Apparitions - Eyes Like Predatory Wealth - CASSETTE

$12.00

Cassette with full J-Card art, Encased in O-Card with alternate art

Release date 10.14.22 (pre-orders ship then)


Andrew Dugas - Guitars & Amplifiers
Igor Imbu - Modular Synthesizers
Grant Martin - Drums & Percussion


Mixed by Seth Manchester at Machines with Magnets
Mastered by Matt Colton at Metropolis Studios

Art - Faith Coloccia

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There are depths which can scarcely be touched by words –– physical, oceanic depths; spectral and poetic depths. While words can really only indicate these, maybe sound can emulate or lend the feeling of experiencing such depths. Sound might, in fact, act as a kind of crossing between those different kinds of depths.

Apparitions was formed in late 2019 when Andrew Dugas and Grant Martin invited modular synthesist Igor Imbu to collaborate. The recordings for Eyes Like Predatory Wealth took place with each of the three performers in three different cities. Through a daring and exploratory process, Apparitions formed these sounds by designing and following outlines for general concepts, each within a respectively assigned duration (10 minutes, 20 minutes and 30 minutes). They then recorded each of their parts without the benefit of hearing the other. In this way, each piece is a collage of drums, guitar, and modular synth; and each piece is an exploration of Rimbaud’s systematic derangement of the senses as creative impetus. This music represents emancipation from ensemble unity; from strict meter and traditional tonality; perhaps from thought itself. The results –– mixed and molded by Seth Manchester at Machines With Magnets –– are staggering. 

It should be emphasized: while rupture and chance are key here, this music was not created randomly. Dialogue is crucial to Apparitions. There was dialogue in the conceptual outlining of the works, and the works themselves are in dialogue with a host of elements throughout the history of art and aesthetics. The name Apparitions comes from Ligeti’s work of the same name. And each of the three pieces on Eyes Like Predatory Wealth are named after –– and in dialogue with –– a different work. There is “Ecstasy Through Self Destruction,” which follows Danelle Gallo’s essay comparing the work of Georges Bataille and Yves Klein. There is “River of Fundament,” after the Matthew Barney film. And finally, “The Moon is Only Aggressive When You Are There,” named for and concerning the Diane Wakoski poem.