![]() | Academic electronic music can be so cold at times, so calculated and intellectualized, so academic! The pleasure of Tangram is that the music it contains is so human. Part of the reason for this lies in the fact that Robert Normandeau creates his music entirely from acoustic samples (often human voices), thereby giving his music an innate organicism. Another reason is that each piece on Tangram is aurally cinematic in the sense that each tells a story -- which is refreshingly human in a century like ours where the trend in 'serious' music has been decidedly anti-programmatic. Finally, there is Normandeau's recording technique, which aims to recreate a live-concert-type atmosphere. Rather than mix his works electronically, he 'mixes' them acoustically by routing each track to a speaker and spacing the speakers in different configurations in the studio. Thus each 'mix' is actually a distinct capturing of the sonic diffusion created by a given speaker setup. If you want to hear what this adds up to, Tangram has two 'mixes' of each piece so that you can compare and contrast. Mr. Normandeau is to be applauded for creating such inviting and sensitive electronic music. | |||||
Tangram Empreintes Digitales 2CD | ||||||
| Review by Noah Wane | ||||||