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reviews of the Brutum Fulmen CD
Flesh of the Moon |
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The Wire #223
Dan Warburton UK |
After a handful of limited edition cassette and CDR releases, a modest contribution to the Intransitive compilation
"Variious" and a split lp "Tender Wreckage" with Lasse Marhaug on Gameboy, "Flesh of the Moon" is the first full-length
release from Connecticut-based Jeff Wrench's Brutum Fulmen (Latin for "senseless thunderbolt"). Billed unashamedly as
musique concrète, these nine sumptuous tracks have more in common with the sensuality of Bayle and Parmegiani than they
do with American electronica's arid conceptualism and/or glitch overdose. Though over half the tracks use an old manual
typewriter as sound source (a beautiful photograph of which on the disc recalls the covers of early concrète albums),
this is no mere exercise in nostalgia. "Mourn", like the earlier spaced out BF release "Moon Boots", uses computer data
transformed into audio files, and "Haunted Space" makes use of fast-forwarded DAT recordings of live performances as well
as scrap metal and plastic forks. Wrench meticulously documents his source sounds and working methods throughout, but
doesn't let cute arty concepts get in the way of musical considerations. Learning that "Spore" was sourced from a heavily
scratched vinyl copy of Tore H. Boe's "Serum" that had been mailed across the Atlantic without an envelope won't
necessarily enhance your enjoyment. Most of the source sounds are transformed beyond all recognition - how Wrench
makes an old typewriter sound like treacle flowing through an underground cave system in "Moisture" beggars belief -
but occasionally he just lets the tape roll: one track documents the dousing of a camp fire with a jug of water, with
astounding results. He also understands that reverb is there to add richness and depth and not merely space out the
listener; the disturbing squeaking door hinges and clanging radiator pipes of "Pickle Mutation", which says more in
two-and-a-half minutes than most composers manage in a whole career, wouldn't be out of place on a David Lynch soundtrack.
The final "Lake of Dreams" sculpts field recordings of traffic and birdsong and a forlorn music box playing "Love Me
Tender" into a surreal and touching nocturne worthy of Steven Stapleton.
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All Music Guide
Dan Warburton |
AMG EXPERT REVIEW: This first full-length offering from Brutum Fulmen (aka sound artist Jeff Wrench, who also
contributed a fine track, "Dusk," to the Intransitive compilation album Various) is billed unashamedly on the
CD tray as musique concrète, but in case that appellation gives the impression that the album is looking back
nostalgically to the early studies of Pierre Schaeffer and Pierre Henry, it's worth noting that Wrench also sources
DAT recordings of his live performances and, on "Mourn," transforms computer data into audio files. He lists his
analog sound sources, which include, amongst other things, plastic forks, campfires doused with water, vacuum-tube
amp feedback, and especially an old manual typewriter (a beautiful photograph of which adorns the disc itself), but
it requires a leap of imagination on the listener's part to figure out how their sounds were transformed into the
shimmering, rich sound sculptures on offer here. "Spore" uses heavily scratched vinyl (sent through the mail without
an envelope) as a sound source, but if listeners weren't informed of the fact it would be frankly impossible to identify
the sounds as such. It's all too easy in the domain of sound art to come up with interesting concepts that sound
nondescript when realized, but thankfully Wrench doesn't fall into the trap: these nine pieces are all painstakingly
crafted and beautifully accomplished compositions in their own right. Be sure to listen for the Elvis quote in the
final track. (**** four stars)
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Manifold Records
USA |
Rising out of a spectral fog, 'Lake of Sleep' begins with a small resonation like Koner's Permafrost, a pure creature
more of space than sound, a deep, discordant, dark beauty echoing into nothingness. Then as the crescendo builds, an apex
is passed, the sound drops off, and small, chiming noises, perhaps typewriters, distant alarms and clocks twitter
motionlessly on some round horizon. Like the dream or narcotic sequences in some film, these periods have a playful
quality that's hard to detect. Its impossible to cipher sound sources but there are a variety of common items used.
The kicker is that this artist likes to use them in uncommon situations. For instance, 'Spore' is a track where
Tore. H. Boe's vinyl record 'Serum' was mailed to Brutum Fulmen with no cover, stamps placed directly on the vinyl and sent.
When it arrived, he played it with the stamps and crap on it, put new stamps on it and mailed it to a new listener.
Another track uses "50 plastic forks, feedback, metal garage door spring...". Another; "broken music box in a cardboard
Christmas tree." And it's not just a mix of objects, its a mix of methods and ideas. Totally unpretentious. And the final
record isn't nearly this complicated, it doesn't help to know these things as you listen. But it may perhaps add another
dimension to the experience so that after many listens, when you are very interested in how these ambient landscapes you've
been hearing were made, you can open the liner notes up and chuckle or wonder. The creativity of the artist feel
contagious, and the record itself is a fantastic, dreamy listen.
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Vital Weekly #329
Frans de Waard Netherlands |
Over the years I have gotten more and more appreciation of a US noise
group called Brutum Fulmen. Using the most concrete sort of sound
elements (listed per track, such as manual typewriters, vacuum tube
amp feedback, 50 plastic forks or broken music box in a cardborad
christmas tree) they have over the years refined their sound more and
more. This is said to be "by my count, the fifth Brutum Fulmen
release" (cover text). By my count their best so far. They (although
it's better to state 'he', as they are really one person, Jeff
Wrench) come up with noise pieces (processed feedback plays an
important role still) and electronically processed sounds, but they
are presented in a set of strong compositions. The noise element is
not lost anywhere, but on the other hand doesn't play the usual
annoying role. The music by Brutum Fulmen of these days can easily
meet up with the like minded composers as Roel Meelkop or Marc
Behrens, but usually the Brutum Fulmen have a more present sound and
do not very often leap into inaudibility. At times Brutum Fulmen even
go into ambient areas, such as in 'Anaerobe', which consists of the
sound of a "vacuum tube amp feedback provided by D-503, mainly one 4
1/2-second clip". The result is an Arcane Device like ambient
feedback piece with some rumblings below. I think that the future
will see that Jeff Wrench will get rid of the name Brutum Fulmen and
also the last bit of industrial music undercurrents (like the title
of the CD) and will settle himself as a more serious composer. This
work will be a good start for that.
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Mimaroglu
Keith Fullerton Whitman (Hrvatski) USA |
i’d never heard of this ohio-based musique concrète ensemble until i was asked to play a gig with them a few years back @
the (old) zeitgeist allery in cambridge. they did a kind of shoddy marchetti/noetinger-esque set with various contact-mic-ed
bits and bots and whatnot.
then, fast forward to august of this year, i’m perusing the record booth @ the safe as milk festival in haugesund, norway, and one of the proprietors (maybe the apartment records huy?) starts telling me that this cd here is his favorite american record of the last 5 years. wow. so i bought a copy and yeah, damn, it’s really fantastic. anyone interested in the furthering of classic/early analogue electronic techniques in a decidely digital era should pay attention and digest this one with gusto. it’s really damn good...
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Ground Fault Recordings
USA |
Very well done musique concrete tracks from this Connecticut based act. I've always admired the sounds
that Jeff Wrench creates and this CD is one of the best collections of sounds I've heard so far in 2002.
Great job. Definately Brutum Fulmen's best work yet. Highly recommended.
[ NOTE: Flesh of the Moon was listed as #2 (behind Negativland and before Whitehouse) on the Ground Fault top 10 best albums of the year. ]
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Chunky Records
UK |
Jeff Wrench’s fascination with studying the relationships between sounds is what helps Brutum Fulmen accomplish what
only a handful of experimental audio projects can: present audio (natural, mechanical, electronic, and combinations
thereof ) in ways that make listeners think differently about sound. Flesh of the Moon is also a testament to Wrench’s
intuitive and constantly refining sense of composition. For fans of Nurse With Wound, Voice Crack.
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Absurd Greece |
Brutum Fulmen’s who till sometime ago considered to be a harsh us noise combo,
and whose work I hadn’t listened to, ‘till a few months earlier I had the chance
to come across the impressive lasse marhaug/Brutum Fulmen split lp on gameboy
records and was totally impressed by their unique soundscapes. Back then that I
visited their site saw the announcement of their forthcoming debut cd on CIP and
must admit that is a release to which I looked forward w/ great anxiety &
curiosity. And it was a couple of months ago that did it see the daylight... I
must admit that by the time I received my copy, I fall in love w/ it. See this
time Brutum Fulmen use in their soundscapes also manual typewriters, an
"instrument" which belongs to some of my most beloved not only because that I
use it too on stage but mostly because is my personal fetish since childhood, as
I always liked their sound, the way they work, whatever, and I always feel
impressed at the sight of a typewriter. Se it a "classic manual" (a "remington"
for instance), an electricity fed one, or a toy one. The cover artwork
consisting of fantastically flabbergasting photos of the typewriter which was
used in the recording, and exposes the "instrument’s" mystical beauty or so at
least seemed to me. Jeff also gives us a term for "musique concrete" somehow to
show us the "concrete" elements of this release which is created using found
sounds, field recordings but also w/ submissions of artists such as tore honore
boe & andre d-503. Even used manipulated records in the way that were treated
from luminaries such as milan knizak to christian marclay & so and more. But the
what I find truly appealing in this project so far is their approach in their
soundscapes creation and their use of techniques & effects to manipulate their
sounds into completely something new and unrecognisable, showing an effort to
create their own language. A "game" which so far seems that they have won and
have achieved (at least judging from their releases that I’ve come across till
now) & the results of which can be heard on this amazing obscure surreal
masterpiece! definitely one of the most impressive releases to come from the
what so called "us noise" scene the last years and certainly not to be
missed... Curious what the future will bring us from both Brutum Fulmen but also
the ever influential Crippled Intellect...
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