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Rashomon

The Combed Thunderclap

About Me

“The Ruined Map : Film Music Volume 1” is a bewildering mix of prog rock, electronic noise, waltzes, East European folk, trad metal, drones, psych rock and free jazz, similar in intention to soundtrack visionaries such as Toru Takemitsu and Ennio Morricone. Each of the eight tracks is based on a different film – not specifically in the form of soundtracks, but rather as companion pieces to the psychic states invoked by the more bizarre outer reaches of narrative cinema. The ideas and filmic techniques of directors such as Seijun Suzuki, Albert Zugsmith and Hiroshi Teshigahara are applied to musical processes in the form of pans, zooms, narrative discontinuities etc.
Tracks :
ONIBABA (Kaneto Shindo, 1964)
BLAST OF SILENCE (Allen Baron, 1962)
A QUIET WEEK IN THE HOUSE (Jan Svankmajer, 1969)
THE MASCOT (Wladislaw Starewicz, 1934)
BRANDED TO KILL (Seijun Suzuki, 1967)
LANCELOT DU LAC (Robert Bresson, 1974)
CONFESSIONS OF AN OPIUM EATER (Albert Zugsmith, 1962)
RUINED MAP (Hiroshi Teshigahara, 1968)
Reviews:
"The Ruined Map is for the most part dark in tone, and explores cinematic atmospheres in a range of different, discomfiting ways..."Onibaba" (showing no small debt to Goblin's demonic prog) brims with ominous creaks and indistinguishable satanic whispers over a steady mono-tonal bassline and a nervous, breathy organ...Sure, making a progressive/ambient album dedicated to obscure art-house nuggets is one of the loftier concepts out there in the musical spectrum, but hey, we’re talking about the work of a musician whose work is mentioned in the same breath as Magma. The Ruined Map is an expressive shot at bringing filmic feeling to dimensions of sound, and doesn’t dwell too needlessly in the realm of the inscrutable." (dustedmagazine.com)
"Not so much a collection of music influenced by films, but rather an attempt to write music that would fit the mood of each film. Such a brash attempt to insinuate new meaning into finished work is risky, but here it works, as the emotional benchmarks set by each film helps the new tunes aim high, often reaching their goal of illustrating how one work of art can influence another, and how the receiver of art can inject personal meaning into existing work and make it personal…Thompson’s musical palette includes drone, psych rock, Eastern European folk and a little hard rock. Zithers and gongs and mellotron are mixed in with traditional rock instrumentation; everything is a proper tool when you are trying to communicate what art does to your heart." 8/10 (digitalisindustries.com)
"The new solo project from Matt Thompson (Guapo) seeks to go beyond synchronicity and inhabit the same spaces / shadows / crevices as the works of experimental filmmakers…haunted merry-go-round surrealism, Balkan wedding music, heaving prog rhythm sections, falsetto hair metal and freak-outs channelling Sonny Sharrock’s ecstatic guitar style. There are times when directions taken are jarring and bizarre, but there are passages where the idea of reifying cinema’s moods and spaces into sound are thoroughly explored." (Rock-A-Rolla magazine [issue 10])
"Very much worth hunting down...this is really very good stuff, Onibaba and Blast of Silence reminiscent of 5UUs, The Art Bears, in places Thinking Plague, referencing Van Der Graaf Generator...influences aside, the whole premise works extremely well - A Quiet Week In The House captures the surrealist short film of the same name perfectly, right down to its neurotic repetition, broken-down Balkan style and Svankmajer's twitchy editing...something visual, narrative and emotionally distinct is suggested by each composition. Better than alternative soundtracks, they're trailers, sending you straight to the nearest arthouse cinema." (organart.com)
"Even after a few listens, I can tell it’s going to take many more for this album to fully sink in, there’s so much to absorb here. Billed as ‘film music’, this is a very diverse and extremely experimental disc…there is a whole world of music to be discovered here…the title track is the most sombre as well as the most moving piece on the album - very quiet with a throbbing drone and some strange haunting instruments and percussion. A very fine ending to an amazing disc...it’s very refreshing to hear such great new music in such an innovative production. Very highly recommended." (progressiveears.com)
"Over the course of the the record, as the tracks slip from film to film, director to director, Bresson to Suzuki, Starewicz to Shindo, Branded To Kill, Lancelot Du Lac, Onibaba, The Mascot, the songs follow suit, shifting from mood to mood, sound to sound, soaring strings, ballroom jazz, bursts of acid fried synth blow outs, tribal almost African sounding drumming, gypsy folk violins, super intense spastic freaked out avant metal damage, deep shimmering drones, long stretches of creaking industrial ambience, haunting bagpipe like melodies, moody abstract drifts, gently strummed guitars, clouds of cymbal shimmer, a constantly shifting world of sound, deep and layered, expansive and indeed, so cinematic. Fans of Guapo will want this for sure, but anyone into far out soundtracks, experimental soundscapes or avant prog should definitely check this out as well." (Aquarius Records)
Buy "The Ruined Map" CD here : £9.00 GBP payable online by Paypal, Credit or Debit Card. Including free shipping worldwide.
Available in North America from CD Baby , Wayside or Aquarius
Available in Europe from Conspiracy

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 11/5/2006
Band Members: Matt Thompson
-with-
Paul Westwood : drums
Sara Hubrich : violin
Emi Hojo : voice
Jaime Gomez Arellano : sound, percussion
Influences: Toru Takemitsu, Faust, Magma, Ennio Morricone, Jonathan Bepler, Iannis Xenakis, Circle, Comus, Sublime Frequencies records, Raymond Scott, Sun Ra, Fred Frith, Boredoms, Vooredoms, Cinorama, King Crimson, Japan, Area, Pharoah Sanders, Otomo Yoshihide, Can, Merzbow, Univers Zero, Moondog, Judas Priest, Steeleye Span, Blue Oyster Cult, Naked City, Beau Hunks, Olivier Messiaen, Gyorgy Ligeti, Luc Ferrari, High Tide, Ocora records, Keiji Haino, Iancu Dumitrescu, West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band, Soliman Gamil, This Heat, Ho! Roady Music From Vietnam, Aphrodite's Child, Slayer, Journey, Popol Vuh, AMM, Glenn Branca, Basil Kirchin, Jean-Claude Vannier, Vernon Elliot, Manilla Road, Charlemagne Palestine, PSF records, Godz, Chris Watson, Terry Riley, Morton Feldman, Hisato Higuchi, Philip K Dick, Alfred Bester, JG Ballard, Kobo Abe, Paul Bowles, Ryunosuke Akutagawa, Alan Garner, David Toop, Jorge Luis Borges, Charles Willeford, Barrington J Bayley, Georges Remi, Kaneto Shindo, Jan Svankmajer, Allen Baron, Albert Zugsmith, Wladislaw Starewicz, Hiroshi Teshigahara, Robert Bresson, Seijun Suzuki, John Krish.
Sounds Like: Handsome Beasts
Record Label: Mirrors
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

More reviews!

The Organ DPRP Sea Of Tranquility ...
Posted by Rashomon on Mon, 22 Oct 2007 05:02:00 PST

Reviews!

New reviews of "The Ruined Map" coming in. More to follow! Dusted magazine Foxy Digitalis Fake Jazz ...
Posted by Rashomon on Thu, 16 Aug 2007 03:03:00 PST

FILMS 06

So, I was going to write an overview of "the year in film 2006" or somesuch, but really there were maybe three new films I saw all year that were worth watching, let alone writing about (Hidden, Child...
Posted by Rashomon on Thu, 18 Jan 2007 06:07:00 PST