cd ebb+flo – metamkine – 2003

kaffe matthews / cd eb + flo
[annette works/metamkine]

Collaboratrice de Fennesz ou d’Andy Moor (guitariste de The Ex), la londonienne Kaffe Matthews s’intéresse au son et à la façon dont il est perçu selon son dispositif de transmission et selon l’architecture du lieu d’écoute. Lors de ses concerts, sa musique est diffusée par huit haut-parleurs. Kaffe Matthews s’est notamment lancée, en compagnie de Zeena Parkins et de Mandy Mcintosh (!), dans le projet Weightless Animals, concept multiple (et complexe) qui tourne autour de la perception de l’environnement sonore dans l’espace et s’aide en cela de données recueillies par des scientifiques-spationautes, et qui devrait donner naissance à un dvd contenant les données d’un voyage intersidéral ! Ce cinquième témoignage de performances données par Kaffe Matthews prend la
forme d’un beau double cd (comme les précédents, chez Annette Works). Dans différentes villes (Vienne, Québec, Londres…), l’artiste a joué à l’aide d’un petit Theremin, un instrument qui se présente comme un boîtier électronique, muni de 2 antennes sensibles à la variation du champ électrique produit par le musicien. Avec la main droite, on fait varier un oscillateur commandant la fréquence et, avec la main gauche, on fait varier l’intensité sonore. Matthews a enregistré le theremin et, forcément en même temps, la réponse de la salle au signal émis, puis elle a tout retraité à la maison. Cd Eb + Flo présente ce travail sur une durée de 106 minutes. L’écoute en fait une expérience électro-acoustique qui dévoile le potentiel incroyable d’un instrument peu courant, mais aussi l’influence de la réponse acoustique d’une salle. A maintes reprises, les sons sont proprement hallucinants.

stéphane

cd ebb+flo – Francois Couture – 2003

Artist Kaffe Matthews
Album Title Cd Eb + Flo
Date of Release 2003

AMG REVIEW: Previous albums on Kaffe Matthews’ Annette Works imprint have chronicled her metamorphosis from violinist to sound artist in incremental stages, a climb toward a new sound. In comparison, cd eb + flo is a fully-rounded statement, a panoramic look from the plateau she has reached. All of the music presented on this double album has been reconstructed in the studio using recordings of performances where Matthews sampled and processed “a theremin, the room and its feedback.” The resulting music shares the purity of lines of the sonic architectures of Carl Michael von
Hausswolff and Richard Chartier. It also shows strong similarities with contemporary feedback artists like Toshimaru Nakamura and Sachiko M, but Matthews’ work constantly remains richer, more sensuous, and more playful than either of them. Plastic beauty doesn’t translate to asceticism on this album and that’s why it is so endearing. Disc one presents a carefully orchestrated sonic journey. It starts with very pure sine waves, builds up from track to track toward the central piece “Get Out More,” significantly noisier, and from there on drifts toward beat-anchored material. Disc two is more fanciful, taking the listener through quicker changes in moods and textures. The anticlimactic “Boy with Dog” is a marvel of flexible restraint, while “Dashes Five” shows what Merzbow could sound like if he’d clean up his act a bit. These pieces are so taking, the actual origin of the sounds rarely crosses your mind.

One of 2003’s best offerings in electronic sound art. — François Couture

cd ebb+flo – Cracked – 2003

KAFFE MATTHEWS

cd eb+flo (Awcd0005-6)

2xCD, Annette Works

Warning: art ! Kaffe Matthews is more of a performing artist than a musician, and the sounds she produces and which are documented on this double-CD are only a means to the end of opening the minds of the audience to a new sense of higher understanding of their senses, their experiences and their surroundings. If you want to file this CD as a minimalist, static ambient-CD, go ahead and do so, you’ll see for yourself, where you’ll end up with.

Don’t be misjudged by the title of these CDs – there is only minimal ebb and flow on these discs. Actually, most of the time this is music as static as it can get. Kaffe Matthews uses a theremin and the surroundings and implements available to her in live settings to produce a sound world that is filled with high-frequency walls, noises, interferences, some harsh rumblings and absolutely no beats or rhythms (unless you count the molecular holes in a sine-wave which our senses – trained on finding differences to work on – will interpret into some kind of variations). The titles “eb” and
“flo” mark the fifth and sixth CD in a series documenting her work in an alphanumerical fashion (starting with “Ann”, “Bea”, “cécilie” and “dd”). She has literally taken that world around the globe, playing in every kind of venue imaginable and dedicating her life and artistic work to the exploration of sounds.

The main outstanding feature about her minimalist soundscapes is an almost organic grace that fills every space that her work is filled with. She confronts her audience in with new experiences regarding their sense of hearing, also extending her pressure to the tactile and sensory abilities of the body of the listener, either by volume or by frequency. Yes, Kaffe Matthews is more of a building artist than a musician, and the theoretical framework – though not much or really put into words – is just as important to her releases than the sounds themselves. She has constructed sonic
furniture, extended her work into the area of visual arts. She is also a teacher for performance technology on one of the leading arts colleges in the UK.

Of course, it is possible, to reduce “eb+flo” to the purely auditive side. This will leave you with a record unlike every other record just the same. Frequency-manipulation, crackling hysteria, the sounds of thoughts and electrons, but within all the futuristic assemblage of consequent sound-production, Matthews still finds some place for humour, if not love. E.g. the track “For mama”, which features the chirping and chatting of birds, and what sound is there done by nature that is more friendly and peaceful than the sound of birds in front of the window? Or introducing sounds like water flowing – which has been used in audio-psychology a lot (and in new-age-music!) Matthews lets herself be driven by her surroundings very much. Having used the arbitrariness and randomness of the weather for sound-production, she has taken some more of the production into her own hands. Still, a lot of influencing factors are still outside of her responsibility and power – and shall remain so. The difference between playing a gallery, a warehouse, a boat or a tea-room, for instance. The fabric of the walls and the dynamics of the air, influencing the sound of the theremin.

I’d like to add at the end of this review, that it is not easy listening to this record. Some tracks are almost like a collection of sine-waves that start and stop at random, giving that little digital ping every time, with complete silence between them, which after some time becomes really nerve-wrecking. I can imagine, people getting sick and tired during shows, but also the opposite. Because at times she presents the most interesting sounds I have ever heard. Hard stuff, at the most progressive frontier of the avantgarde, this will make you listen to Aphex Twin as a relaxation.

www.annetteworks.com

11/2003

CRACKED (AT)

cd ebb+flo – Andrew Culler (Brainwashed)

Kaffe Matthews, “cd eb + flo” AWcd0005-6
Annette Works

CD Eb + Flo marks a number of departures in the work of one of today’s most interesting sound artists. The double-disc is Matthews’ first solo release using theremin as primary sound source, following her retiring of the violin which had formed the core of her excellent first three discs (recently reissued as a trio). The artist’s method remains somewhat constant on Eb + Flo, involving the live sampling and laptop manipulation of sounds created with the theremin and projected via quadraphonic soundsystem throughout a particular room. Matthews sets up a system of microphones in each performance space (five in total for these discs), enabling the pure tones of her instrument to feed back in a manner unique to the architecture of the room. Environment plays the biggest role in the artist’s music and has never been as much of a factor as it is on this release. As with previous recordings, Matthews has placed additional microphones around the room to gather specific pockets of sound, influenced by audience movement, noise from outside etc. However, where on her debut, CD Ann, the artist credited these “hidden” mics with only “the essential wild card,” Eb + Flo is more sympathetic, the blank purity of the sine tones allowing for uncluttered, even languid compositions that seem to evolve with an ear trained, more than ever before, on the details and happenings of a particular space. The release’s double-length is perhaps indicative of new patience and openness in Matthews’ work. The sine tones could not be further from the frayed, “comfortable” strains of her violin, and the individual pieces on Eb + Flo are drastically minimal compared to the warm, droning pile-ups that fill earlier releases. But while these pieces are more demanding, they also maintain a grasp on the ingenuous nature and simple luxury that separates Matthews’ work from many similar-minded artists, such as fellow sine-stress Sachiko M. Several tracks take on a playful air, such as the two pieces that open cd eb, “Long Line Starting” and “Clean Tone Falling,” whose titles seem to poke fun at the solitary pure tones jetting across both in comical animation. Others bearing titles like “Hallo Vera” and “For Mama” echo Matthews’ commitment to keeping personality, and a level of immediacy, in her increasingly abstract style; the latter with its mournful drones and captured bird-songs (via open window?) is particularly subtle and rich with sentiment. Played at a volume high enough to register the intricacies and unique spatial referents of each sound, Eb + Flo manages a unique and fulfilling sound environment, full of movement and mesmerizing activity, and it is an expertly restrained effort as well, allowing the most intimate picture to date, of the artist’s process, her degree of involvement and particular response to what a space might offer, or give back.

Andrew Culler

Wire magazine feature, Se[ptember 2003 – Will Montgomery

Kaffe Matthews is one of the most enduring figures in London’s improvised music scene, and her recent conversion from processed violin to software based transformations of space has opened up her music to a multitude of contexts, including radio art, a sonic armchair and music for astronauts.

Feature in the WIRE magazine – issue 235, September 2003.

Words: Will Montgomery.

There’s a ringing in the air of Bethnal Green one Saturday afternoon in East London. I wander around the streets for a little while with earphones in and the radio on. Then I sit on a bench on a spot of public land, a sculpted grassy hump, its glass-strewn tonsure ringed with trees. It’s outside a former Victorian dispensary, now flats. The ancient Pellicci’s cafe, part of the local Kray-crim heritage, is just across the road, as is a busy-looking pawnshop and more newly established sari outlets. The ringing is in my head: Bow Bells, not Bow Bells. It’s a radio artwork and it’s being broadcast on Radio Cycle, a short-licence radio project run by Kaffe Matthews, best known as a first-wave laptop improvisor. The piece (by Keith de Mendonca of the Disembodied Art Gallery) uses only bicycle bells as source sounds but they’re processed into sharp tones and drones and they make a superbly active backdrop to the wan public-works optimism of the open space I find myself in.

Since the appearance of Resonance FM, with its all-points experimentalism, London avant heads have been able to turn on the radio without fear. Radio Cycle is a rather different project, a meeting point between sound art, music and community activism. The station had a week-long licence, broadcasting within a one and a half mile radius of Matthews’s Annette Works studio, high in a 1950s factory building by Regent’s Canal in Hackney. When we meet there the following week, on a rainy summer morning, the radio transmitter is still rigged up. It’s a roomy space. There are a couple of laptops, a mixing desk, a bed, racks of CDs. I sit in a large armchair that, I later learn, contains several loudspeakers and is part of Matthews’s sonic furniture project. Although she tells me she’s worn out from a week of 24 hour broadcasting, you wouldn’t guess it: she’s direct, articulate and humorous, ready to pursue aspects of any of her projects into animated digressions.

Growing out of a week of workshops in Bow, Radio Cycle’s highlight was a series of pieces that were broadcast and ‘played’ by a group of cyclists carrying radios and following predetermined routes in the area. Citizens out and about in London Fields, Victoria Park and streets in the vicinity would encounter these mobile soundworks as they drifted by on wheels. The local streetmaps, Matthews explains, took on the character of scores for her.

“It suddenly dawned on me that the radio itself is like a mobile stage,” she tells me. “Originally I wanted to have a mobile radio station but we couldn’t do that because you’re not allowed to have a licence and be mobile. Radio Cycle was about this invisible activity, this subtle alteration of what’s going on around you. Which explains the bicycles. You’d be walking down the street and a bicycle goes by. You probably wouldn’t notice the bicycle but you’d notice some sound. A piece of music floating by. Just subtle little tweaks, altering people’s environment to turn them on to what they’re hearing.”

Matthews has had a working base in North East London since the mid-90s: first Stoke Newington, then near Brick Lane and now Hackney. One of the main aims of the Radio Cycle project, she says, was, after many years of touring and involvement in online communities, to work more closely with local people. Another such local initiative has seen her going into two Hackney girls’ schools, introducing them to working with sound.

The ‘tweaking’ of East London streets through sound is, like most of Matthews’s work, an exercise in the traffic between systems, in this case radio art and the urban environment. This characteristic of her work is reflected in her self-assigned job description: ‘live converter’. When she first began playing regularly in London in the mid-90s she was converting her own violin sounds and ambient material sourced from the venue into rich and dense pieces of music that rapidly reached a critical pitch of complexity. Since then she’s moved through an astonishing array of activities that shows no sign of narrowing: installations, the sideline in sonic furniture, radio and Web based art, and collaborative musical work such as her involvement in Mimeo (Music In Movement Orchestra), Keith Rowe’s live laptop ensemble. Matthews is directing Mimeo’s performance at London’s Serpentine Gallery in September, their first UK appearance.

“Music for me has always involved other media,” she says. “ A couple of years ago I was talking to a funder from the visual arts world about Mimeo and I realised that at last they were starting to understand music that was not about tunes. They were suddenly realising that electronic improvised music was speaking in the language that they spoke in, that it involved texture, density, colour, grain, size and shape.”

During our conversation Matthews frequently returns to her interest in the physicality of sound (hence, for example, her forthcoming Sonic Bed, which will incorporate input from a neurophysiologist). Her live performances bring to the fore the plasticity of her raw materials, as she rapidly moulds narratives out of the conversion of sonic events. It comes as a surprise, then, to learn that, after years of incessant touring, she reached a point last year when she was on the verge of giving up performing, the heart of her work. What happened instead, after a spot of intensive labour in the studio, was a new shift in the sound components of her work. This change is evidenced on her strongest CD to date, this summer’s double set cd eb + flo.

Like all her albums, it’s composed of material drawn from live performances, only this time she’s taken a much freer attitude, superimposing music recorded at different shows (in the past there was little or no editing). What’s most impressive about it are the sounds themselves. She’s arrived at a more spacious, stripped-down aesthetic, built on sine tones generated by a mini-theremin. The work moves through subtly overlapping loops and it has a remarkable warmth to it. Rather than the more elaborate edifices of her older work, there’s a new confidence in the capacity of her sounds to stand alone. Lines of sound move in gradual evolutions that draw the listener along with them. In taking this minimal turn Matthews is, of course, moving in parallel with a number of other currents in avant-garde music, seen in the work of collaborators such as Sachiko M or Andrea Neumann, for example. Yet the rhythmic richness of the music has clear continuities with the more layered pieces she has made in the past. It goes back, it seems, to a trip she took to West Africa in 1986.

“The most important part of my musical life, when I reached a moment of clarity and knew that music was the thing that I needed to do,” she says, “was when I came home from living in Senegal for three months and working with drummers on the beach. There I was taught about the importance of the texture of your skin, its temperature and its shape on the drum skin. And about the temperature of that drum skin and the shape of the drum, and the weight and dryness of the wood. All those details make up a sound and each alteration of those ingredients will change the sound. Changing those sounds will change the music and its meaning. And I learnt about how to put together ones and twos and threes in patterns and about how they can then shift.”

These two notions, the importance of small changes and the use of overlapping patterns, reappear in different guises throughout Matthews’s musical career. From 1997’s cd Ann onwards, there has been a fascination with the ways that layers of loops interact with one another. Incidentals, the introduction of sound miked from a nearby bar, for example, could be introduced to reinforce the specificity of the particular event and to change the music in a way that was only possible in that space. Although these days Matthews is less concerned with making her listeners aware of her working methods, the emphasis on unrepeatable particularity remains.

“I’m responding to the resonance and the energy of a space,” she remarks. “ That feeds the music and partially creates the music. It’s not about the place itself. If I was playing here on a Thursday afternoon and it was pouring with rain the acoustic would be very different and therefore so would the ways that I would improvise. It’s all in the detail. These tiny shifts of information are really crucial to creating the music. So the actual place itself doesn’t matter, it’s just the fact that there will be a different resonance and energy that will create and colour the music in different ways. And of course the size and energy of the audience has a huge amount to do with that.”

After several years of arduous work with a MIDI violin, samplers and effects in the early 1990s, the breakthrough for Matthews was her discovery of Steim’s LiSa software in January 1996. Whereas in the past she had been preoccupied with methods of controlling the technology she was using, LiSa allowed the machine space to speak. She learnt to set up particular environments on the laptop that would define the parameters of its responses without making them predictable: chance and the precariousness of real-time performance could be preserved in her interactions with the software. Things moved very quickly and within a matter of weeks she was doing regular gigs with the new set-up and a laptop. The following year she released cd Ann, a remarkable series of violin-sourced electronic improvisations that documents the richness of those early adventures with LiSa.

In those days Matthews was ardent about process. It was vital for her to communicate the fact that the music was, in the words of a CD sleevenote, “  a realtime exploitation of electronics in a particular place at a particular time”. More recently, however, there’s been a shift away from this concern and a greater reliance on the qualities of the sounds themselves. The movement from process to sound is caught in 2000’s transitional cd dd, which contained her farewell to the violin, “the last of the violins”. It is with cd eb + flo, however, that she has attained a new stage. Much had clearly happened in the period between cd dd and cd eb + flo .(Matthews and the violin, after all, went back a long way: she first played it at the age of seven).

“That gap has been about leaving the violin behind,” she explains. “It’s been about finding where I am next and going through a big change. I had a few difficult things happen. I was in New York for 9/11 and I saw it happen. It took me a year to deal with that. I think for a lot of people it was a shattering experience . I was also performing so much that I was not having enough downtime in my studio. To actually go through the shift musically I needed time to make it solid.”

Her new music is more focused on the possibilities of space. Matthews has been using eight channels to get beyond stereo sound, and she’s become more interested in the ‘architectural’ placement of sound within the performance space. Although many of the musical lines and what she calls ‘droplets’ of sound are very simple, their positioning has become a key part of the performance. On cd eb + flo too, the stereo image is carefully shaped. Some of the old love for rough textures is there in the glitchiness of some the loops but the most striking element of the sound is the use of very clean electronic tones.

“The sine tone, that really completely pure sound, is something I’ve loved as a sound source ever since I first switched on an Akai S900 sampler,” she says. “Even though it’s the antithesis of the violin. It’s this smooth sound, with no edges and no vibration. The violin is all about a vibrating edge. I’d been wanting to clear things out, make some space and deal with things on a much simpler level. That’s really what the use of the theremin has been about. ”

Matthews’s solo work often seems to involve a negotiation with control: the coexistence of her own ideas alongside the contributions of the machine and an openness to the accidentals of live performance. In her collaborations, however, Matthews explores a different side of her aesthetic. “Essentially, the collaborations I do are very much about making me work in ways that I wouldn’t on my own,” she tells me. In one recent piece, for example, she made a ‘collaborator’ of the weather. Weather Made, a project involving artists, kite flyers and writers, took place on an uninhabited Scottish island. Matthews used data from the kite strings, along with the temperature, light and wind, to control various software parameters: pitch, loop duration, filters and panning (the results are documented on an Annette Works CD-R).

“Why I find the weather to be an ideal collaborator is that it’s a system that’s outside my control,” she explains. “One thing about my early work with technology and the violin and so on, I realise now, was that it was about me controlling everything. Then working with LiSa was about setting it up so it can do its own thing, which I then deal with. Now the weather is completely outside that because it is its own system. It works in patterns but these patterns never repeat. I set up LiSa so the weather would do what I would normally do, my job was just to prepare an instrument for the weather to play.”

It was after this experience that Matthews went out to the Australian outback to work with Alan Lamb, whose monumental recordings of miked-up telegraph wires (such as 1995’s Primal Image) had made an enormous impression on her. “When I first heard his music I thought this is the music: I don’t need to make music any more, this is it,” she says. She was fascinated, she tells me, with their similarities and differences as strings players. Her aim is to perform live with Lamb in the bush, and uplink the music via satellite to huge sound systems at venues in cities worldwide.

Another collaboration, which has resulted in an interactive Website and which will see the release of a DVD in November, is her Weightless Animals project with harpist Zeena Parkins and artist Mandy McIntosh. The work aims to reflect on both the strangeness and the attractions of travel in space. For Matthews the project is part of her current exploration of the medium of radio and is thus linked to the more earthbound ambitions of Radio Cycle. Her contributions to Weightless Animals incorporate radio translations of the electronic activity in space, along with recordings of dialogue between ground crew and astronauts, and of the music that the astronauts choose to hear in space.

During a research trip to the NASA HQ in Houston, Texas, Matthews and McIntosh interviewed several ex-astronauts. “ In the old days the astronauts were allowed to take six cassettes each. I was actually given the six cassettes that one astronaut took into space. We’ve processed one of those. One of the questions we asked the ex-astronauts was “What is the piece of music that you most associate with space?” Most of them would just want [mimics astronaut drawl] “Some nice classical, a bit of folk, some Easy Listening ”. But one of them looked me straight in the eye and said, “Ravel’s Piano Concerto For The Left Hand. That’s the one, that’s it.” So I got a recording of that and processed it and made a piece out of it.”

The lappetites, a group of female laptop artists now in its third incarnation (featuring Antye Greie-Fuchs and Ryoko Kuwajima), is another of Matthews’ joint ventures. The group initially grew out of an event Matthews curated at New York’s Tonic, during which she played alongside Parkins, Ikue Mori, Marina Rosenfeld and o.blaat – the five musicians enjoyed the event so much that they went on to set up the lappetites. In its latest version Matthews says it has grown into an experiment with networked computers: “ I think that there’s a mammoth world of music that hasn’t been discovered yet that could be composed via us actually plugging our machines into each other and controlling each other’s sound,” she observes. “You experiment with controlling each other’s sounds. So it’s about thinking of sound as a central mixing pot that we all have access to. It throws up all kinds of ideas of ownership and control too.”

These days a Kaffe Matthews solo performance is an atmospheric event. She’s dispensed with the stage, preferring to sit in the centre of the space. The lights are off and only a little lamp illuminates the laptop, spilling onto Matthews’s intent features. She believes that a more valuable listening experience is made possible with the minimum of visual distractions.

“These days I’m getting to a venue quite a bit before the gig,” she remarks. “I place mics to be able to work with little bits of feedback. I’m resampling what I’m doing within the space much more. A stage is not relevant to me. I need to be in the middle of the space so I can hear how the sound works with a quadraphonic system. Working with the sonic aesthetic I have now, your actual position in relation to those speakers is more important. When you’re working with smooth tones and space and so on it really creates another kind of music, depending on your position as a listener. I want the people to be close because the hotspot of the sound is going to be where I am, in the middle, and they need to be there too. I need a little light so I can see what I’m doing but essentially it’s dark and people are in the position of just dealing with the sound. That’s what music is about for me , it’s about listening, active listening.”

It’s possible to draw parallels between some of the sounds that Matthews is working with and those used by musicians such as Ryoji Ikeda, Carsten Nicolai or Sachiko M. But the structure and organisation of the music is very different – the way that a piece develops its own internal coherence is quite specific to Matthews’s manner of working with rhythm and timbre. And, alongside the sine tones, she retains an attachment to very distinctive sharp edged tones. She returns to a spatialised, visual vocabulary to describe it.

“It’s the actual sound and the sense of shape about each sound that is clear, like little sculptured moments in air. I think I’ve wanted to let the air have a bit of space in what I do rather than have to stuff it full of sound all the time. One of the reasons I’ve come to this much more minimal music is that I don’t feel the need to blast music at people any more. I think some of what I was doing, working with high levels of sound, with great density and complexity, could feel bombastic, a bit of an assault. Now I don’t feel the need to do that. This music is small but there are little jewels.“

cd ebb+flo – Clive Bell – 2003

KAFFE MATTHEWS
CD EB + FLO
ANNETTE WORKS AWcd0005-6 2XCD
BY CLIVE BELL

(written for Annette Works website)

If earlier Kaffe Matthews albums have occasionally felt like a guided tour of a dense, possibly life-threatening tropical forest, eb + flo is more like watching someone paint with light. A cunning lighting designer can mould a space on stage, then heat it up, open it out, and radically alter its emotional density. In a similar way Matthews’s gleaming, unpredictable electronic sounds seem to define a space around the listener. The stereo placing is carefully crafted, and the sounds themselves, generated from theremins and feedback, often have a pure, jewel-like quality. At times they
lie almost static, winking like opals on velvet. Elsewhere they swoon or gurgle, leap from wall to wall like a game of Pong, or gallop off into a sweating riff, only to suddenly revert to more sunbathing.

eb + flo is a gentler, easier listen than previous outings – even when the going gets granulated and the flo starts to fizz, it’s never an onslaught. Matthews has stripped back her sounds to a simpler, cleaner palette, and her imagination has hit its stride with this excellent double set.

Clive Bell. London, UK. September 2003.

cd ebb+flo – kathodik.it – 2003

Kaffe Matthews ‘cd eb + flo’
(Annette Works 2003)

La dolce Kaffe prosegue il deflusso alfabetico, e dopo la ‘a’ di “cd Ann”, la ‘b’ di “cd Bea”, la ‘c’ di “cd Cécile” e la ‘d’ di “cd dd”, liquida in un sol colpo la ‘e’ e la ‘f’ con questo doppio “cd eb + flo”. Le registrazioni risalgono all’anno 2002 e, come al solito, sono state estrapolate da vari concerti per finire assemblate in un unicum che non lascia affatto trapelare fratture spazio-temporali. Il cambiamento evolutivo è quanto di meglio potersi aspettare da un musicista e “cd eb + flo”, visto sotto questo aspetto, rappresenta una bellissima sorpresa, se pure disorienta dal momento che tale cambiamento emerge, a tratti, fin troppo brusco, ma mai di tipo involutivo, nel qual caso il disorientamento si tingerebbe di perplessità. È, quindi, una Matthews diversa quella che ascoltiamo in questi dischetti, una Matthews che appare influenzata, molto, dai musicisti con cui ha collaborato in tempi recenti, in particolare da Sachiko M (il piacevole “In Case Of Fire Take The Stairs”, inciso in trio con la pianista Andrea Neumann, era stato registrato il 17 Marzo 2002). Direi che a tratti, soprattutto in alcuni passaggi del primo CD, l’influenza della giapponese è troppo opprimente e finisce per soffocare la poetica della Matthews, sono questi i momenti meno convincenti, eppure indispensabili, un pegno da pagare per giungere alla splendida catarsi da cui sorgono, come affreschi sotto i colpi del pennello, i più riusciti episodi del secondo CD. Qual è la differenza principale con i dischi precedenti? Direi che è nello studio del particolare e nella sua messa a fuoco, dove prima l’arrovello principale era quello di provocare l’impatto attraverso orchestrazioni che oggi sembrano appartenere al passato. Quella compattezza arcigna, quell’intemperanza direi, si scioglie in uno stile spiritoso, fatto di brevi sequenze macchiate da reticoli post-moderni, dove trova giustificazione anche la copertina molto Liberty disegnata per l’occasione. Oh sì, la copertina trova davvero una giustificazione in tale vivacità… e anche nei grilli canterini, nelle flebili melodie, negli sporadici impulsi ritmici, nelle continue invenzioni, in quello che è un miracolo di perfetto equilibrio. Sia chiaro che neppure “cd flo” è un capolavoro (che parolona!!?!), casomai è un disco di transizione, ma la volontà, e la capacità, dimostrate dalla Matthews nel mettersi in discussione, e nel mettere in discussione la sua musica, le aspettative del suo pubblico e le logiche della conservazione, ce la fanno apprezzare molto più di quanto avremmo fatto davanti al suo marquee moon. Il cosiddetto disco definitivo, in realtà, rappresenta la morte ultima e Kaffe è ben viva e decisa a sorprenderci nuovamente. La curiosità che la spinge, e che l’ha portata a suonare con Andy Moore, Giuseppe Ielasi, Marina Rosenfeld, Zeena Parkins… e numerose altre situazioni così dissimili fra loro, è un toccasana per il presente e una garanzia per il futuro. (no ©)

Aggiunto: August 3rd 2003
Recensore: Etero Genio
Voto: 3.5 stars
Link Correlati: Annette Works
Hits: 24
Lingua: italian

“Peace Warriors” December 2002

#18 with Lesser, Zai Kuning – Tetsu Saïtoh – Michel Doneda, Heiner Goebbels – Heiner Müller, Hoppy Kamiyama, Natsat and a lots of cd reviews…

KAFFE MATTHEWS
cd dd (Annette Works / Metamkine)

Fidèle toujours au même principe de travailler la matière sonore in situ, dans le contexte précis d¹un lieu et d¹un moment précis, pour son quatrième album (quatrième état des lieux dans son projet d¹explorer un maximum de possibilités offertes par le dispositif LiSa), Kaffe Matthews a sélectionné les enregistrements de trois performances (Bruxelles, Bologne, Glasgow). On ne pourrait certainement pas dire que la musicienne a perdu la main : sa manière de bâtir des paysages sonores imaginaires semble intacte, cependant, le discours s¹y fait de plus en plus discontinu, dérangé, éclaté. ” The Last Of The Violins ” est un peu son ” adieu aux armes ” : ou plutôt, adieu aux vieux amis – le violon, son premier instrument (d¹avant la découverte de l¹électronique) est désormais mis en veilleuse. Le travail, nuancé, sur la texture, une approche attentive de la matière brute à sculpter, s¹élaborant par tâtonnements, ” heureux accidents ” et une maîtrise indéniable de la panoplie électronique fascinent toujours mais le résultat me laisse plus perplexe que subjugué : la formule semble s¹éprouver, tourner en rond. ” The Pool In The Basement “, le dernier titre du disque marque, peut-être ( ?) un nouveau départ, c¹est en tout cas, la partie la plus gratifiante de l¹album : Commençant comme un morceau de techno minimale (ou presque), elle évolue vers des boucles de drones, hypnotiques, denses, irrésistiblement efficaces. (Derek Z.).

KAFFE MATTHEWS
cd dd (Annette Works / Metamkine)

Ever faithful to her method of working sound recorded on location, for her 4th album (4th state of play in her project of exploring the numerous possibilties made possible by LISA) Kaffe Matthews has chosen recordings of three perfromances (Brussells, Bologna, Glasgow) The artist has certainly not lost her touch. Her way of building imaginary soundscapes remains unchanged, but seems more disjointed, disturbed, more explosive. ‘The Last of the Violins’ is almost a ‘Farewell to Arms’ , or moreover, ‘ Farewell Old Friends, the violin, since further discovering electronics, has been put to rest. Her work is highly textured, a tentative approach to sculpting with raw sound , elaborate ‘ trials and errors’, and ‘ happy accidents’ . Her control/understanding of all the paraphenalia that goes with electronic music is amazing, but the result is more perplexing than enthralling, the formula possibly testing itself, going round in circles. The last track , however, ‘ Pool in the basement’ is the most gratifying part of the album, and signals a new phase in her music: beginning with a piece which is near minimal techno that turns into hypnotic dense loops that are irresistibally effective. (Derek Z.).

Locks – All music guide 2002

Moor, Andy/Matthews, Kaffe
Locks 2002

Kaffe Matthews is well known for her numerous avant-garde projects as a keyboardist and sampler artist. If the name of guitarist Andy Moor fails to ring a bell, it’s only because he usually performs under his pseudonym Andy Ex (in the Ex, of course). Locks is this duo’s first offering, an unusual and impressive album. The two artists improvise, the lady using a “live converter” to sample the gent’s guitar and add noises and glitches. She tweaks and loops, creating strange repetitive tunes over which the guitar occasionally roars (“Delta”). There is rhythm, there are riffs, and some punk energy blows through the laptop. The album has been pieced together from studio tracks recorded at STEIM (Amsterdam) and Annette Works (London), plus three cuts from a concert at Instants Chavirés (Paris). The pieces have been carefully arranged in suites and the whole thing flows nicely, despite the fact that parts of a particular suite can come from different sources. The five-part “Here Is Your Coat” (the longest at 17 minutes) stands out because of its wide range of dynamics and clever multi-layered guitar loops that give the impression of a thoroughly written composition. “AK-47 MH” surprises with its gentle, twinkling first section — really not the kind of music you’d expect with a title like that. In the age of glitch electronica and laptop-based experimental music, the guitar tended to become less and less incorporated and more and more ambient (Fennesz, Oren Ambarchi). Andy Moor shows you can import its more delinquent edges into the genre. Recommended. —

François Couture
All-Music Guide

STEIM concert – anonymous review

STEIM
May 10th, 2001

Text sent from audience member after kaffe’s solo concert at STEIM, may 10th 2001

considering i have not been exposed to large quantities of live electronic music, my perception is necessarily limited by experience. regardless of my experiential self-deprecative, i perceived your sound-gift as immensely powerful and impressive, the use of density and sparseness to create a moving structure which flowed effortlessly through time and my body. the saturation points reached incredible levels, without the unbearable loudness intensity i have heard before used as an effect in itself. the simplicity of your sound source rapidly dispersing into a complex world of inter-relations, increasing layers of trajectory after trajectory, a delicate beauty held together with the subtle strength of timbral cohesion. and of the technical structure of the sonic – loops and phases in and out of synchronicity – actual physical sound events creating their own solid environment within which i was submerged, reflecting. somewhere i drowned in rising tides and depths, which dropped brutally leaving my body to melt in fluidic plateaus of frequency shifts. the place where time slows, to the pace where the mind can perceive all that has, is and may occur in that world – a sensual multi-dimensional bodyencapsulated within the immersive sound body. and at its close, _my body was saturated.