A gripping, devastatingly patient, and emotionally raw improvisation for cello, saxophone, and metal chains recorded live at Kuwayama Kiyoharu's cavernous warehouse space in Nagoya, Japan in March 2002. "From the Abolition Port" features two human musicians, but the ghostly presence of the acoustic space acts as a third performer... or perhaps as a collaborative composer.
The music is violent in its sparseness; sharp instrumental outbursts push with great effort against a backdrop of blackness as dense and heavy as the sun. "From the Abolition Port" suggests a private ritual, or a seance... or perhaps absurd theater, with unseen players circumnavigating a pitch-dark industrial space, sending out desperate distress signals and futilely listening for a response.
Praise for "From the Abolition Port":
"An absolutely staggering illustration of how it is possible to create a musical universe with very sparse means, yet one that is full of tension, meaning, and feeling. The tension, the meaning and the feeling are not necessarily those you like to have, but like all good stories, that's what creates the suspense and keeps you seated to your chair in anxious expectation of what is coming next, hoping for relief, hoping for salvation, hoping .." - Free Jazz
credits
released June 1, 2010
Recorded at No 20 warehouse, Nagoya Port, on October 2, 2003
Urabe Masayoshi - alto saxophone, chains, metal joints, bell
Kuwayama Kiyoharu - cello, viola, metal junk, wood sticks, etc
Originally published as a CDR in a limited edition of 100 copies.
Former label for experimental-type music. Foolishly founded by Howard Stelzer in 1997, mismanaged for more years than necessary, and finally put out of its misery in 2012. This page exists to keep some titles available.
Massive 25-year-retrospective from Frans de Waard originally came out as a 10 cassette boxset. The digital edition includes even more archival noise and concert recordings. Intransitive
supported by 18 fans who also own “From the Abolition Port”
This is my favourite release so far as I slowly drill through his back catalogue. There’s something about the focus & subtle movement that captivates me. biscuitgecko
St Celfer returns with tracks culled from a series of live shows, each one a showcase for his inventive experimentalism. Bandcamp New & Notable Jun 26, 2023