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Hauschka

Experimental Pianomusic

About Me

undefined Hauschka at the Spitz London
NEW TRAILER for Bloksky
Hauschka Mutek Interview with Flasher
NEW FREE MP3 DOWNLOAD "Lipstick Race" HERE !
Hauschka
‘Room To Expand’
Release Date: 19th February 2007 Label: 130701 / FatCat
Following previous releases by Set Fire To Flames, Sylvain Chauveau, and Max Richter, the stunning ‘Room To Expand’ album sees the addition of Hauschka, a new artist to FatCat’s 130701 imprint.
Hauschka is the alias of Dusseldorf–based pianist / composer Volker Bertelmann, whose work is based upon an exploration of the possibilities of the 'prepared' piano - a playfully disruptive intervention into the preconceived idea of the piano as a pure-toned, perfected instrument waiting for a gifted virtuoso to play on it. Instead, Volker explores and influences the outcome of his playing by getting right down inside the instrument - clamping wedges of leather, felt or rubber between the strings; preparing the hammers with aluminium paper or rough films; placing crown corks on the strings, weaving guitar strings around the piano's guts, or pasting them down with gaffa tape. These little modifications throw up an array of rustling, drumming, shivering, scraping, resonating sounds which either provide the focus / drive for a piece or hook the ear into an intriguing, slightly unusual frame. As ‘Room To Expand’ shows, his resulting tracks are composed both originally and charmingly, forming vivid, unconventional pieces made through what Volker terms a playful ‘research-enthusiasm’.
Always assured and adventurous, the album flows beautifully, from the spritely, layered sprawl of the string-backed ‘La Dilettante’ to the ever-evolving growth of ‘One Wish’; the minimalist repetition and percussive noise of ‘Sweet Spring Come’ and the sparse, delicate beauty of ‘Kleine Dinge’ or ‘Old Man Playing Boules’. There’s a lovely sense of depth and balance to the album – skipping through a range of moods, each piece is animated with its own particular character, its own weight and feel. Across the album’s 12 tracks, Volker is able to deploy both a forcefulness and a delicacy of touch; varies tempos; integrates other instruments when necessary; uses space and silence as well as bolder, more ectstatic outbursts. This is a beautiful, involving and evolving album, whose bold, accessible melodies, rhythms and structures immediately act as hooks, whilst a wealth of micro-detail rewards close-listening.
Rather than striving for any purist academic perfection, Volker’s playing appears as much informed by modern electronica or Indonesian gamelan as it is by any classical cannon. With the aid of his material interventions, the piano becomes as much a machine for generating rhythms as it does for melody. Here and there, tracks utilise additional, non-piano sounds such as synthesizer, drum machine, electric bass, or other acoustic instruments like vibraphone, strings or brass. His pieces may be seen as small rhythmic sound-vignettes or just quiet ballads which have their roots in east-asian harmonies; the minimalism of Reich, Glass, Nyman, etc.; in Satie or Ravel; in 20th Century composers like Henry Cowell, John Cage, Arvo Pärt, Steffen Schleiermacher, Frangis Ali-Sade, Edison Denissow or Philip Corner and other artists from radical '60s art grouping, Fluxus; as well as maverick popsters like Schräger Otto.
With a growing emergence over the past couple of years of pianists working between the cracks in modern / classical / electronic genres – the likes of Kenneth Kirschner, Max Richter, Julien Neto, Sylvain Chauveau, Goldmund, Library Tapes, etc. - this album is certainly timely and should place its author up there amongst the best of them.
Hauschka has previously released two albums on the Karaoke Kalk label - 'Substantial' (2004) and 'The Prepared Piano' (2005); and a 7", 'What A Day' (2005) on the Ear Sugar label. Besides working as Hauschka, Volker is a member of Music A.M., a collaboration with Stefan Schneider (To Rococco Rot) and Luke Sutherland (Long Fin Killie); and of the electronic / club tracks duo Tonetraeger, his project with Torsten Mauss. A remix album of tracks from ‘The Prepared Piano’ will be released on Karaoke Kalk in May 2007, including mixes from Nobukazu Takemura, Tarwater, Mira Calix, Frank Bretschneider, Vert, Wechsel Garland, Eglantine Gouzy, and Barbara Morgenstern.
Hauschka will be touring Japan for the first time in January 2008

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 1/28/2006
Band Website: hauschka-net.de
Band Members: Volker Bertelmann:Piano
Influences: It is hard to say, but to point out some influences i would like to start with experimental electronic music from german labels like KaraokeKalk, Morr Music, RasterNoton, Staubgold, Kompakt, Tomlab and ECM(jazz-label) and then english Labels like FatCat, Domino, Touch etc.But also american bands and soloartists from 12k, saddle creek and thrill jockey.
Sounds Like: Hauschka - but similarities to following artists:Yann Tiersen, Gonzales, Goldmund, Max Richter, Sylvain Chaveau, Eric Satie, John Cage, Vert, Pascal Comelade,etc.
Record Label: FAT CAT / KARAOKE KALK
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

HAUSCHKA JAPAN TOUR Reviewed

Hi there, i just thought after this wonderfull tour in japan with colleen, to write some short impressions to say thank you to the japanes audience in particular.We recieved such a feedback and warmne...
Posted by Hauschka on Fri, 01 Feb 2008 03:31:00 PST

HAUSCHKA PLAYS MAIN ROLE IN A SHORT FILM

Hey,Volker Bertelmann/Hauschka is playing the main role in the english short film Bloksky.The premier will be on the 4th of July in the National Film Theater in London.Hauschka also wrote the music fo...
Posted by Hauschka on Mon, 26 Mar 2007 11:41:00 PST

INTERVIEW ON WWW.TOKAFI.COM

http://www.tokafi.com/magazine/15questions/15questionshausch ka/?searchterm=hauschka5 Questions to HauschkaAwarding only your second album with the same title as one of modern music's eternal classics ...
Posted by Hauschka on Thu, 23 Mar 2006 11:27:00 PST