Stefan Thut and Marianne Schuppe
https://www.wandelweiser.de/_fotos/amsterdam2022/index.html
seen from Italy
seen from China

seen from Netherlands
seen from Belgium

seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from Belgium
seen from Australia
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from India
seen from Japan

seen from United States
seen from Yemen
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from Canada
seen from Netherlands
Stefan Thut and Marianne Schuppe
https://www.wandelweiser.de/_fotos/amsterdam2022/index.html
Melaine Dalibert — Anastassis Philippakopoulos: piano works (Elsewhere)
Anastassis Philippakopoulos: piano works by Melaine Dalibert
When Melaine Dalibert set out to record this album, he could not have foreseen the moment into which it would emerge. It was recorded during a single session at a church in Brittany, and no one executes a program of compositions as well as he had done these without spending significant time to select, study and learn them first. Moreover, in the pianist’s own work as a composer, he practices patient development. Dalibert has spoken of letting a piece spend several months in his head, mulling it over while he runs or rides the train, before he first sets pencil to paper to write it out. He did not compose the pieces on Anastassis Philippakopoulos: piano works, but it is reasonable to assume that he applied some of his own preparatory process to the tasks of readying and executing this project.
“When one walks through the city listening to Wandelweiser, it’s not that the music soundtracks the city, it’s the other way around. The city enters the music. There is no mediation because there are not two distinct states to mediate between. Or, seen another way, the question of mediation becomes absolutely primary; as in Pisaro’s field recordings or in the occasional sounds that Wereder’s date pieces introduce into a space, the content of the musical sound is almost beside the point.
What we primarily here is the otherness of a (musical) sound in relation to our (nonmusical) surroundings. Like a veil over our eyes, it is not the particular qualities of the veil that we see (the pattern or density of the weave, the thickness of the threads), but the general state of “veil-ness” that it casts on what we see through it.” - Tim Rutherford-Johnson in Music After the Fall (2017)
“With recording, sound is stored for use. How do you use a recording like Stones [Christian Wolff]? Do you just listen to it like anything else (perfectly possible in this case) or do you find ways of listening to it that suit the recording in other ways: say playing it all day at low volume (so that it can be forgotten, except for those very few moments when a sound rises to the surface, reminding you it’s still there). Or play it so loud that you hear everything.
In other words, the recording can be viewed as open, something like an instrument - a particular instrument that makes a limited set of sounds that can nonetheless have a variable relationship in the environment in which they are played” - Michael Pisaro from Wandelweiser, appearing in Music After the Fall
Michael Pisaro - The Fields Have Ears
“I find the implication that there are “ears” everywhere, at every point in a world, a fascinating concept, even if it is rather hard to imagine. It implies that position might be more important than time in hearing; and that the sounding configuration of a world can be understood (differently) from an infinite number of points. It says that what is audible to any one person is unique, but at the same time contiguous (and therefore directly related) to what is audible to others.“
http://michaelpisaro.blogspot.com/2012/03/some-thoughts-on-fields-have-ears.html
score: http://www.wandelweiser.de/pisaroscores/ew08.133.1.pdf
“Sound modifies silence modifies sound (and the subsequent sound/silence of life after you listen).“ (review)
Jurg Frey
Michael Pisaro — Nature Denatured and Found Again (Gravity Wave)
Nature Denatured and Found Again by Michael Pisaro
Let’s start small; Nature Denatured and Found Again is a document of five summers well spent. In the summer of 2011 Michael Pisaro, an American composer, educator, and musician associated with the Wandelweiser composers collective, traveled to Neufelden, Austria to join artist Joachim Eckl at a former storehouse called Die Station (The Station). It is situated near the Grosse Mühl, a small river that empties into the Danube. Decorated with items culled from movie sets and an old Hilton hotel, it houses some of Eckl’s work and provides living and studio space for visiting artists, who mix with each other and townspeople in encounters intended to realize Joseph Beuys’ concept of “social sculpture” (in a nutshell, the idea that people gathering together can collectively change society through art).
Michael Pisaro - “July Mountain” for large percussion ensemble and 20 field recordings
https://www.flickr.com/photos/truu/10378343554/in/photolist-gP6HXQ-8Dbyzz-8BLCKP
Score: