This collection
started as an exercise on nostalgia meet fashionable electronic music. I’ve
been asked in the past few years to score in a specific, “modern” style,
inspired by late takes on electronic music like Cliff Martinez,
electro-acoustic soundtracks like Johann Johansen and Clint Mansell and more
abstract stuff like Alva Noto, Fennesz and Ryuichi Sakamoto.
People who
pushed me to revisit this recent and fashionable styles were really reticent
to go in a more traditional, old-fashioned electronic school that proved to
be very successful and efficient in film scoring on the 70’s and 80’s. Most
notably the works of people like Vangelis and Giorgio Moroder. Now, that was
outdated and dowdy. But as we know, what’s dated today will be fashionable
again tomorrow and eventually I played the (illegal, I know) “Esper Edition”
of the Blade Runner OST (that I cherish) to somebody who was crazy
with the vintage sounds of Drive soundtrack and realized that, at
least those old styles were “in” again.
But, besides
the analog sounds, it was the compositions that charmed me when I was a kid
and that I was missing the most in recent “electro-years”. Those “themes” and melodies spiced by electronica,
those arrangements that could sound almost baroque and out-dated now.
I’ve found myself going back to those LPs I own, full of
melodies and yet deeply electronic, from my first purchases (Wendy Carlos
and Isao Tomita) to the recent Sakamoto haunting piano with
electro-glitches collaborations, through Vangelis and Giorgio and some
others.
Here for you,
an hour of electronic themes; synthetizers and acoustic instruments,
programming and real performances, melodies, chord changes and soundscapes;
all as an homage to those
electro masters.
13> Le Temps Perdu 2:26
upright piano, melodica, upright bass, steel string requinto..
14> Dive At Dawn 3:21
Fender Rhodes, Acoustic Bass Guitar, Accordina, Talking Drum, Percussion.
15> El Manzanero 3:12
Inor Sotolongo (Cuba): perussion.
Line Kruse (Danemark): violin.
Pajaro Canzani (Uruguay): Tiple
Daniel Diaz (Argentina): piano, upright bass.
16> El Pasional 3:17
Inor Sotolongo (Cuba): perussion.
Line Kruse (Danemark): violin.
Pajaro Canzani (Uruguay): guitar
Daniel Diaz (Argentina): piano, upright bass.
17> Bagatelle Numero 5.1 2:16
Daniel Diaz: Upright Bass, delays & filters.
Dave Lewis: Flugel Horn.
18> Bagatelle Numero 5.2 2:34
Daniel Diaz: Upright Bass, Piano, delays & filters.
Dave Lewis: Muted trumpet.
19> Bagatelle Numero 5.3 2:44
Daniel Diaz: Bowed upright bass, treated fender rhodes, electronica, delays & filters.
Dave Lewis: Trumpet.
20> Song For Lisa 3:34
acoustic bass.guitar, 12 string acoustic guitar, accordina, percussion.
Liner notes:
Themes is an album that compiles some music I composed and recorded for different audio-visual projects (theatre, music libraries, documentaries, TV). 20 tracks have been released in 2013.
These
compositions are instrumental songs, like old-style themes, with chord
changes and melodies.
Some are
commissions, some others are compositions I was keeping for an eventual solo
record (that I’ve just started recording, more
here), but instead of reworking them I decided to recoup all these
tracks in this new collection because I really like the actual themes as
they are. No focus on development or performance here (solos, introductions,
codas, improvisation) like I used to do in my albums, I decided to keep the
bare song, in many cases just the melody exposition.
Songs from the past, 1995-2010. Unused masters, jams, covers.
Track List :
01> KARMA 3 (Daniel Diaz) 6:05 Manuel Miranda: Flute. Daniel Diaz: Acoustic Bass Guitar. Rikhi Hambra : Tabla, Percussion.
02> DOS AÑOS (Daniel Díaz) 6:00
Manuel Miranda: Flute.
Daniel Diaz: Fretless Bass.
Gabriel Kirschenbaum: Acoustic Guitar.
Daniel Miguez: Drums.
Santiago Vazquez Tabla.
03> PATAGONIA 1 (Daniel Díaz) 2:24
Manuel Miranda: Quenacho.
Daniel Díaz: Acoustic Bass Guitar, Percussion.
04> PATAGONIA 2 (Daniel Díaz) 2:36
Manuel Miranda: Quenacho.
Daniel Díaz: Acoustic Bass Guitar, Percussion.
05> ANGEL (Jimi Hendrix) 7:56 Daniel Miguez: Drums. Daniel Díaz: Acoustic Bass Guitar, Percussion. Gabriel Kirschenbaum: Acoustic Guitar. Julian Hojman: Tenor Sax.
06> VIEJO PALERMO VIEJO (Daniel Díaz) 3:19 Manuel Miranda: Flute. Daniel Díaz: Acoustic Bass Guitar, Percussion.
07>DOS OCEANOS (Daniel Díaz) 6:42 Daniel Díaz: Solo Acoustic Bass Guitar. Field recording: the sea @ Villa Gesell circa 1995. 07> Part 1: Gaviotas 3:22 08> Part 2 : Océanos 3:20
08> WINTER CODA (ZAMBITA) (Daniel Díaz) 7:28
Bobby Rangell: Alto Sax.
Daniel Díaz: Acoustic Bass Guitar.
Nico Arnicho: Percussion.
09> UMBRAL ( Luis Alberto Spinetta) 6:28
Manuel Miranda: Flutes.
Daniel Díaz: Acoustic Bass Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Percussion
10> TOO LATE CANDOMBE (Daniel Díaz) 5:21
Daniel Díaz: Fretless Bass, Acoustic Guitar, Rhodes.
Bobby Rangell: Flute.
Javier Estrella : Drums.
11> SAMBA DE ORLY (Chico Buarque & Toquinho) 5:21
Daniel Díaz: Acoustic Bass Guitar.
Gabriel Kirschenbaum: Acoustic Guitar.
Facundo Guevara : Percussion.
12> EXPRESO NOVA (Daniel Díaz) 3:14
Daniel Díaz: Acoustic Bass Guitar, Percussion
Osvaldo Burucua: Acoustic Guitar.
Rikhi Hambra : Tabla.
Manuel Miranda: Quena.
This is another batch of “un-used” songs, jams, covers and leftovers, a companion of my CD “Maquina Dura” released in 2000. After 15 years of recording in my home studio, by 2000, two official albums have been released: 1993 The Years Alone and 1997 Segundo Ciclo.
But so many recordings have been made in my Pleasure Dome Studios during those creative and formative “Years Alone” in Buenos Aires that I decided to put together two collections of leftovers: one electric (Maquina Dura) the other mostly acoustic. Both include leftovers, studio jams and cover versions.
The electric side was easy to put together. It featured tracks that, for artistic and “quality” issues, didn’t make it to the official CD’s track list. But the acoustic CD featured some tracks that couldn’t be considered leftovers. Tracks that were actually in the song list for Segundo Ciclo, recorded during those sessions, but dropped at the last moment because I decided to make a whole acoustic CD immediately after Segundo Ciclo.
“Maquina Blanda” was my live act and it was all-acoustic (acoustic guitar and basses, tabla and small percussion, flutes). The idea was to drop the “Maquina Blanda” songs form Segundo Ciclo and expand them to form a full length CD for a release by 1997-1998. Then I moved to France and that release never happened, so those tracks remained in the vault for 15 years. I was enamoured with those recordings (my very last full analogue-open-reel masters) and decided not to mix them with some “light weight” jams and demos, and save them for an eventual formal release.
In 2005 I reloaded that project, its concept, sound and repertoire for my trio with Javier Estrella and Bobby Rangell. We went to the studio to complete Maquina Blanda (the album) but eventually we made a full length CD with new recordings (including a couple of revamped tracks from The Maquina Blanda project) and that was it.
That’s how some of my favourite recorded songs remained inexplicably unreleased.
Then in 2010 a commission for acoustic recordings got me to work again with Manuel Miranda (full member of the original Maquina Blanda) and the idea of completing that collection was again in my head. I asked him to record two tracks I had written for Maquina Blanda back in 1995 (Patagonia 1 and 2) and a new track in the same style that was an ode to the old neighbourhood where we both used to live, play and hang out in Buenos Aires on during those years: “Viejo Palermo Viejo”. With these three tracks recorded with Manuel in Lima, now the whole project came full circle.
From the original 1996 track list including “Jams, Covers and Leftovers” just one studio jam and two covers remains, all tracks that we had been playing live and considering for release by then. The rest of the informal, spontaneous jams are replaced by formal recordings of acoustic, spare originals.
Now here it is to you (and to me) Maquina Blanda, almost as I intended to be 15 years ago.
1.Solo Piano Uno 03:48 2.Metallic Drone 03:36 3.Duo 1 03:07 4.Drone Mécanique 06:03 5.Bamboo 03:19 6.Jesse al Arco 02:50 7.Duo 2 03:28 8.Tappin Guitars 04:05 9.Solo Piano Dos 04:55 10.Tension 02:08 11.Frantic Prelude 01:53 12.Frantic Techno 03:03 13.Fierros 03:58 14.Solstice 04:16
Total Time 50:35
instruments & objects used:
acoustic piano,
upright bass (bowed and pizz),
acoustic and electric guitars and basses,
hand percussion,
bamboo flutes,
harmonica,
knives,
bamboo drums,
metal trash lid, stainless steel thermos,
wine glasses
and other objects.
fx, processing & treatments:
digital and analogue delays
echo
filters
reverb
wah-wah pedal
distortion pedal.
Musique Mécanique: liner notes
Musique Mécanique is the result of two types of
research I have
been pursuing during the last few years.
First , while working on some “drone” based tracks for another
project, I got tired of the usual synth sustained low note as a drone, and all
the tweaking, processing and morphing required to give some life to those dull
plastic twangs. Being a bassist, it was a natural alternative to pick up my
upright bass and try some bowed sustained notes. How much easier was now to add
life to that! Not just by means of dynamics and playing techniques, but also
manipulating and processing that acoustic “live” sound. So I started building
some basic tracks that I called “organic drones”, they were just drones
performed in acoustic instruments and even objects, noises and sounds, then
processing and morphing those mixed tracks to achieve an original, unreal yet
warm and lively sound. Those organic drones started to get more and more complex
and weird as I kept pushing the limits of my postulate: “Just noises produced by
mechanical means”.
In the bonus CD of the Special Edition of Musique Mécanique
you’ll find the very first track I recorded for this project using this concept:
“Recitativo”, is one of my complex organic drones going on for more than 8
minutes, mutating and evolving as I just solo on top of it my with my electric
guitar. Some other tracks using this drone techniques made it to the final cut
of Musique Mécanique, most notably “Metallic Drone” and “Drone Mécanique” and
“Solstice”, but glimpses of these methods impregnated the whole project in the
background of each track.
Then I started a second type of research, exploring the
possibilities (and fun) of playing around with delays and echoes. The random
counterpoints, brilliant accidents and unexpected harmonies provided by these
delayed signals (usually with particularly high decay/feedback times) proved to
be quite addictive, and it took the best part of the album, its bonus tracks and
extended to many other projects like “lärmkunst”. The bonus CD includes some
compositions I recorded for other projects using the very same “Delays
Mécaniques” concept.
The culmination of this echo-drenched research and the idea of
using delays as a composition technique, ended up in a collection called
“Auto-Counterpoints”, but that will be a different project, as those tracks are
more focused, rigorously planned, standard compositions.
Musique Mécanique shows the research process, its unexpected
results and delightful accidents. In a way this is the ultimate ”experimental”
album for me: a recording of my experimentations with sound and composition, a
pure “research” project, where I found the charm of starting a track without
knowing exactly where it would lead me, without any plot or plan. Then, in post
production the composition process continued, giving these recordings a more
coherent, achieved structure and sound.
Hopefully some of you will appreciate the results of this process
that took 2 years of passionate work. Thanks for making it happen, thanks for
listening.