Saturday, 15 November 2008

Murcof - The Versailles Sessions

The Versailles Sessions shouldn’t be considered as a follow up to Murcof’s Cosmos album of 2007. In fact this music isn’t really an album at all as it’s a collection of aural compositions commissioned for a site specific artwork on display at the Jardin du Roi.
All of the music is played and/or sampled on original 17th Century instruments and filtered through the Murcof brain to generate expansive, looming passages of intense and occasionally regal sounding noise this is a pretty big leap from what where minimalistic beginnings but Fernando Corona seems to have a firm grasp on the powerful sounds at his fingertips.

As with all most music classified experimental The Versailles Sessions requires a certain listening shift – there are no pretty songs in here anywhere, nothing remotely approaching a tune in the classic sense – but of course that’s not the point. The powerful, evocative noises and interplay of instrumentation feels more like music for film, amped up and monolithic. Anyone who enjoyed Jonny Greenwood’s score for There Will Be Blood, for instance, will hear good things in this Murcof offering but let’s be honest that is a niche crowd.

My preference would have been release this on DVD where the music and visuals of the installation compliment each other but as this isn’t the case you have to become enveloped in the wash of sounds, in the interplay of the bangs and clatter and the hugely evocative choral passages – and give yourself over to imagination.

www.murcof.com/
www.mekongdelta.co.uk

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