suzanne ciani - buchla concerts 1975 - finders keepers - vinyl
FKR 082 - 89229 - uklp - €19.99New Copy
Genre: Techno / Electro - Electronics
1. Concert At WBAI Free Music Store
2. Concert At Phil Niblock%u2019s Loft
Out Of Stock, Remind me
Add To My Wishlist
You have found a holy grail of electronic music and a female musical pioneer who was too proactive to take the trophies
Suzanne was a self-imposed twenty-year-old employee of the Buchla modular synthesiser company, San Francisco�s neck and neck contender to New York�s Moog. Buchla was run by a community of festival freaks and academic acid eaters whose roots in new age lifestyles and the reinvention of art and music replaced the business acumen enjoyed by its likeminded East Coasters. In the eyes of the consumer the creative refusal to adopt rudimentary facets like a piano keyboard controller rendered the Buchla synthesiser the more obscure stubborn sister of the synth marathon, steering these incredible units away from the mainstream into the homes and studios of free music aficionados, art house composers and die-hard revolutionaries. Championed and semi-showcased by composer Morton Subotnick on his albums The Bull and Silver Apples Of The Moon, Buchla�s versatility began to open the minds of a new generation, but the high-end design features and no-compromise modus operandi was often confused with incompatibility and, in the pulsating shadow of Moog�s marketing, the revolution would not be televised nor patronised. Suzanne Ciani, as one of the very few female composers on the frontline (and also providing the back line) did not lose faith.
These �concerts� are the epitome of rare music technology historic documents, performed by a real musician whose skills and academic education in classical composition already outweighed her male synthesiser contemporaries of twice her age. At the very start of her fragile career these recordings are nothing short of sacrificial ode to her mentor and machine, sonic pickets of the revolution and love letters to an absolutely genuine vision of and �alternative� musical future. In denouncing her own precocious polymathmatic past in a bid to persuade the world to sing from a new hymn sheet, Suzanne Ciani created a bi-product of never before heard music that would render the pigeon holes �ambient� and �futuristic� utterly inadequate. Providing nothing short of an entirely different feminine take on the experimental �records� of Morton Subotnick and proving to a small, judgmental audience and jury the true versatility of one of the most radical and idiosyncratic musical instruments of the 20th century. These recordings have not been heard since then.
The importance of these genuinely lost pieces of electronic musics puzzle almost eclipses the glaring detail of Suzanne�s gender as a distinct minority in an almost exclusively male dominated, faceless, coldly scientific landscape. Those familiar with Suzanne�s work, a vast vault of previously unpublished �non-records�, will already know how the creative politics in her art of �being� simultaneously reshaped the worlds of synth design, advertising and film composition before anyone had even dropped a stylus in her groove. Needless to say this record, finally commanding the archival format of choice, courtesy of the Ciani and Finders Keepers longstanding unison, was not the last �first� with which this hugely important composer would gift society, and the future of a wide range of exciting evolving creative disciplines.