• Bogdan Dullsky: “Freedom Reflex (Second)” and the Limits of Language

    Nov 6 2009, 17h07 por zzapp

    Bogdan Dullsky: “FREEDOM REFLEX (Second)” and the Limits of Language

    November 6, 2009 by admin
    Filed under electronic, electronic: ambient, electronic: dark ambient, electronic: drone, electronic: industrial, instrumental

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    A little over a year ago, Moldova-based instrumentalist Bogdan Dullsky released the experimental album “FREEDOM REFLEX (ONE).” It was made available through the Italian label Setola di Maiale. At the time, Dullsky was the backbone of Quest.Room.Project, whom we had already discussed with some enthusiasm previously. These projects – like our own! – have thankfully endured and now Dullsky has released a follow-up entitled – logically enough – “FREEDOM REFLEX (Second).” It is available for free downloading.

    When the first recording appeared, it was described by Dullsky’s Italian hosts as follows: “There are many sounds in his music; they come and they go like a tornado. Movement. The sounds are worked with great depth and perspective; they differ in intensity, both approaching and retreating. There is a light source within this music, yet there is also darkness all around. This is the morphology of a thought.”

    Despite the melodrama of that quotation, it does underscore the fundamental idea behind the “Freedom Reflex” projects. Even in their common title, we have a tension between “freedom” (active choice) and “reflex” (passive reaction) – hence the references both to approaching and retreating in the Italian.

    This tension has been maintained on the second release – where it is expressed in much more concrete and dramatic (if not disastrous) contexts.



    The press release for “FREEDOM REFLEX (Second)” reads as follows, but we have polished the English somewhat. “The famous Russian experimentalist Bogdan Dullsky – responsible for the Quest Room Project – returns to [Portugal's] test tube Records with a mixed-media release. He has invited some friends to collaborate on this album, namely Barandash (a visual artist who has created the amazing images that accompany this work); Nikita Golyshev (founder and curator of netlabel Musica Excentrica) on samplers and synthesizers; Oliver Wichman (founder and curator of the netlabel Petcord) on piano, and – last but not least - Ray Kondrashov on acoustic and midi percussion.”

    So much for the participants, but what about the thematic emphases, especially in the light of some evidently disturbing illustrations?



    On this follow-up to a previous work, Bogdan and friends create something fantastic, operating on various levels of complexity. They render the listener numb – yet dazzled.” That may sound slightly overblown, but the reasons for such hyperbole soon become clear. We also quickly realize how the core emphases or tensions between “freedom” and “reflex” are going to be further investigated.

    The new album, simply put, is an audio-visual materialization of what life could have been like in a concentration camp. A life on the edge, full of horrors, tragedy, sadness, and agony,… and yet still a life, all the same. What does existence mean when you know it will eventually end… just sooner than you anticipate? What if you had to enjoy that same existence in the best way possible – even knowing that you would be eventually tortured and executed? What thoughts would fill your mind? What kind of pleasure would you try to take from those moments? What would you dream? Would you dream about… Death? Despair? Freedom?

    The insistence of death, always locating its addressee, finds especially unnerving expression in the picture below. Repose and ruin occupy each and every mail box with the same missive. Whether the recipient chooses to open his/her box and recognize its contents is irrelevant. Quietus will push its way through the cracks.



    The introductory text accompanying the new album concludes that “there are many answers to these questions. One possible response is contained in the sounds. Listen to them, and take a close look at the images, too.” Dullsky attributes the slow emergence of these rather moribund concerns in his work to an experience he had exactly one year ago. Logically, therefore, this would have occurred close to the time of “Freedom/Reflex One“: “A year ago I had a terrible dream. It was simultaneously grandiose and beautiful. Since that time I’ve been trying to reproduce some landscapes of the spiritual world that I envisioned. These are the kind of sights that lie ‘beyond the looking glass.’ I’ve been trying to reproduce them in sound…”

    The digital artwork by Barandash does fine, yet frightening justice to the grim stubbornness of these thoughts and themes; no matter one’s physical frailty, they grind onwards with self-destructive insistence. Forgetting is impossible.



    Let us briefly consider the spaces and experiences that Dullsky wants to capture in sound. There are specific references in this release to the WWII camps of Mauthausen and Gusen, in Austria. Even though the two locations (often referred to as one complex) had approximately 85,000 inmates at the time of their liberation, deaths throughout the war years may have been over 300,000. As those figures immediately suggest, the Mauthausen-Gusen camp was designed to destroy, rather than “use” its residents. Or, more accurately, prisoners were forced to work on local farms, road-building projects, and underground storage facilities, but no attempts were made to maintain the long-term (financially sensible) health or usefulness of these people. They were worked to death with maximum speed. Particular violence was directed against members of the intelligentsia. Mental freedoms were curtailed in the simplest, most horrific way possible: through brute physical destruction.

    At this point even the more flexible specificity of imagery dissolves into a troubled consideration of things unspeakable.



    Work days would typically last at least twelve hours. until prisoners simply collapsed from fatigue. This made them eligible for “sick leave,” which in actual fact was the first step towards their execution. The original means of removing unwanted workers by injection proved to be too expensive, and so – over time – a collection of mobile gas chambers would shuttle back and forth between Mauthausen and Gusen.

    The awfulness of these facts leaves Dullsky in an admitted state of speechlessness. He hopes that the abstract music on “Freedom Reflex: Two” at least occupies a “place and time where these people can no longer be.” He admits that having made the album, he is now unable to listen to it. “I simply pray that some things are never repeated. On the other hand, though, who am I to speak for these people?”

    In rather difficult English, he adds “It will repeat again and again…” It’s hard to tell whether he means – somewhat resignedly – that history is bound to repeat itself. He may, conversely, be continuing his thought about the ineffable, inexpressible nature of these crimes. If so, then the multi-media nature of this release takes on a special significance. The images themselves revolve around a repeated object of concern, time after time. It is the huddled, shriveled carcass that we see below, devoid of all liquid and life, becoming instead an arid marker of awful times.

    Just like the sonic contents of this recording.



    In consideration of hundreds of thousands of deaths, instigated by savage decree, the musicians of this release clearly decided that language per se is an unsuitable medium. Dullsky himself, taking the helm, instead resorted to complex, even contorted instrumentals in order to move beyond the deceptively comforting limits of grammar – and other reasonable regulations. We find ourselves lost amid noise and images. The overall impression, conjured by long compositions of no evident direction, is that meaning itself has been cast adrift.



    If our composer, another year from now, can nonetheless muster the optimism to consider manageable goals beyond the dead-end experiences of Mauthausen and Gusen, then he’ll also be able to consider artwork that does more than cast skeletal figures adrift in boundless, blank spaces. Figures will be fleshed out, the music will manage a basic rhythmic consistency – and speech will become possible.

    David MacFadyen



    http://www.moscow.ucla.edu/electronic/2009/11/06/9628/
    FREE DOWNLOAD
  • DREAMING IN A CONCENTRATION CAMP

    Out 24 2009, 4h44 por nexTime

    «Famous russian experimentalist Bogdan Dullsky - responsible for the Quest.Room.Project - returns to test tube with a new mixed-media release, to much of my own pleasure as I'm a big fan of his work. For this 'Freedom Reflex | Second' he invited some friends to collaborate, namely Barandash (the visual artist who created the amazing images that accompany this work); Nikita Golyshev (founder and curator of netlabel Musica Excentrica and musician) on samplers and synthesizers; Olliver Whichman (founder and curator of netlabel Petcord and musician) on piano, and also Ray Kondrashov on acoustic and midi percussions.



    On this follow-up of a previous work (FREEDOM REFLEX (ONE)), Bogdan and friends create a fantastic work of various levels in complexity, rendering the listener numb and dazzled. 'Freedom Reflex | Second' is, simply put, an audio-visual materialization of what life could have been in a concentration camp (one like KZ Mauthausen). Life on the edge, full of horrors, misfortune, sadness and agony, but also a life. What is life when you know it will eventually end, sooner than you think? What if you had to enjoy in the best possible way even knowing you would be eventually tortured and executed? What would fill your mind? What kind of pleasure would you try to take from those moments? What would you dream? Would you dream about Death? Despair? Freedom?

    There are many answers to these questions. One possible answer is in 'Freedom Reflex | Second'. Listen to it, and watch the images closely» - Pedro Leitão

    «One year ago I had a terrible dream. Both simultaneously grandiose and beautiful. The whole year I have spent attempting to reproduce landscapes of the spiritual world behind the looking glass, in a sound...

    Perhaps. Which that was possible. You check up...

    It would be desirable that we have stayed near to prisoners of concentration camp Mauthausen and other camps of death. In what time and in what place they would not be... Can not listen to this album... Simply pray for, that some things. Never repeated... Though... What am I to speak for it? It will repeat again and again... I have impudence pretentiously to trust in a good victory :)

    Take care...» - Bogdan Dullsky http://dullsky.net/

    '| test tube
  • v/a - Vortex [NTT050]

    Jul 24 2008, 4h34 por mrGad

    With a strong focus on unique and structures, v/a - Vortex has turned into a solid collection of next level sonic wizardry.
    All of the artists involved have dedicated an extremely respectable amount of time and effort to sculpt their submission until it was perfect.
    Could it be possible that 1 reason for this has to do with the fact that v/a - Vortex was a compilation that simply needed to be made?



    * 01 - Hecq - Continuum
    * 02 - Zoogoo, Chlorophyll Fluxbunny, Otets Dekan - Neural Ensemble
    * 03 - CCP - Owak Erg
    * 04 - Barbarix - Masicular
    * 05 - Sytrjv - Exacud
    * 06 - Subskan - Aezphia Vortex
    * 07 - La Peste - Being Palm Eldritch
    * 08 - atomhead - Vortex
    * 09 - atomhead - Robotomy
    * 10 - Sedarka - Ishimori
    * 11 - Binray - Beta Block
    * 12 - Xanopticon - Ortexx
    * 13 - Inshizzo - Head of Atoms
    * 14 - Bogdan Dullsky - Rift Fractal
    * 15 - atomhead - Rift

    http://www.entity.be/
    download ZIP

    Let's do a quick rundown to get to know these wonderful artists:

    Hecq, German professional with an admirable discography on labels such as Hymen, Bnkcrsh, ...
    Otets Dekan, Zoogoo and brother Chlorophyll Fluxbunny, who collaborated intensely on their morphing re-assimilation monster, and who should be known from previous NTT releases.
    CCP, aka Yann Hekate of the Italian "Hekate Soundsystem", in charge of Anarmonia and related promising labels and responsible for a completely alien glitchmorph fest.
    Barbarix, a rising UK artist who could previously be heard on BBC's Mary Anne Hobbs radio show, and who's also preparing the next Entity release.
    Sytrjv, another relatively unknown though very talented knobtweaker from Rome, delivering a complex onslaught of dark experimental rhythms.
    Subskan, whose dark, mindcrashing electronics can assimilate any A.I. mutant from a distance, and who created some seriously awesome releases on respected labels such as Belgium's own Ambivalence Records and Mirex.
    La Peste, head of the French Hangars Liquides label, coined the musical term "flashcore" and operates in his own personal sounddimension.
    SDK, aka Sedarka, who will one day be like Kazumoto Endo, except better, as his Entity release so charmingly demonstrates.
    Binray, who's merciless track got lifted from the cancelled Phalanx project "Hyperion", and who also brought you a mesmerizing free release in the past, as well as on labels such as ZOD and Ad Noiseam.
    Xanopticon, micro tweaker deluxe, especially known for his insane livesets and ultra-detailed Liminal Space album on Hymen.
    Inshizzo, a psytrance vs breakcore duo who rock the Moscow underground partyscene and run the Acidsamovar label, bringing us a speedcore influenced track.
    Bogdan Dullsky, aka Quest.Room.Project, a sound project exploring the strange and the bizarre by superimposing the impossible, as with his outworldly Entity release "ROOM Number".
    atomhead, aka yours truly!

    http://www.entity.be/
    download ZIP
  • Há poucos dias foi editado na russa Musica Excentrica.....

    Jun 18 2008, 0h24 por mrGad



    Há poucos dias foi editado na russa Musica Excentrica (avantgarde post-music netlabel) um trabalho de colagem de oito peças acústicas e digitais reunidas num único “nevão”, como se diz na apresentação do disco dos artistas russos Nikita Golyshev (aka CD-R) e Bogdan Dullsky (aka Quest.Room.Project). Digital Snow (41’) é um bom exemplo do trabalho conjunto de artistas que, não se encontrando fisicamente presentes em simultâneo, colaboram à distância trocando ficheiros entre si através da net, aos quais acrescentam valor via troca e improvisação, processo criativo de que resulta este jogo profícuo de estímulos e reacções alternadas. CD-R and Quest.Room.Project — Digital Snow, está disponível para descarga alternativa em formato mp3 ou em flac. De escuta muito recomendável são também os trabalhos de Joe Colley, Jessica Rylan and Kevin Drumm, Pure; de Kenneth Kirschner, 10/19/06 Fragments; Kim Cascone, The Astrum Argentum, e alguns mais.
    CD-R and Quest.Room.Project — “Digital Snow”

    ZIP with 320kbps mp3 (91mb)
    http://listen.excentrica.org/releases/exc014/exc014_mp3.zip
    ZIP with FLAC lossless (307mb)
    http://listen.excentrica.org/releases/exc014/exc014_flac.zip

    http://jazzearredores.blogspot.com/
    http://www.dullsky.net/
    http://netaudio.ru/musica-excentrica/releases/exc014/
  • CD-R and Quest.Room.Project — “Digital Snow”

    Jun 15 2008, 22h17 por zzapp

    CD-R and Quest.Room.Project — “Digital Snow”

    This free compilation/collaboration, released today, is well worth your time - if you can actually hear it. The opening track is barely audible and undoubtedly the quietest piece of music on this site. Its authors describe it as the introduction to “ or ‘.’”

    http://www.netaudio.ru/musica-excentrica/releases/exc014/
    ZIP with 320kbps mp3 (91mb)
    http://listen.excentrica.org/releases/exc014/exc014_mp3.zip
    ZIP with FLAC lossless (307mb)
    http://listen.excentrica.org/releases/exc014/exc014_flac.zip
    “Pre-noise” would be equally accurate.

    “Pre-noise” would be equally accurate.

    Nikita Golyshev, shown above and known professionally as CD-R, authored “Digital Snow” together with Bogdan Dullsky (Quest.Room.Project). They worked togehther on this recording virtually, not physically, merging pre-recorded files with real-time performances over a peer-to-peer connection.

    In a recent interview, Dullsky explained the interplay between file swapping and improvisation as follows. He tried defining a balance between the limits of prerecorded sounds and the limitless choices of absolute, aimless freedom.

    Somewhere in between lies creativity: ”When it comes to improvisation, this is what I do… The first things to consider are the given circumstances. It’s a bit like an actor trying to relive something with his [boundless] heart, albeit inside the limits of the stage. He tries both to relive his character’s experience and to allow it ‘through’ him. In the same way - in those same circumstances of an amorphous [yet restrictive] room - you’ve got to hunt down the main thing. It’s what people sometimes call ‘liberty.’ The driving force behind this project was something similar; we were looking both for stimuli and for reactions to them. If you spend most of your time with a musical instrument in your hands, then a musical syntax, a harmony-based view of the world in all its depth and spatial modes will come together. What I mean is… there’s no need for [desperately-sought] originality… Originality is something you simply cannot avoid!”

    The result of this give-and-take is what these two musicians call “a collage of both acoustic and digital pieces, gathered in one snowfall.” Their light, almost unnoticable touch is evident in the opening and closing tracks, simply titled “Parts One and Eight.”

    The first and shorter of the two seems a fitting embodiment of the wonderful cover art by Grigorii Kochenov: a light dusting of fractured, twinkling elements through which other distant structures (other songs, perhaps?) can barely be discerned.

    Digital Snow

    http://ffm.soyuz.ru/
    http://www.netaudio.ru/musica-excentrica/releases/exc014/
    http://www.netaudio.ru/nikita-golyshev/?cd-r
    http://www.dullsky.net/
  • ADD NOISE III

    Nov 7 2007, 18h33 por zzapp

    ADD NOISE III at National Centre for Contemporary Arts

    Musica Excentrica by the wide cooperation with The Ministry of Culture and Mass Communications of Russian Federation, Federal Agency of Culture and Cinematography, National Centre for Contemporary Arts (Moscow) presented ADD NOISE III, the festival of contemporary music featuring Bogdan Dullsky (Quest.Room.Project), Nikita Golyshev (CD-R), Novel 23, moroza_knozova and Fizzarum. The astonishing video was performed by Tsymbal, Apel and Intekra.

    DOWNLOAD FREE
    http://www.archive.org/details/excentrica_audionotes.003


    01 Quest.Room.Project | 12.9mb, 9:24

    02 Nikita Golyshev | 15.1mb, 11:03

    03 Novel 23 | 7.9mb, 5:43

    04 Moroza_Knozova | 8.0mb, 5:47

    05 Fizzarum | 15.2mb, 11:06



    This is a selected recording of
    ADD NOISE III” contemporary music festival (06 sep 2007)


    http://www.excentrica.org/
  • Idle Sunder - Psygnosis I [NTT045]

    Jul 5 2007, 16h47 por nexTime

    NTT045 - Idle Sunder - Psygnosis I
    click to enlarge



    01 - Welcome
    02 - Analyse
    03 - Aeon
    04 - Paradigm Shift
    05 - Introspection
    06 - Unknown
    07 - Fury
    08 - Boundary Dissolution



    entire release (.zip)
    http://www.archive.org/compress/ntt045



    _____________________________________________________

    Having worked closely with Bogdan Dullsky (Quest.Room.Project - see "ROOM Number") on this 1st album of the Psygnosis trilogy, Idle Sunder has transcended the space drone boundaries they were once confined to, to visit a universe of remarkably visual minimal rhythms and manipulated instruments/recordings.
    All of the tracks contain a great diversity in both sound and style, while retaining a quite conceptual atmosphere which holds ground in between existential and psychological ideas that are sure to be elaborated on throughout the remainder of this project.
    A word of thanks goes out to all the people that have made a contribution in one form or another:
    levinj, Suonho, djgriffin, NoiseCollector, melack and Bram at Freesound for sound sources, Winne Clement for the flute in track 8 and once again Christian Jehle for the nice cover art.
    _____________________________________________________

    Bogdan Dullsky http://www.dullsky.net
    Idle Sunder
    Entity.be http://www.entity.be/idlesunder
  • Iannis Xenakis: Tribut CD for free Download

    Jun 25 2007, 2h11 por re-quest



    A free-to downlad tribut CD on Russian Netlabel Musica Excentrica is paying hommage to Iannis Xenakis. This is not just THE Greek composer of the 20th century - he is the archetype of the modern composer as such and possibly the last true superstar of the genre: Musically creative beyond any comparison, with a sense for the rediscovery of rhythm as an important element long before the ascent of techno and a sensibility for the interests of an audience outside of academic circles. Which is again clearly demonstrated by the line-up of the participating artists to this album, which are almost all rather from the side of cutting edge electronica than the .
    Iannis Xenakis: Tribut CD for free Download http://www.excentrica.org/musica/exc006/

    Included on “Tribute to Iannis Xenakis” are: Kenneth Kirschner, Kevin M. Krebs, Alexei Borisov, Quest.Room.Project (Bogdan Dullsky), Zenial vs Phillip B. Klingler, CD-R, and Alva Noto. While the inclusion of common creative license proponent Kirschner may not be such a big surprise, getting Alva Noto, famous for his solo releases on German Raster Noton and his collaborative efforts with Ryuichi Sakomoto, should certainly give the tribute the attention it deserves. His track, by the way, must surely be the most minmal piece of music I have ever listened to, consisting of nothing but a delicately varying frequency wave.

    All contributions are exclusive to the compilation and underline the label's motto for “Tribute to Iannis Xenakis”: Also a mathematician, experimental engineer and architect, he is a true cult figure."

    Musica Excentrica
    “Tribute to Iannis Xenakis” at Musica Excentrica

    http://www.tokafi.com/
  • Quest.Room.Project - Room Number: Fiducial Banality

    Jun 11 2007, 14h20 por zzapp

    Quest.Room.Project - Room Number - Fiducial Banality


    «A gentle flute motive introduces us to the world of Quest.Room.Project from Russia, and one might at first expect a relaxed listening experience. But by the time more voices chime in, it becomes obvious that these spotlights are going to be swallowed by shadows of tragic compassion. "Room Number - Fiducial Banality" is organised in 4 parts (one could as well define them as movements, because there are some key themes occuring throughout the entire release) and each of them features a room with distinct acoustic characteristics:
    "TocarThe reason for the surfacing" appears like a shadow of a doubt that gradually turns into overwhelming certainty. Almost inaudible at the beginning, "TocarAssemblage" soon escalates to several emotional outbursts, before exhaustion will take its tribute in "TocarPossession" and create a haunted, threatening atmosphere. As reminiscence of the beginning, "TocarCombined Exercises" begins with a flute solo and continues to pick up previous motives to escalate them to a wall of sound. Finally the dissonances wither away and make room for the last remnants of the ever occuring flute theme. A cycle has been completed and we are at the beginning again...
    Bogdan Dullsky, the creative head behind the Quest.Room.Project, describes his intentions on the project's website(http://dullsky.net/) as "a search of space for the life leaving for borders of habitual linearity". But "Room Number: Fiducial Banality" doesn't attempt to descibe a solution to break free: It's left up to the listeners themselves to recognise their personal ever returning patterns of life and change them by their own strategy. or - as Bogdan concludes - as an "attempt to live by some own rules on which borders it is possible to breathe freely".» - Olliver Wichmann

    '|
    320 kbps download
    http://www.monocromatica.com/netlabel/releases/tube078.htm
  • Quest. Room. Project. и преодоление "иерархии смерти"

    Jun 11 2007, 14h04 por mrGad

    08.06.2007 | art-sunnata |

    Quest.Room.Project. и преодоление "иерархии смерти""Сохранилась его запись одной мелодии, по которой
    ясно, что при игре он использовал более десяти пальцев…"

    Такие данные по версии "Хазарского словаря" сохранились о музыканте XVII Ибн Акшани. Кроме виртуозной техники он славился глубокомыслием. Правда, мысли совсем неоднозначные – смерть и сон понятия, если не тождественные, то родственные, "сон – это каждодневное умирание, маленькое упражнение в смерти". Ибн Акшани указывал на существование некой "иерархии смерти": "Кто-то, кому известно каким образом, чем и почему ограничено наше пространство, то, что мы считаем небом и воспринимаем как нечто неограниченное. Кто-то, кто не может приблизиться к нам и только одним-единственным способом – убивая нас – дает нам понять, что мы существуем. <…> И мы через наши смерти <…> как через приоткрытую дверь, рассматриваем в последний момент какие-то новые пространства и какие-то другие границы". Иными словами философ утверждает, что смерть – единственное средство коммуникации в безграничности вселенной.

    Если внимательно вслушаться, то опровержение этой аксиомы мы в силах обнаружить в альбоме “Room Number - Fiducial Banality” проекта "Quest.Room.Project.". Опровержение настойчиво пробивается сквозь эфемерные глыбы звука. Скорее всего, автор этих полотен (Bogdan Dullsky) лишь только догадывается (а быть может и знает), чем ограничено наше с вами пространство, но чтобы донести свои сакральные догадки (а быть может и знания), не прибегает к лишению возможности жить.

    Напротив, насильственное перемещение в мир иной сознательно игнорируется – музыка создаётся ночью, БЕССОННОЙ ночью. Смерть попирается в тот момент, когда она робко проецирует себя сновидениями на чёрно-тёмно-синее полотно ночи. Звук, мысль и чувство прорываются сквозь десятки или, не исключено, сквозь сотни или даже тысячи границ, за которыми проявления жизни приобретают непознанный, характер. Часто солирующая флейта – это не дудочка Крысолова, она не намеревается увести в места погибельные. Приоткрываются сотни скрипучих несмазанных таинственных калиток, за которыми не пространства и горизонты, а предчувствие ещё, как минимум, тысячи калиток. Их размещение нелинейно и не циклично, но при этом хаос весьма условен. Пространство не механично – в нём есть жизнь, в которой наблюдающий и наблюдаемый непрерывно меняются, местами минуя фазу физического уничтожения, проносясь над мостами страны теней. "Иерархия смерти" разрушается этой старой-новой формой общения, стремлением к жизни и любви в самом широком понимании…
    art-sunnata