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L'ivresse de la Vitesse

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Download links and information about L'ivresse de la Vitesse by Paul Dolden. This album was released in 1993 and it belongs to Electronica, Rock genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 02:21:52 minutes.

Artist: Paul Dolden
Release date: 1993
Genre: Electronica, Rock
Tracks: 11
Duration: 02:21:52
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. L'ivresse de la Vitesse 15:56
2. Physics of Seduction. Invocation #3 18:33
3. Revenge of the Repressed. Resonance #2 7:18
4. Dancing On the Walls of Jericho 16:23
5. Physics of Seduction. Invocation #2 13:20
6. Physics of Seduction Invocation No.1 15:56
7. In a Bed Where the Moon Was Sweating Resonance No. 9:12
8. Beyond the Walls of Jericho 16:40
9. Introduction 5:06
10. Section A 11:55
11. Section B 11:33

Details

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Culling material that covers a decade of work, L'Ivresse de la Vitesse (Intoxicated by Speed) had the effect of a bomb in musique concrète circles. Paul Dolden's previous album, The Threshold of Deafening Silence (1990), already indicated that the composer eschewed traditional tape music esthetics, but this ambitious two-CD set consecrated him as a new voice. Dolden works with instruments. His compositions are amalgams of partitions, hundreds of them, recorded individually on a wide array of instruments. They are later assembled through pitch, polyrhythmic and textural relations to create high-density pieces that seem to be performed by massive lunatic orchestras. At the heart of the album are three such pieces: "Dancing on the Walls of Jericho," "Beyond the Walls of Jericho" (these two completing a triptych started on the previous CD with "Below the Walls of Jericho"), and the title piece. The three works in the "Invocation" series feature tape parts from the Jericho cycle over which a solo part has been added. Performers include Dolden himself on guitar, Vivenne Spiteri on harpsichord, and cellist Peggy Lee; they are simply beautiful in "Physics of Seduction: Invocation #2." The same method is applied to the title track, transformed into the two parts of the "Resonance" series, both performed by François Houle (on soprano saxophone and clarinet). An older piece, "Veils," concludes the set with a look at the emergence of Dolden's technique as it is made of acoustic parts and more conventional musique concrète treatments. The energy, richness, and density of the music bring to mind the Vancouver new music big bands NOW Orchestra and Hard Rubber Orchestra — that is to say that it conveys a much more organic experience than more standard tape music. Decadent and subversive, L'Ivresse de la Vitesse is a classic, a unique form of fin de siècle tape music. ~ François Couture, Rovi