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Last Post 3/11/2004 10:31 AM by  compactrisc
compactrisc news, march 2004
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compactrisc
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3/11/2004 10:31 AM
    Hello from Compactrisc. We have lots to tell you. ---Herv: Snap Hands--- Snap Hands, the debut album by Herv, was co-released on CD by Compactrisc and Sinkorswim Records (http://www.sinkorswimrecords.com) at the start of the year. We think it's a fantastic album, and we reckon you should all run out and buy it. Other people have been very positive about it as well, so we've copied some reviews onto the end of this thread. Our favourite so far: "a national Herv day would be a nice, humble gesture". Snap Hands is available online from Road Records (Dublin) and Norman Records (Leeds), and both are linked from our website (http://www.compactrisc.net). In Dublin, the CD is in Road, Tower, Big Brother, Spindizzy, Freebird, Mero's, Selectah, City Discs and a couple of other places. It will soon be available in shops in Galway, Belfast and Cork, and other distribution will be following. Affordable access is a good idea (and paying twenty quid for a CD is the kind of thing the French would have a national strike about), so the CD is in the shops for as close to €10 as we can get it. Herv's gigs are a swirl of laptop,  gameboy, violin, accordion and breaks, and in case you've missed his any of his performances so far this year, he'll be playing soon in Dublin and Limerick, with other stuff being organised. Herv is also going to be travelling to Estonia at the end of May with Irish Modern Dance Theatre (http://www.irishmoderndancetheatre.com) and composer Juergen Simpson (of The Jimmy Cake), as part of the cultural program to welcome accession states into the EU. http://www.compactrisc.net/herv/ .   ---Northstation--- The next release on Compactrisc will be the CD album 'Bears' (risc005), by Northstation, a.k.a. Steve Fanagan. The album, recorded by Steve at home over the past year, is a meditative collection of fractured electronics and chiming guitars, bringing to mind things like the hum of Labradford and the electronic warmth of Four Tet, and a host of other stuff from Polmo Polpo to This Heat. It will be released in a specially-commissioned heavy cardboard sleeve,  and sounds fantastic on headphones. Steve has previously released music as (deep breath) Old Man Polka (the album 'I Go To Work To Come Home To You', released last year on Dead Slack String Records), as a member of Deadman's Flats, as Northstation (with one previous album, 'Plink. Plonk.' on Mango Music), as Wrecking Ball (with a CD-R album of improvisations for voice and bell, 'Grunt Work', recently released by Deserted Village Records) and under his own name (the album 'There Is Hope', recorded in Chicago by Steve Albini and released on Mango Music in 2001). http://www.stevefanagan.com . ---Other news--- Physical Remix: Help to destroy some records in the name of art. http://www.compactrisc.net/physicalremix/ . Compilation: We're starting to put together tracks for our next-release-but-one, a compilation of Irish acts which will go from experimental drones to electro-acoustic singalong to broken apart rock to blahblahblah. We'll tell you more as soon as we know what's happening. Maersk: Maersk are currently rehearsing and putting together music for their album, which should be out later on this year. Conor Ryan's video for the track "I/O" (from the Compactrisc EP, First Line) will be online soon. http://www.compactrisc.net/maersk/ . Compactrisc releases available and in shops: risc002 – Herv – "Warmduscher"/"Demian" – 7" heavy vinyl – about €4.50. risc004 – Maersk – First Line EP – 10" vinyl – about €7. risc006 – Herv – Snap Hands – CD – about €10.
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    3/11/2004 10:33 AM
    ---Reviews of Snap Hands by Herv--- Leagues O'Toole, Foggy Notions, February 2004: In Dublin, we're digging ourself out of an avalanche of electronic music, and Jaysus, it's getting to be hard work. Nowadays there are more laptop chameleons than there are trained sound engineers, and that's saying something. Melody, narrative, pop composition and cohesion is all thin on the ground. Everyone's searching for the perfect bleep, yet most of the time all we can really hear is the incessant bleet of the pack shuffling along to the pretext of cold technology. About a year ago Herv busted out of nowhere with live Gameboy shows and a super creepy-crawly seven-inch called "Warmduscher" that minced the competition in its steady grinding path. On his debut album we find him playing off studied technology concepts against action-packed ideas. His songs are shape-shifting monsters, endlessly inventive, confounding, dramatic and, God forbid, entertaining. On "Corrective Action" he minces heart-pounding funk and syncopated snares with weeping violins and cello. One of the recurring ideas on this record is to embed these frenetic rhythms into these lush and serene string canvases, with the emphasis on creating something evocative as opposed to making some random, spurious statement. "Process Idea" sounds like The Incredible Bongo Band being brutally deconstructed and I keep thinking the next-door neighbour is banging on the wall. Oh no, that's just Herv f**king with us in the back of the mix. And what about the moment three-and-a-half minutes into "Pianowire" when he just launches into this hammering thump and sends you spiralling off into a completely different direction? That's Snap Hands all over – a myriad flow of sounds and an endless flow of contortion. 4/5 ------- Sam Bungey, Mongrel, Feb/March 2004: The last, mock-revelatory song title – "It's OK, I'm A Collage" – is a cheeky red herring, posted for anyone who thinks they've figured out what Snap Hands is. See, this album obviously wasn't made by a person, but it wasn't made by a collage either. It was made by a bunch of nymphs: some psychotic, some angelic, but all blessed with an extra-terrestrial musicianship that means they don't need instruments – every gesture creates music perfectly correspondent to its emotional intent. With their little computer bodies they made this album. Even with the Aphex Twin – so capable of making a sudden shot of melody seem like it's been immaculately conceived from out of a mess of megabytes and drum 'patterns' – you're aware, however distantly, of the weird chap banging away at his Apple Mac. Not a clue here. The medium that found a way to bring this joyful noise to us must surely be rewarded in kind for its interplanetary philanthropy. I say a national 'Herv' day would be a nice, humble gesture. 82% ------- Katrin Richter, Raveline, March 2004. (http://www.raveline – translated from the original German) Herv comes from Ireland and is inclined towards introverted sound-collages, nicely bleeping sound snippets, which tenderly crack and break together to form a larger whole. His album, which falls somewhere between Bpitch, Hoertest and Planet Mu, despite all abstractness is above all convincing, because Herv never alienates his audience. Rather, through the use of melancholic strings or, as in the case of "Boots", he lures you into it's frendly interior with lovely floating tones and snarling, spitting threads, where one stays for ages, owing to the total absence of hard beats, until the outside world lures again. 5/6. ------- Jim Carroll, The Ticket, The Irish Times, 26th Feb 2004: Electronic doodles of the giddy kind. Irish electronic twister Herv doesn't bother hiding his influences under a stack of squawks, squelches or squeaks but rather lets them go wherever the hell they want to. As a result, while the descriptive shorthand may be informed by those records which has spent a lot of time with – we're guessing Four Tet, Manitoba, early Orbital and Prefuse 73 – there's thankfully little to suggest that Herv is simply a diligent sum of those influences. Instead, this is electronic music with considerable width and depth, Herv's ears rather than eyes open for the next possibility, an album where the quest for interesting noises co-exists rather than supplants the search for melody. You'll find yourself drawn back to these rough rhythms time and time again. 3/5 ------- Paul Watts, Anorak, January 2004: Ewan Hennelly has been producing and performing under the Herv name for a few years now, and has established quite a reputation for himself as one of Ireland's top electronica artists. Now, after having a few compilation tracks and a 7" single (which recieved a good review from The Wire magazine), he's released his debut album. And it's very good: Herv has possibly the best feel for melody of any Irish electronic producer, and his beat construction can sometimes be astonishing. So there's no complaint with his songwriting abilities. What is an occasional problem, though, is the production: he tends to use too many of the same sounds too often, and the EQing sometimes ends up too trebly, giving some tracks a certain off-putting shrillness. However, this doesn't change the fact that the songs themselves are generally great. Most of the tracks seem at first listen to be somewhat naive and childlike, but there's an underlying experimentalism and restlessness to them which distinguishes the music from the ear candy which passes for electronica nowadays. But it's not all chin-stroking material; one of the best tracks on the album is the closer, the well-named "It's OK, I'm A Collage", which drops the experi- but keeps the mentalism for sheer stop-start gabba silliness. With Ambulance and Spectac also releaasing albums in 2003, it was already a good year for Irish electronica debuts; "Snap Hands" continues that trend. ------- (And last but not least, the final review. It's the only 'bad' review we've got, but it's really only fair that we include it.) Matthew Magee, i Magazine, Sunday Tribune, January 2004: It can only be imagined that this is the kind of music that people like to be seen to possess – certainly it's not a lot of fun to listen to. Herv, a Dublin-based electronic musician, makes sounds that are interesting to hear once, but give little actual pleasure. Sure, this is the seemingly adventurous use of non-music samples and weird leftfield sounds to make 'music', but if Herv is making a point that all music need not be tunes or made by instruments, it is a point well made long ago. What Herv doesn't do is make his experiment appealing enough, sticking resolutely to his own rules. ----------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.compactrisc.net – hello@compactrisc.net
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