty Pleasure, but this version is slightly reworked by way of a Casio keyboard. (The original shorter version is really worth checking out).

‘Zero Gravitation’ is absolutely classic ambient techno, with its long notes and driving bassline. (Below is a ”beatless’ version of Zero Gravitation posted on youtube by Husmus Media – but headphones are still needed for maximum listening pleasure)

‘Take Me Home’ has elements of William Orbit’s Torch Song project and Hans Zimmer’s soundtrack work for films like Gladiator. The vocals are by Sylwia van der Wonderland.

‘The Chameleon’ is an edited remix by Agebjörn of Portland duo Glass Candy.  It has a lot of low-pass filtering, sustained notes and radio static going on. The original remix appeared on the second Milky Disco compilation.

‘Last Tram to Comet Square’ is the epic journey song of the album,  rhythmically punching its way through 13 minutes of perfect ambient programming.

‘Love Ray’ is a sweet concoction, with Lisa Barra breathing life into it. (This would be the perfect end point for the album as the listener drifts off to sleep).

‘Siberian Railway’ is a bonus track, a remix of a two part track from the previous album, inspired by Johan’s childhood journey with his mother on the legendary Trans-Siberian Railway. It has been remixed by Steve Moore, giving it a trance bassline and techno beats.

                                                                             *                                                                           

My main criticism of the album is that some of the tracks are of varying styles, and a few of the earlier ones like The Stones are Blasted and Spiral Staircase, do not sit well together. Part of the reason for this is, that unlike other ambient artists, Johan has not created this album in a single sitting, but rather has collected the tracks together over time. This kind of disparity can break the continuity of an ambient album, where continuity — that one long, deep journey — is a paramount feature of the genre.

But this changes with the second half of the album where the music takes on full effect: Zero Gravitation, Take Me Home, The Chameleon, Last Tram to Comet Express, and Love Ray, all go into deep, delta-wave territory.

Although Johan doesn’t tour as Sally Shapiro, he could easily put on a great ambient show — with a good video-mixer/VJ blending projected images, and an atmospheric venue filled with comfortable cushions, he would reintroduce a new generation to the lost art of the chill-out.

The Mountain Lake is available now through CD Universe, Spotted Peccary Music, and the itunes store. (But for the time being, you can download ‘The Stones are Blasted’ free here)

SELECTED DISCOGRAPHY:

Disco Romance (2006) Diskocaine / Paper Bag Records

Mossebo (2009) Lotuspike

My Guilty Pleasure (2010) Permanent Vacation / Paper Bag Records

Remixes by Johan:

The Case is Closed – Friday Bridge  (available as a free download)

LINKS:

Johan’s website: http://www.johanagebjorn.info/

Lotuspike:  http://www.lotuspike.com/

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THE MUSIC FROM MIDNIGHT EXPRESS

Filed under:Film,Giorgio Moroder,Midnight Express,Music — posted by I J Wilson on March 13, 2010 @ 11:20 pm

Trailer for Midnight Express (1978); dir. Alan Parker, screenplay by Oliver Stone. 

Based on the true story of Billy Hayes, Midnight Express was a huge film of the late seventies. Starring Brad Davis, it was the story of a young American who was arrested for drug-trafficking in Turkey and  sentenced to 30 years in a squalid prison. It won two academy awards and co-starred John Hurt and Randy Quaid.

Although Oliver Stone, who wrote the screenplay, later regretted the way he and director Alan Parker had portrayed the Turkish authorities, Midnight Express still deserved the accolades it received: It was a well-made story of survival, emotional isolation, and the horrors of getting lost in a system, wherever that may be.

The film also contained some great suspense sequences: the opening scene of Billy trying to pass through the Turkish customs with drugs strapped to his chest is harrowing, as is his final, fateful escape from the prison, hinging on a gesture.

Midnight Express was also one of those films where the soundtrack left as much of a mark on its audience as the film itself. Like the theme by Vangelis in Peter Weir’s Gallipoli, or the Warsaw Concerto from the 1941 film Dangerous Moonlight, the soundtrack to Midnight Express was deeply emotional, with two distinctive themes that echoed throughout the film.

The first was the ’Theme from Midnight Express’, a repetitiously haunting melody that Moroder had written on a computer and a klavier organ. It has become one of the most sampled themes in hip-hop — up there with Kraftwerk’s Trans-Europe Express and Good Times by Chic.

The second theme was ‘The Chase’ which accompanied Billy as he ran through the backstreets of Turkey, pursued by an American bounty-hunter. Because of its driving tempo, eight-and-a-half minute length, and catchy melody, The Chase became a huge hit with the dance community: It was a great example of the use of a high-pass filter (a synthesizer function) to build tension over time, a technique that would be used on everything from acid-techno to commercial dance for the next thirty years.

Midnight Express was also the first full-length electronic soundtrack to receive critical acclaim, winning both an Oscar and a Golden Globe in 1978 for Best Original Score. At the time, Moroder was already famous for his pioneering work with Donna Summer (creating the infamous ‘Moroder Bassline’ on I Feel Love) and these awards only strengthened his position in the music industry, allowing him to continue working as a film composer, as well as a producer.

Below: Giorgio Moroder performs Chase live on German TV in 1979, with his newly won Oscar (starts at 2.13).

LINKS:

Wikipedia entry for Giorgio Moroder: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giorgio_Moroder

Giorgio Moroder’s Official Website: http://www.giorgiomorodergallery.com/

Thanks to Mal and Amber’s Video Service.

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