Pedro Tudela
La Ou Je Dors
(Cronica)
Stealthily sneaking onto our radar screens last year, the
Cronica label came to our attention not from the usual myriad of music
magazines and our associate sound freaks, but rather from a few art
student acquaintances from Goldsmiths College. That alone should immediately
tell you something about the overall direction of this promising
new Portuguese label.
Based in Porto, Cronica has been around for around two years now, existing
as a true multimedia environment rather than just a record label. Think
Warp with The Designers Republic exclusively making music videos or
Tomato incorporating a full time record label and film company, and
you're on the right track.
Going far beyond the typical DJ/Producer base, the Cronica label bases
its musical output firmly in the world of art, and although electronic
in nature, its overall sound is determined by the individual processes
of its artists and collaborators rather than any pre-conceived ideology,
influence or mission statement
Pedro Tudela is one of the label's co-founders and has been an active
participant in both the Portuguese and European art community for almost
two decades now, working in a variety of mediums from video to traditional
canvas based work.
This latest project of his is a soundtrack to a commissioned dance
piece by Portuguese choreographer Isabel Barros. Inspired by the text
of Maurice Blanchot's "The Dream, The Night", Tudela followed
the rehearsals, recording sounds and images of the dancers and then
after three months of editing and sound processing, the results
were mixed together to create this release.
The first thing that you notice both about Tudela's work and the Cronica
label in general is that this is no amateur operation. La Ou Je Dors
is a sonic masterpiece, densely packed with layer after layer of intriguing
sounds and sampled loops that come from the heart, not some pre-packaged
piece of software.
For example, "Playing" could be an anonymous stripped down
remix of Autechre's Gantz Graf; "Dream Seller" could be Ritchie
Hawtin remixed by Missing Foundation.
"
Figures That Fall Apart" reminds one of some of the more dissonant
Teletype transmissions that used to be sent on shortwave radio. From
there on in, the CD scratches and rolls around stealing bits from many
genres; industrial noise, granular effects processing and deep techno,
all thrown together at odd angles to create a very unique and genuinely
inspired sound.
Tudela's mastery of DSP effects and audio production is evident and
he easily outshines most (if not all) of the recent powerbook brigade
with the depth and scale of the soundscapes presented herein. Like
the Cronica label he helped found, Tudela has amassed an impressive
body of work that marches firmly to its own beat.
A truly captivating and stunning release from a label that is very
much at the top of our list at the moment.
Don't miss this.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/music/experimental/reviews/tudela_laoujedors.shtml