Markus Reuter

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ian boddy / markus reuter - distant rituals (cd)

A Listener's Guide To Distant Rituals (by Sid Smith)

I've been listening to the final mix of the Distant Rituals CD by Ian and Markus. I'm struck by the depth and beauty of the music. There's a real warmth to the overall sound and the mixture of Markus' Warr guitar and Ian's electronics work together in all sorts of unexpected ways.

On A Beginning In Light as the gothic architecture gradually unfurls, at the 3 minute 50 seconds mark, a strange howling, repeating siren like sound, comes in. I asked Ian about it recently. Oh its from a tape loop I did back in the seventies. I just never knew what to do with it at the time. We reckoned that Markus would have been 5 or 6 when Ian recorded that loop at Spectro Arts Workshop in Newcastle!

Within The Space Between Things is a brooding, smouldering piece of atmospherics with Ian working on the colour and shading.

Trace The Memory contains a truly blissful solo by Markus. The pure clear tones weave effortlessly around the swirling rhythms which Ian deploys. The drums are half speed and the gorgeous sub bass sound with a killer bass line that would keep many a dance club fan more than happy. In fact there's something deceptively joyous about this piece, despite its languid, rolling beat.

Distant Ritual goes off into more mysterious territory, with sounds and the shades of melody shimmering in a heat haze. Reuter uses shards of sustained notes to etch away at the backdrop of sounds. Strange voices lend a sense of dark, menace as the track ebbs away. Chilling but totally thrilling. It may well be my favourite cut on the album after the opening track.

Presentation Of An Offering fades in with a deep, meandering bass and what could well be the sound of thighs being slapped in some obscure Tyrolean dance macabre. After a while the bass sound develops a parping rasp which I confess did little for me. Markus and Ian laugh contemptuously at my objections and tell me to stick to the label co-ordination (whatever that is).

Its just possible that this track could become a dance floor classic. Listen out for the cathartic gurgling at the 4.00 minute mark as filtered whisperings become a shuffling, brushed jazz kit and Markus slaloms up and down the scales. Invigorating stuff.

Voices Of Doubt starts with impressionistic washes of colour. Its dark and foreboding and reminds me of some aspects of Boddy's Continuum. It blends seamlessly into A Delicate Re-enactment. The faraway thrum of machinery shrouded in a cold, swirling mist of sound begins life as a dark ambient exercise. This gives way to a delicate plucking of notes and a slow unravelling of melody and form. Its moments like these where its not what you play but what you leave out that becomes as important. Personally, I could take a whole album of this stuff but then again I am more than a little biased.

Out of stock.

Tracks

1) A Beginning in Light (8.33)
2) Within the Space Between Things (3.47)
3) Trace the Memory (8.56)
4) Distant Ritual (6.03)
5) Presentation of an Offering (11.09)
6) Voices of Doubt (4.44)
7) A Delicate Re-Enactment (12.14)

Credits

All tracks composed, played & produced by Ian Boddy & Markus Reuter, November 1998 - February 1999.

Ian Boddy - Electronics, rhythms
Markus Reuter - Warr Guitar, textures

Comments

After the rather typical Ian Boddy-record "Box Of Secrets" this second release on DiN, a collaboration with (German?) guitarist Markus Reuter, sounds more atmospheric. Reuter plays "Warr-guitar" (Warr is a manufacturer) which looks like a Chapman Stick and sounds strange but beautiful. I must honestly say that I absolute adore this album. It's all very quiet but extremely intence. "A Beginning In Light", for example, is built up over sounds from a church-organ and guitarsounds which almost "fall down" (I can't find a better way to explain). "Trace The Memory" and "Presentation Of An Offering" sound more like Boddy with a calm sequence and with a solo from Reuter. This music resembles me a bit of the fantastic "Substrata"-album by Biosphere (live on E-Live). The title-track almost has a Robert Fripp-approach because of the repetetive guitar. Other pieces like the dark "A Delicate Re-enactment" can also be compared to Michael Stearns and Steve Roach. It's an album you'll just have to try but, again, be quick.

Paul Rijkens

Distant Rituals finds Ian Boddy in collaboration with Warr guitar player Markus Reuter. On this maiden voyage the two navigate smooth, textural soundscapes, with one idea morphing effortlessly into another. Guitar sounds intermingle with synth textures as easily as do the musical concepts held by these two artists.

Chuck van Zyl/STAR'S END

This is a collaboration between Ian Boddy, who deals with the electronics and rhythms, and Markus Reuter who plays the warr guitar (whatever that is, but I suspect the results can be heard on the seventh track A Delicate Re-enactment) and modification of the textures. Ambient music it certainly is, boring it certainly is not as each of the seven tracks has it's own distinct mood ranging from the joyous opener A Beginning In Light to the rather sad and eerie Within The Space Between Things. On the following piece Train The Memory provides dreamy melodies, light percussion and bass so deep its almost felt rather than heard, then without warning the unusual drum pattern enters the soundstage as a kind of fill in. This is quality, not only of composition but also of all the other essential items to make a fine album. All the tracks flow together so neatly, the only way to spot the changeover on certain tracks is by watching the CD display. Being an all-digital product, the technical quality is breath taking especially when listening to the deep notes on Presentation Of An Offering. With some types of ambient music, the mind may occasionally wander due to a lack of clarity of developments, yet you won't find this happening here. Fine music, in fact very fine music indeed.

Phil Brook (www.ambientmusic.co.uk)

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