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Other Minds is excited to announce a never-before-heard selection of early works by German composer/improviser/instrument builder Werner Durand. With this new release, entitled To Be Continued: Early Recordings 1978-80, a more vibrant portrait of the life and work of Durand is made possible. The recordings composing To Be Continued were recently unearthed for the first time in decades from the personal collection of Other Minds’ Executive Director, Charles Amirkhanian.
Werner Durand has been active since the 1980’s both as a solo performer, and in collaborations with Amelia Cuni, Arnold Dreyblatt, and Sam Ashley, among others. To Be Continued comprises three long form pieces that are important documents of the development of the audio processing techniques for which Durand is now known.
To Be Continued is presented in chronological order, tracing Durand’s move from his home in Karlsruhe, Germany to his influential trip to India and subsequent move to Berlin, including the only recording existent of the artist playing the bansuri flute. The influence of his studies in India are apparent, as is the influence of his teacher Ariel Kalma. The music is hypnotic and subdued, the sound of a trailblazing artist taking his first steps into the brush.
On the trilogy "Triptychon,” subtitled “Three Afternoon Songs,” Durand, along with collaborator Tom Dietz, weave together fragmented organ and synthesizer arpeggios into a dense field of kaleidoscopic sound. “The Road to Trichy” finds Durand in a more contemplative mode, skirting around the edges of New Age, a harder-edged Joanna Brouk or something akin to Alice Coltrane. The album closes with the short piece for soprano saxophone titled “BerlIndia.” As indicated by the elision of the title, there is a clear influence of Indian classical music here. Repeated raga figures over a central drone dominate the sound field.
credits
released January 15, 2021
1-3. Triptychon - 3 Sunday Afternoon Songs
Recorded in May 1978 by Tom Dietz at his rehearsal studio in Karlsruhe, Germany
Werner Durand: tenor saxophone, phase shifter, tape delay, echo chamber, farfisa organ
Tom Dietz: Yamaha synthesizer
4. The Road to Trichy
Recorded in May 1979 by WD at his home studio in Berlin, Germany
Werner Durand: tenor saxophone, bansuri, phase shifter, tape delay, echo chamber, farfisa organ
5. BerlIndia
Recorded in spring 1980 by WD at his home studio in Berlin, Germany
Werner Durand: soprano saxophone, phase shifter, tape delay, echo chamber, farfisa organ
supported by 17 fans who also own “To Be Continued: Early Recordings 1978-1980”
Absolutely love this recording. I listen to it at work. I listen to it in the car on the way home from work. I listen to it while falling asleep. Curtis’ cello is so amazing. Just got the vinyl in the mail from Discogs the other day! Can’t wait to play on my hi-fi system! Dave Sewall
supported by 16 fans who also own “To Be Continued: Early Recordings 1978-1980”
Fantastic stuff!!! Scratches all my itches: reich, bit of glass, some Laurie spiegel…. Just killer stuff. Can’t wait for my vinyl to arrvie! Jay Hodgson
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