pdf file
Transcription
pdf file
Sigmatropic: Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories [international] REVIEWS FROM THE WORLD [contents] # [media] [country] US/Canada/UK/Australia 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 Allmusic.com Amazon.com Bucketful of Brains Calgary Sun Chartattack Comes with a smile Courrier press Filter magazine Godsend Online Gravity Girl High Bias Hour Ice magazine Le Soleil Logo Magazine Mix Northern Jersey New Times (Miami, Phoenix) Neos Kosmos No Ripcord Now /Toronto Ottawa Xpress Photokitty Plan 9 Music Rolling Stone Slug Magazine Tiny Mix Tapes Times /St Petersburg/ Uncut (on Carla Torgerson’s Saint Stranger) Urgentculture/ Jaime Ohlsson Voir Europe Content mail Dominio dos deuses Flipart Gaesteliste Idbox i-n-f-r-a Internautas Jam Liability Mediatheque Ny Sida Pitas Platomania Rock Star Ton-um-ton US US UK Canada Canada UK US US US US US Canada US Canada (Fr) US US US Australia US Canada Canada US US US US US US UK US Canada (Fr) Russia Portugal Portugal Germany Italy France Spain Italy France Belgium Sweden Spain Netherlands Italy Germany www.allmusic.com Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories sigmatropic Artist Sigmatropic Moods Album Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories Rating Release Date Jan 20, 2004 Label Thirsty Ear • • • Type Enhanced Genre Styles Rock Indie Electronic Post-Rock/ Experimental Review Literate Eccentric Brittle Intimate Soft Laid-Back/ Mellow Cerebral Sensual Earthy Trippy Quirky Tense/Anxious Wry Druggy Fractured Uncompromising by Johnny Loftus On Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories, a slate of international guests help Akis Boyatzis and Sigmatropic recast their original, Greek-language interpretations of George Seferis' poetry into English, in the process bringing the Nobel laureate's evocative work to their own varied audiences. The recording's guest list is rather impressive, from an indie standpoint at least. Shoving off with no less an eccentric talent than the inimitable Robert Wyatt, Sixteen Haiku drifts soundtrack-like through 22 unnamed pieces ("Haiku Five," "Haiku Six," etc.) According to Boyatzis' liner notes, the guests involved recorded their respective vocal interpretations over Sigmatropic's existing tracks; the resulting musical threads tie together what might otherwise be a mess of tangled voices. The album percolates with electronic programming, and the grooves of what might be labeled indie electronica. Processed bits of guitar build subtle melodies over thick bass, wildly varied drum loops, faraway snatches, traditional instrumentation, and assorted blips of human laughter and muttering. Ultimately, however, Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories is about words and voices. Wyatt, Laetitia Sadier, Alejandro Escovedo, and Edith Frost dress their performances in personal nuance, but never outpace the poetry itself. (The artfully simplistic couplets are included in the accompanying booklet, along with a brief Seferis bio.) "I am raising now/A dead butterfly/With no make-up," Cat Power sings in "Haiku 10." It's brief at just over a minute. But the track's atmospheric buzz is sold by Chan Marshall's particular phrasing. This holds true throughout the album. Despite all the distinct personalities and their clever interpretations, no one piece ever really stands out. Instead, they each pour a spoonful of sparkling crystals into Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories' rejuvenating mineral spring. Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories [international] – reviews - ENGL - 3 Cargo's Best of 2003 Cargo Music Distribution present their best of 2003. To make your selection, click on the tick boxes to the left of the images. To place your order for titles selected from this page click on the "Add to Shopping Basket" button at the bottom of this page. Love Unbolts the Dark Atomic Ritual ~ Nebula ~ The Immortal Lee County Killers II Our Price: £10.99 Used & Our Price: £8.99 Used & New from £10.99 New from £8.99 Dangerous Magical Noise [IMPORT] ~ The Dirtbombs Our Price: £12.99 Used & New from £8.93 Goodbye Babylon [BOX SET] ~ Various Our Price: £79.99 The Disconnection ~ Carina Round Our Price: £9.99 Used & New from £8.75 Amorino ~ Isobel Campbell Our Price: £10.99 Used & New from £9.95 16 Haiku & Other Stories ~ Sigmatropic Our Price: £11.99 Customer Reviews Avg. Customer Review: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other shoppers! 5 of 5 people found the following review helpful: Interesting concept & astonishing results, October 23, 2003 Reviewer: Henry Stiles from Glasgow,Scotland To be honest I found this a very intriguing listening proposition from every angle. What is immediately fascinating with this album is not only the very interesting and diverse artist line up. It is the fact that these artists are singing on a sprawl of music that is quite alien to their customary musical craft of choice! Like a family of cool cult artists, from far flung places gathered on a Odyssey style musical adventure. The music is hard to describe but it is a beautiful & ethereal textured electronic soundscape with a soundtrack feel to it. It is not a World Music affair but more of a mystical & moody electronica affair with some Mediterranean elements to it. The Haiku style poetry is outstanding, but what would you expect from a Nobel prize winner like George Seferis? From the 18 artists singing on this album it would be unfair to single out a favourite track as all voices blend in well. SIGMATROPIC are an actual band & I still find it remarkable how they managed to get all these artists to guest on their music. In a way it is NOT a compilation or a tribute album & NOT a spoken word but a musical trip that invites some diverse & outstanding cult voices of our time to each sing their favoured or chosen Haiku poem. It could be an acquired taste, but I believe they have dished out a very brave concept that overall works well. The a hour long album has plenty of twists & turns to keep me happy & any true music fan might not agree with this music 100pct but without doubt they would be able to pick up some true gems here. Either you Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories [international] – reviews - ENGL - 4 like Cat Power, Howe Gelb, Robert Wyatt or Mark Eitzel, this album deserves some dedicated moments. If the electronica + Greek poetry aspect of it is a stumbling block for you, then its your loss: you are missing out on a well labored & exquisite piece of music. Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories [international] – reviews - ENGL - 5 SIXTEEN HAIKU & OTHER STORIES — Sigmatropic Artsy and engrossing The artiness of the project may discourage many away from it. But for those with patience, for those with a little time to digest it, Sigmatropic’s Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories is a rewarding, engrossing collection of songs. This is actually the international version of a project originally released in the band’s homeland of Greece, which uses the words of that country’s late Nobel Prize-winning poet George Seferis in song. Helping make the jump from national to international is a peerless collection of vocalists, including Mark Eitzel, Robert Wyatt, Howe Gelb, Steve Wynn, Alejandro Escovedo, Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab), Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth) and Cat Power. The 22 short, organically ambient tracks created by Sigmatropic’s Akis Boyatzi emotionally bleed into one another to create a landscape that is, at first, somewhat stark and standoffish, but soon swallows you inside its warmth, coddling you, coaxing you on. Seferis’ poems — predominantly haiku, as the title implies — live inside the landscape, naturally, comfortably, like characters born of their surroundings. It’s a haunting listen, one you’ll be glad you made the time for. Track Listings: • 1. Introduction - (featuring Robert Wyatt) • 2. Haiku One - (featuring Laetitia Sadier) • 3. Haiku Two - (featuring Martine Roberts) • 4. Haiku Three - (featuring Mark Muleahy, In The Museume Garden) • 5. Haiku Four - (featuring Alejandro Escovedo) • 6. Haiku Five - (featuring Carla Torgerson) • 7. Haiku Six - (featuring Carla Torgerson/Ahis Boyatzis) • 8. Haiku Seven - (featuring Akis Boyatzis) • 9. Haiku Eight - (featuring Edith Eitzel) • 10. Haiku Nine - (featuring Mark Eitzel) • 11. Haiku Ten - (featuring Cat Power) • 12. Haiku Eleven - (featuring Simon Joyner) • 13. Haiku Twelve - (featuring Lee Ranaldo, Unprofitable Boat Line) • 14. Haiku Thirteen - (featuring Alex Gordon) • 15. Haiku Fourteen (a)(Sung In Greek) - (featuring Akis Boyatzis) • 16. Haiku (b) - (featuring John Grant) • 17. Haiku Fifteen - (featuring James William Hindle) • 18. Haiku Sixteen - (featuring Lee Ranaldo) • 19. Dead Sea, The - (featuring James Sclavunos, Logbook II) • 20. Water Warm - (featuring Pintcie Maclure, Sketches For A Summer) • 21. This Human Body - (featuring Howe Gelb) • 22. Jasmines, The - (featuring Steve Wynn) Sun rating (out of 5 stars) 2004-02-03 Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories [international] – reviews - ENGL - 6 [ www.chartattack.com ] Your Canadian Music Source Cat Power And Stereolab’s Laetitia Sadier Do Haiku Indie Style Wednesday October 22, 2003 @ 03:30 PM By: ChartAttack.com Staff Most of us are familiar with those Japanese poems that contain a structure of 17 syllables and are often used to express elements of nature like colour, the seasons, contrasts and surprises. If we were to write something like "White leaves/Floating with the road/The night is over," you would know what we’re talking about, right? Well, if you missed that day in tenth grade English class, the contemplative poetry form known as Haiku has been given a cool new twist by some big names in the indie music circuit. Cat Power (a.k.a. Chan Marshall), Stereolab’s Laetitia Sadier, Alejandro Escovedo, Mark Eitzel, Sonic Youth’s Lee Ranaldo, Steve Wynn and Giant Sand’s Howe Gelb (plus many more) have all loaned their dreamy vocals to an album called 16 Haiku & Other Stories, which comes out January 20 via Thirsty Ear Records. The album features 21 tracks of seasonal goodies written by the winner of the 1963 Nobel Peace Prize for Literature, George Seferis. The musical backdrop of the album is provided by Sigmatropic’s Akis Boyatzis. If Sigmatropic sounds all Greek to you, it’s probably because the band actually is Greek and hails from that land known for mythological creatures and of course, souvlaki. Ummm… souvlaki. They’ve already recorded and released this same album in their native tongue of Greek, but later translated the poems into English so that these indie darlings could sing them. After listening to Cat Power’s "Haiku Ten," on Sigmatropic’s website, the result isn’t as corny as it sounds. Although it does sound like she’s singing in a different language at times, it’s pretty much what you’d expect from Chan Marshall. A limited-edition 12-inch vinyl EP of the project will also be released later this year and will feature alternate takes not found on the original disc. —Aaron Foster Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories [international] – reviews - ENGL - 7 http://www.columbusalive.com Sigmatropic Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories Thirsty Ear Of related interest: Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy and William Burroughs’ Spare Ass Annie and Other Tales Having success in Greece setting Nobel Laureate George Seferis’ poetry to music, Greek electronic outfit Sigmatropic have collaborated with a bevy of artists for an American version of the same. Having translated Seferis’ work into English for the majority of the album, Akis Boyatzis (the principle member of Sigmatropic) assembled a cast of notable singers to lend their voices, including Mark Mulcahey, Edith Frost, Lee Renaldo, Howe Gelb and Steve Wynn. With 16 of the album’s 22 tracks haiku, the album is an interesting mix of intricate instrumentation and minimalist lyrics. Most are generally structured as pop songs and, given the syllabic requirements of the form (and the difficulties translation often produces), the match would seem an awkward one. Still the artists here make it work, most notably Cat Power and James William Hindle, even if their contributions seem truncated. Sigmatropic wraps the few words given them in a lush mix of sounds that offsets the gaps only there for expectations most listeners schooled on Western pop bring. In fact, after listening to the 16 haiku, the album’s remaining six tracks seem cluttered with words by comparison. —Stephen Slaybaugh January 28, 2004 Copyright © 2004 Columbus Alive, Inc. All rights reserved. Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories [international] – reviews - ENGL - 8 Comes with A Smile (UK) Sigmatropic | Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories (Tongue Master) OK, first the facts: this is an album derived from the haiku poetry of Nobel laureate George Seferis, with music by Akis Boyatzis who, with a band of like-minded fellow Greek musicians, calls himself Sigmatropic. A Greek language version of this album was released in 2002, but Boyatzis has now created an international version utilising the same music, but with the poems translated into English and now featuring an impressive array of guest vocalists, with some very familiar names amongst them. So, that's a Greek take on traditional Japanese poetry, set to Greek electronica, and sung by Brits and Yanks. Some brew. The disc opens with some church bells, some big drums, some very Craig Armstrong film-soundtrack music, and Robert Wyatt doing his fragile non-singing thing. So far, so moody. Following tracks are gentler and with acoustic elements sweetening the sound - Haiku 1 sung by Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab), and Haiku 2, sung by Martine Roberts (Broken Dog), instill a Cocteau Twins feel, before the ever-expressive Mark Mulcahy does a bit of a Sylvian thing on Haiku 3. The variety and brevity of the tracks (an inevitable shortcoming of the haiku form) ensures a strong 'soundtrack' feel to the whole thing, but there's a unifying, almost dramatic, element in the rhythms and the different voices singing and speaking the short, oft-repeated lines. Things shuffle and throb along nicely, with contributions from the stellar cast that includes the likes of Mark Eitzel, Howe Gelb, Alejandro Escovedo, Cat Power, Steve Wynn and James William Hindle. All find themselves in unfamiliar territory here, a world away from their traditional musical environs. And this is where the album's appeal is found, in this curious melding of tradition and form. Populated across its twenty-two tracks with alumni of the lo-fi school (including Simon Joyner and Lee Ranaldo), it's only artists with a naturally dramatic voice, such as John Grant (The Czars) or James Sclavunos (The Bad Seeds, The Vanity Set), or the seductive tones of Pinkie Maclure, Edith Frost or Carla Torgerson (The Walkabouts) who really seem at home here. You'll catch many flavours - from Tom Waits to New Order - but it's the Greek and the strange that percolates up through the lyrics. Blue skies, bees, clear seas, heavy breasts in mirrors, jasmine, goddesses, and statues all feature, with the elements and nature the dominant themes. 'Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories' demonstrates the success of eclecticism, of mixing digital sounds and beats with some of the most organic singers you could wish for, with various stringed instruments counteracting the potentially new-age vibe. It all makes for a dramatically unique listening experience. Jeff Cotton COURRIER PRESS http://www.courierpress.com/ecp/me_music_reviews/article/0,1626,ECP_2258_2595801,00.html CD Reviews By MARK WILSON, Courier & Press staff writer January 23, 2004 Sigmatropic - "Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories" (Thirsty Ear) The bad poetry so many musicians pass off for lyrics in the name of art is one of the most unfortunate crimes perpetrated on music listeners in the wake of popular culture's flowering in the 1960s and 1970s. Thank psychedelia and progressive rock for that. It's an unfortunate legacy because poetry and music are two sides of the same coin. Words and sound can work together to the same end, but it's a concept more often than not lost to mainstream popular music, apart from the occasional surfacing of bands or performers such as R.E.M. or forward-thinking R&B/hip-hop musicians such as Wyclef Jean and Outkast. So it is into this void that the currents of world culture carry Sigma-tropic's unique, entrancing and utterly convincing setting of Greek Nobel laureate George Seferis' poetry to music. At the heart of Sigmatropic is multi-instrumentalist and producer Akis Boyatzis, augmented here by a rotating cast of Greek musicians and sung by a respected all-star cast of indie-rockers and musicians that includes Cat Power, Lee Ranaldo of Sonic Youth, Mark Eitzel, Laetitia Sadier of Stereolab, Robert Wyatt, Steve Wynn and Alejandro Escovedo. The music blends live instrumentation and studio effects into a diverse collection of moody, unconventional songs that glide effortlessly through folk, rock and ambient styles. Unlike so many overzealous attempts to meld poetry and pop, the mood of the music really does complement the lyrical content here, each vocal performance beautifully integrated into the music. Haiku d'Etat by Carmina Ocampo | 10.27.2003 w w w . f i l t e r - m a g . c o m Proving that they can be even more "out there" than usual, spacey avant-gardists like Cat Power, Stereolab's Laetitia Sadier and Sonic Youth's Lee Ranaldo are putting their experimental pedals to the metal. The innovative indie rockers are among several performers--including Alejandro Escovedo,Mark Eitzel,Steve Wynn and Giant Sand's Howe Gelb--contributing vocals to 16 Haiku & Other Stories, to be released Jan. 20 on Thirsty Ear. The artists involved show that they're the sort only bookworms with their head in the clouds (no shame) could love. And they're the sort of musicians that have no qualms about provoking haters of experimental rock into saying, "What in the shit is that?" The compilation will include 21 tracks that highlight the work of distinguished Greek poet George Seferis, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1963. The laureate's poetry is recurrant with themes of exile and nostalgia, much like Ranaldo's, Eitzel's and Marshall's vocals, which evoke reclusive sentiments, and are really good to sigh to. The singing on the album will be set to music by Akis Boyatzis, lead singer of the Greek band Sigmatropic. Boyatzis was one of the founders of the indie-rock band Hum in the late '80s, but turned in his beloved rock 'n' roll for airy Mediterranean electronica (what the shit is that?). With their powers combined, Sefaris and Boyatzis demonstrate that it is, indeed, chic to be Greek. 16 Haiku & Other Stories was originally recorded and released in Greece by Sigmatropic in 2002. Once Sefaris' poems were translated into English, the album was re-recorded with the verses sung by the 18 guest vocalists. Snooty fans (typically accustomed to whining whilst wining) of the artsty fartsy indie rock performers will have to re-adjust their boozing preferences just a tad and pick up some ouzo while listening to this unusual comp. God, that's so arty. And pretentious. And we can't wait for it to come out. Check out the incredibly inventive track list: "Introduction," Robert Wyatt "Haiku One," Laetitia Sadier "Haiku Two," Martine Roberts "Haiku Three," Mark Mulcahy "Haiku Four," Alejandro Escovedo "Haiku Five," Carla Torgerson "Haiku Six," Carla Torgerson, Akis Boyatzis "Haiku Seven," Akis Boyatzis "Haiku Eight," Edith Frost "Haiku Nine," Mark Eitzel "Haiku Ten," Cat Power "Haiku Eleven," Simon Joyner "Haiku Twelve," Lee Ranaldo "Haiku Thirteen," Alex Gordon "Haiku Fourteen," Akis Boyatzis "Haiku Fifteen," John Grant "Haiku Fifteen," James William Hindle "Haiku Sixteen," Lee Ranaldo "Dead Sea," James Sclavonos "Water Warm," Pinkie Maclure Related Links George Seferis Sigmatropic Haiku You GODSEND ONLINE REVIEWS : S Sigmatropic - "Sixteen Haiku And Other Stories" CD - Taking the poetry of Greek Nobel Laureate George Seferis to a new level, SIGMATROPIC here enlists the vocal talents of an allstar cast of musicians to read/sing Haiku over his sonic foundations. Opening with the somber and dark 'Introduction' (featuring Robert Wyatt), 'Sixteen Haiku' successfully merges the written word with rich and moody musical backdrops that range from otherworldly dub to Morricone-esque rock to trip hop and covering all bases in-between. Notables such as Laeticia Sadier, Edith Frost, Mark Eitzel, Cat Power, Lee Ranaldo, Howe Gelb, and Steve Wynn pepper the recordings with a wide assortment of sounds and moods, and SIGMATROPIC's music is suitably diverse and evocative. Really a fine release and more than a successful translation of Seferis' words into song. (Thirsty Ear) gravity girl [www.gravitygirl.com] - sigmatropic - sixteen haiku & other stories - rogue Greek producer Akis Boyatzis originally made this same Sigmatropic album in his native tongue; it finding him wedding the words of Nobel laureate poet George Seferis to beatsy backing-tracks of muted breaks, looming keytone, and twangy guitar. A year on, and he's released an 'international' version of the same, with Seferis's words translated to English. And, to get to the point, he's roped in more famous guests than a commercial hip-hop disc. A brief selection of these goes: Cat Power, Lee Ranaldo, Robert Wyatt, Laetitia Sadier, Mark Eitzel, Edith Frost, Steve Wynn; and these familiar and occasionally-iconic voices go a long way to adding to the atmospheric atmosphere Boyatzis is striving to cultivate. Cat Power, of course, is the star of the show, with Ms.Marshall's amazing voice arresting even in its brief stay. The tracks Boyatzis assembles tend to be short and sweet; especially given so much of the album explores the brevity of Haiku; with the vocalists brought aboard to imbue every sung syllable with as much drama as they'd have on the page; even if the mere singing of them takes them both changes the cadence and takes them into a completely different artistic context. Whilst someone like Marshall or Wyatt have some sort of inexhaustible musical spirit that, even in a fleeting moment, can help conjure up that certain magic, overall the disc has the distinct feeling of being less than the sum of its parts; the patchy track-to-track nature of things failing to succeed in the grand artistic picture Boyatzis hopes to have painted. High Bias www.highbias.com Listening with extreme prejudice Aural Fixations SIGMATROPIC Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories (Thirsty Ear) Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories is one of the more unusual projects to cross my desk in some time. Greek musician Akis Boyatzis, who records under the name Sigmatropic, produced an album some time back that put the work of Greek poet and Nobel Laureate George Seferis to music. After a great deal of success in Greece, Boyatzis decided to record an international version, with Seferis' work translated to English and vocalized by a diverse group of indie rock and underground artists. The catch: most of the pieces selected for the album are in the form of haiku, the three-line poem that is no more and no less than a literary snapshot, a condensation of emotional expression into a bullshit-free bite-sized chunk. One could argue that a haiku isn't unlike a three-minute pop song, but we won't go into a fruitless comparison of one art form to another here. Regardless, the challenge stood before the singers recruited to work on the project: not only figure out how to put Seferis' haiku into song form, but also to do it with accompanying music already provided by Boyatzis. Since it's unlikely that anyone would work on this record unless he was passionate about the concept, it's unsurprising that the singers rise to the challenge. Besides, Boyatzis' guitar-laced electronics leave plenty of room for interpretation, whether it's Walkabouts frontperson Carla Torgerson's clear tenor on "Haiku Five" and "Haiku Six," Sonic Youth guitarist Lee Ranaldo's forceful rant on "Haiku Twelve" and "Haiku Sixteen" or singer/songwriter Simon Joyner's creepy croon on "Haiku Eleven." Other guests include indie rock thrushes Cat Power, Edith Frost and Laetitia Sadler of Stereolab and underground studs Mark Eitzel, Steve Wynn, Mark Mulcahy (formerly of Miracle Legion), James William Hindle and Alejandro Escovedo. There are a few breaks from the format for variety's sake. Prog legend Robert Wyatt lends his ethereal swoon to a full length poem, "On Stage, 2," used as the collection's introduction; Bad Seeds percussionist James Sclavunos and Giant Sand grand poobah Howe Gelb also vocalize longer, non-haiku pieces. In fact, the latter's lazy, guttural diction fits both verse and music so well it almost seems that "This Human Body" was written for him. This is an ambitious project; merging poetry (which Boyatzis is wise enough to print in the booklet) and music is usually begging for trouble. Not here, though—this masterful blend of concentrated passion and cool atmospherics works on every level. Proof positive of the good taking chances can do. Michael Toland [buy it] www.hour.ca/music/spin.aspx?iIDDisque=57 February 12th, 2004 Sigmatropic - (Thirsty Ear) Sixteen Haiku And Other Stories John Sekerka A record so good they released it thrice. Originally a Greek-language disc, then a European release, and finally the North American version. A highly infectious music virus, Sixteen Haiku sets the words of late poet George Seferis to dreamy pop soundscapes, while an elite list of performers take turns at the mic. There must be something in the Mediterranean waves cuz the results are mesmerizing. Howe Gelb is terrific as always. Robert Wyatt is chilling. Cat Power blows everyone out of the water. And if that ain't enough, how about Lee Renaldo yelping "what's wrong with the rudder, the boat's going in circles." Jump in, this here's the best music hour of the fresh year. (John Sekerka) ICE Magazine DEC. 26, 2003 - JAN. 1, 2004 The List 2003 The Other Music A-Z by John Payne It was a staggering year in sounds, far too much to get a handle on — assuming, that is, that you wanted to hear something different. Somewhere just over and a bit under the radar, these discs did or didn’t change your life in 2003. Active Ingredients (Chad Taylor, Jemeel Moondoc et al.), Titration (Delmark) A Grape Dope, Missing Dragons EP (Galaxia) Tony Allen, Home Cooking (Narada) Ammon Contact, Sounds Like Everything (Plug Research) The Angels of Light, Everything Is Good Here/Please Come Home (Young God) Aphex Twin, 26 Mixes for Cash (Warp) Art Ensemble of Chicago, Tribute to Lester (ECM) Richard Ashcroft, Human Conditions (Virgin) Federico Aubele, Gran Hotel Buenos Aires (Eighteenth Street Lounge Music) Baby Dodds, Talking and Drum Solos (Atavistic) Basement Jaxx, Kish Kash (Astralwerks) Tywanna Jo Baskette, Fancy Blue (Sweet Tea) Benjamin Smoke DVD (Plexifilm) Brendan Benson and the Wellfed Boys, Metarie EP (Startime International) The Black Keys, Thickfreakness (Fat Possum) Carla Bley, Looking for America (WATT/ECM) Books on Tape, Sings the Blues (Diffusion I Media) Carla Bozulich, Red Headed Stranger (DiCristina Stair Builders/Revolver) Broadcast, Haha Sound (Warp) So (Thrill Jockey) L’Avventura (Jetset) Le Soleil [Quebec, Canada] http://lesoleil.cyberpresse.ca/journal/2004/01/24/critiques_de_disques/00321_bijoux_de_brievete.php Avant-garde Bijoux de brièveté Nicolas Houle, Le Soleil 24/01/2004 Formation grecque fusionnant poésie, musique et art visuel, Sigmatropic avait fait paraître en 2002 une première version de Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories dans sa langue maternelle. Le projet qui rassemble la poésie minimaliste du défunt écrivain George Seferis — Prix Nobel de littérature en 1963 — ayant été salué outre-mer, le groupe s’est donc proposé d’en faire une nouvelle version, internationale cette fois, avec une remarquable équipe pour narrer ou chanter les courts poèmes. Sigmatropic n’a pas réuni n’importe qui : les Robert Wyatt, Laetita Sadier (Stereolab), Lee Ranaldo et autres James Sclavunos (Bad Seeds) sont au rendez-vous pour donner du relief à cette fascinante aventure. Ce qui aurait pu n’être qu’un collage de vignettes musicales et poétique éparses s’avère un magnifique ensemble. Rock underground, électronica, trip-hop, les styles fusionnent aisément, tandis que la grande équipe de chanteurs se dédie entièrement aux pièces. Du bon-bon. **** Sigmatropic, Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories (Thristy Ear) ALBUM REVIEWS Sigmatropic "Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories" (Tongue Master) Released: 13 October 2003 Label Website Stunning. Now that’s out of the way; the question is: why? To answer, a little background: Haiku is a non-rhyming Japanese poetic form consisting of three lines of 5, 7 and 5 syllables, and the Haiku (plural) in question were written by Nobel laureate George Seferis. Obviously, Seferis’ words have been set to Sigmatropic’s music, which combines electronics with Mediterranean folk stylings under the guiding hand of Greece’s Akis Boyatzis. So far, so boring; the masterstroke is in recruiting, among many others, the voices of Robert Wyatt, Mark Mulcahy, Sonic Youth’s Lee Renaldo, The Czars’ John Grant and Bad Seeds/Vanity Set alumnus James Sclavunos. Picking out the efforts of Cat Power and Carla Torgerson does the others a disservice, so find your own favourites; they’re here somewhere. Fela Lewis www.losingtoday.com SIGMATROPIC SIXTEEN HAIKU AND OTHER STORIES (Tongue Master) BY MARK BARTON Label Web Site If your looking for something a little tender in which to lose yourself in for the best part of an hour or so, then I couldn’t recommend enough this timid little beauty, I could chirp until the cows came home at how spellbinding this particular release is, softly twisting lounge like threads, native folk arrangements, trip hop textures, ambient electronics and tribal beats alongside blissed out improv workouts, yet there is a story attached to this beguiling release which adds a whole sense of charmed mystique to the mix. Centred around the nucleus of Greek based Sigmatropic’s melodic threads, this album has been taken on as something of an International project. Original devised as a score to wrap around the poetry of Nobel Laureate George Seferis, the basis of the idea was to centre on his early written work which had been conceived in the haiku style derived from the Japanese art of chopping up poetry, it encompasses his short observations of life in the Aegean, set alongside the musical score a colourful tapestry of life begins to spring forth. But that wasn’t the end of the matter, by translating Seferis’ words into English, Akis Boyatkis, the principle player in Sigmatropic, wanted to develop the project further in enlisting a plethora of guest vocals to make this a truly international adventure. Hence the reason why you find the likes of Robert Wyatt, Laetitia Sadier, Lee Ronaldo, Simon Joyner and fourteen other invitees all together on one album. Concentrating on the music side of things, this really is a compelling body of work, each of the tracks lock into each other to create a wide screened symphony, each can be listened to as stand alone but brought together are invested with a sum far greater than its parts, though that’s not to say that they are cut from the same cast as each memorably weaves it’s own unique imprint. In the main it’s all about creating moods, delicate soundscapes that, and here’s the beauty of this, match guest artists to styles of music that you’d never imagine them to be associated with in particular the opening cut featuring Robert Wyatt, the glacial sounds adorned with subtle trip hop beats encouraging Wyatt’s usually impeccable frail vocal to stretch like you’ve never heard it before, then the added novelty of hearing Laetitia Sadiers vocals transported from the warm confines of space lounge Francophile pop to do battle against the elements of the cavernous ‘Felt Mountain’ like dynamics on ‘Haiku 1’ while elsewhere Mark Eitzel is supported by stately Orbital like backdrops on ‘Haiku 10’. ‘Haiku 3’ features the vocals of Mark Mulcahy, the former Miracle Legioner twists alluringly against the backdrop of warming Ry Cooder like grandeur, Texas based Nuns mainman Alejandro Escovedo is also found wandering unfamiliar paths as he navigates dreamily against an abandoned flurry of detached ambient mood spills. One of the collections best moments is the rather jiggling sensuality of ‘Haiku Five’, which sees the vocals of the Walkabouts’ Carla Torgerson softly sizzling away to a fluffy space like thread that would probably be more familiar to Laetitia Sadier. Then there’s the soothing ornamental frosted lullaby’s of the graceful ‘Haiku Seven’ to contend with, bracing stuff as it flinches with a demeanour more associated with a Spaghetti western but tripped with an intergalactic vibe. ‘Haiku Eight’ has the same neutered elegance of Kate Bush’s ‘Army Dreamers’ featuring Edith Frost who apparently stretched her vocal to enough tracks to be considered for an album in its own right. ‘Haiku Twelve’ finds the first of Lee Ronaldo’s contributions caught in atmospheric territories sounding like Stewart Copeland, capped with magnificently sombre washes of electronics while underneath a stalking guitar riff burrows away. John Grant really does has a sound of Ian McCulloch on ‘Haiku 14(b)’ but maybe that has more to do with the icy glaze of the Bunnymen-ish melodies that chill in the background sounding like a cross between the ethereal ‘In bluer skies’ from ‘Porcupine’ and the Lost Boys era ‘Lips’ phase. ‘Haiku 16’ cavorts with the ladened elegiac sounds of latter day Flying Saucer Attack fencing with a perkier Roy Montgomery and which bleeds teasingly into the tasty exotic folly of ‘Dead Sea’ itself falling lovingly into the tender vocals of Pinkie Maclure on the heart aching cinematic sheen of ‘Water Warm. With ’16 Haiku and other Stories’ Sigmatropic have created a wonderfully sublime journey through life as seen by another, a thoroughly enthralling and engaging trip which is thoroughly recommended you should take sooner rather than later. MARK BARTON MUSIC Stars turn out prose and poetry Tuesday, June 8, 2004 By GINA VIVINETTO ST. PETERSBURG TIMES Tell me, do you notice a trend with these recent news items? • British rocker Elvis Costello announced in March he's penning not one but two books for Simon & Schuster: a story collection inspired by his songs due in late 2005, and a "comic philosophy" book on how to play the guitar. • R&B singer-pianist Alicia Keys has let folks know she's in talks to create a series of children's mystery books called "Alicia Keys' Street Mysteries," with each novel named after one of her tunes. • Esquire introduced pop singer-guitarist and Grammy winner John Mayer as the writer behind the new monthly column "The Resident Rock Star," which began this month. Is it me or are a whole lot of pop stars picking up pens and laptops? Alas, this phenomenon isn't so new. It called to mind rockers in the past with published prose. It also reminded me that some of it wasn't half bad. Including: • Richard Hell, punk-rock guitarist and leader of Richard Hell and the Voidoids, in 1996 published the critically acclaimed novel "Go Now," which dazzled, among others, cyberpunk author William Gibson. (Hell has published other works, too.) • Kinky Friedman, once the leader of Kinky Friedman and the Texas Jewboys, a beloved quirky country band, is now better known as a mystery author. • Henry Rollins, former Black Flag and Rollins Band leader, is so in love with the printed word he created 2:13:61, a grass-roots publishing company to release his and other maverick authors' books. Pop poets When it comes to poetry, look out. Seems every rock and pop lyricist under the sun considers himself wellversed enough to be published. The bards include: • Jim Morrison of the Doors, because he was the Lizard King, and as such, he could do anything, including writing "Lords and New Creatures." • The voice of his generation, Bob Dylan, whose song lyrics have been printed as poetry in many collections. So have those of Lou Reed, former leader of the Velvet Underground and disciple of poet Delmore Schwartz, Reed's professor at Syracuse University. Several of Reed's songs are dedicated to Schwartz. • Punk singer-spoken-word-performer Lydia Lunch (once in front of the 1970s act Teenage Jesus and the Jerks), who has had many journals and books of poetry published. • Patti Smith, the Godmother of Punk, acolyte of Dylan, the Stones, and Rimbaud, who has been published in many forms. • Jewel, the little folkie who wrote the god-awful "A Night Without Armor." • Ed Sanders and Tuli Kupferberg of the Fugs, both published poets. • The late rapper Tupac Shakur, whose lyrics have been published as poetry. And let's not forget Joseph Simmons, better known as Run of the pioneer rap group Run-DMC. In April, Simmons entered himself as a candidate for poet laureate of Queens. (He didn't win.) Pop critics or pop stars? A category dear to me features folks who pulled off both tasks. These are the music writers and pop-music critics who wrote about other performers and played in bands of their own: • Chrissie Hynde of the Pretenders. • Neil Tennant of the Pet Shop Boys. • Ira Kaplan of Yo La Tengo. • Patti Smith (so, she wrote a lot!). • Lenny Kaye of the Patti Smith Group. • And of course, famed Creem critic Lester Bangs, who led Lester Bangs and the Delinquents. Novel rockers In a very special domain, we place noted fiction writers and aspiring rockers Stephen King, Amy Tan, Dave Barry, Kathi Kamen Goldmark, and Barbara Kingsolver, who together call themselves the Rock Bottom Remainders and perform occasionally. The band, which features King and Barry on guitar and Tan on lead vocals, got started in 1992. The Remainders even embarked on a tour, dubbed the "Three Chords and an Attitude" tour, and released a "Stranger Than Fiction" CD. How good are the Rock Bottom Remainders? On the band's Web site, Barry says, "The band plays music as well as Metallica writes novels." Short stories by musicians Thunder's Mouth Press recently released "Carved in Rock: Short Stories by Musicians," featuring stories by outlaw country singer Steve Earle, Joan Jett, Pete Townshend of the Who, Eric Burdon of the Animals, Ray Manzarek of the Doors, and the aforementioned Lydia Lunch and Kinky Friedman, among others. A disc of haiku "16 Haiku & Other Stories" (Thirsty Ear) is an album of poems by Greek Nobel laureate George Seferis sung in English and performed musically by a cast of hep Ÿindie rockers, including Cat Power, Mark Eitzel (American Music Club), Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab), and Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth). The album was shaped by Greek multi-instrumentalist Akis Boyatzis, better known as Sigmatropic, who was determined to give the disc a global sound, heavy on the cross-cultural vibe. 6537377 http://www.miaminewtimes.com/ Sigmatropic Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories (Thirsty Ear) BY LEE ZIMMERMAN http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/feedback/index_html?author_email=feedback@newtimes.com&feedback_email=nope&headline=Si gmatropic&issuedate=2004/01/29 Relying on a cheap pun isn't normally the best way to start a review. But given Sigmatropic's origins, as well as its strange mix of sounds, the oft-quoted expression "it's all Greek to me" somehow seems appropriate. Taken literally, Sigmatropic refers to Greek producer/multi-instrumentalist Akis Boyatzis, who recruited several musicians to create this inspired interpretation of 16 poems by the late Greek Nobel laureate George Seferis. The saying, however, might also apply to the collective's esoteric approach, which often makes the music difficult to grasp. The otherworldly arrangements -- forged through a combination of guitars, violin, glockenspiel, cello, Celtic harp, synths and keyboards -- create a kind of cosmic brew, sometimes churning, mostly free-floating. The results accentuate the reflective qualities of Seferis' meditations, from the ethereal sounds that drift through the various haiku to the swirling melodic cacophony that ignites "The Dead Sea" and "Water Warm." Fortunately, the overall sense of disorientation is cushioned by an array of guest singers, including such luminaries as Cat Power, Robert Wyatt, Alejandro Escovedo, Mark Eitzel, Howe Gelb, Lee Ranaldo, Laetitia Sadier of Stereolab, and Carla Torgerson of the Walkabouts. They gently intone Seferis' words, as translated into English, making the project a bit more palatable to American ears. Softly sensual, these tone poems effectively celebrate their muse through the music. phoenixnewtimes.com | originally published: January 29, 2004 www.neoskosmos.com.au Sixteen Haiku and other stories The imminent Australian release, in mid October, of an interesting new album has come to our attention - and not just for its intriguing blend of music. The release by the artist(s) known as Sigmatropic and its title alerted us to a relation with Seferis' poetry and his Sixteen Haiku. These settings of Sixteen Haiku by the Greek poet, George Seferis, were composed on the Greek island of Aegina between August and November 1983. Back in 2002, Sigmatropic released to the Greek public Sigmatropic, above, re-releases Sixteen Haiku... this time in English. the original version of 'Sixteen Haiku and other stories' which was based on this poetry by Seferis. This new effort is the international version of that project. Sigmatropic is the name of the band created by the session musician Akis Boyatzis. Together with the highly respected musician-producer Antonis Livieratos, since1997, they have been 'meshing breezy Mediterranean flavoured beats with ice-chilled electronica.' The 'Sixteen Haiku and other stories,' feature guest vocalists from both sides of the Atlantic. The idea was born in 2001 when Sigmatropic wanted to create a sprawling and magical musical trip: a musical accompaniment to an imaginary journey. The result is an atmospheric musical odyssey that supports this poetic wordplay. The soundtrack quality of this recording is earthy and works well with the masterful poetry. After this album's original Greek release, Akis Boyatzis asked eighteen overseas musicians to recreate the spirit of the work, retaining the same music with the same poetry, but, translated into English. And so, in the English version, each vocalist chooses and sings their favourite Haiku. Together with Sigmatropic and Akis Boyatzis the full guest vocal line up for this release is representative of the Western Indie scene. You will hear Cat Power, Mark Eitzel, Alejandro Escovedo, Alex Gordon (Lincoln), John Grant (The Czars), Edith Frost, Howe Gelb, James William Hindle, Simon Joyner, Pinkie Maclure, Mark Mulcahy, Lee Ranaldo, Martine Roberts (Broken Dog), Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab), James Sclavunos (Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds), Carla Torgenson (Walkabouts), Robert Wyatt and Steve Wynn all contributing. The music is a mix of acoustic instruments alongside a very electronic approach. As for the words of Seferis, they elevate this album above the ambient and into the beautiful: "You always write / The ink diminishes / The sea multiplies" This is the second time we have heard the Sixteen Haiku set to music. Back in 1984, the English composer John Tavener composed music for solo voices and orchestra on the very same settings of Seferis' poetry. This effort is definitely worth your undivided attention! No Ripcord album review Various Artists Album Round-Up: February 2004 In an attempt to cut through the morass of over informative prefixes, Ben Bollig dives into the murky world of all things dirty, strange and avant-garde... (…) Having set for myself up for a volley of abuse after savaging one Eastern European prog rock album, Sigmatropic’s latest efforts, Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories filled me with no little trepidation. Akis Boyatzis, founder and main nucleus of Sigmatropic, marked his musical presence in his native Greece for the first time in the early 80s with local New Wave bands Captain Nefos and Libido Blume. He re-emerged in 1997 as a new revolving outfit called Sigmatropic, a single person home-studio project into an exciting full-blown live band. The latest instalment is the international version of 16 Haiku And Other Stories, based on the poetry of the late Nobel laureate George Seferis, featuring a lengthy roster of musicians, from Laetitia Sadier to Mark Eitzel, all delivering their vocal interpretation of the English translated poetry over the same music. Musically, it’s a dark studio-based electro trawl, mixing in some Meditarranean guitars and beats for light relief. Poetically, for some there will be too much, for others, too little. Haiku 1 translates almost perfectly, while Haiku 6 – ‘Her breasts are heavy in the looking glass’ – is barmy but rather sexy. Mark Eitzel’s vocal contributions offer gravitas and tension, while my personal favourite has to be Cat Power’s brief performance on Haiku 10, brash, raspy and perfectly accompanied by the Sigma guitars. At 22 tracks it’s a bit much, but Boyatzis cannot be faulted for his range and vision, and as introductions to the Greek avant-garde go, this is, frankly, a much more pleasant experience than I’d expected. (6.5) Reviewed By Ben Bollig February 15th, 2004 http://www.nowtoronto.com SIGMATROPIC SIXTEEN HAIKU AND OTHER STORIES (THIRSTY EAR) **** buy this @ amazon.ca On the surface, Sixteen Haiku And Other Stories is a concept way too weird to work in a pop context. A bunch of indie darlings sing English translations of the short poems of Nobel laureate George Seferis, backed by amorphous Greek indie electronic outfit Sigmatropic. Uh, yeah. Shockingly, not only does the ambitious project succeed, but it's beautiful. Sigmatropic founder Akis Boyatzis plays matchmaker, providing idiosyncratic singers like Laetitia Sadier, Mark Eitzel and Sonic Youth's Lee Ranaldo with the perfect lyrical wisps. Who else but Chan Marshall could pull off "I am raising now / A dead butterfly / With no makeup"? The arrangements are evocative and intricate, and the power of these tiny perfect poems is staggering. SARAH LISS NOW | JAN 29 - FEB 4, 2004 | VOL. 23 NO. 22 Ottawa Xpress http://www.ottawaxpress.ca/ June 3rd, 2004 Sigmatropic - (Thirsty Ear Records) Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories Dylan Young Somewhere between the idea of getting a bunch of name-check artists to compose songs around the poetry of George Seferis and the possibility of this album actually getting pressed, we've ended up with a kind of post-rock version of the This Mortal Coil project. A jaw-dropping assortment of sonic alt-royalty - from Robert Wyatt to Laetitia Sadier, Alejandro Escovedo to Cat Power, Howe Gelb to Lee Renaldo - drop aural inspiration on Seferis's haiku quandaries. It's moody and sluggish, and wildly changeable within those confines. It's sure to polarize opinion, but love it or hate it, it's not boring. http://www.photokitty.com The concept isn't new, but it is taken to the highest levels imaginable on 16 Haiku & Other Stories. It's simply an amazing album. B y H o l d e n K i l r o y Sigmatropic - 16 Haiku & other Stories (Thirsty Ear) Release Date - January 20th, 2004 (www.thirstyear.com) Originally released in Greece to incredible acclaim, (and what hasn't been really), "16 Haiku & other Stories" is a collection of poetry written by the late Greek Nobel Laureate George Seferis, set to the music of the group Sigmatropic. Now, I know what you're saying to yourself - "My God, I have the late Greek Nobel Laureate George Seferis' complete works here on my nightstand, and I saw Sigmatropic five times last summer! This is a dream come true!" I said the same thing. Then I realized that this project was a lot more than just that. Sigmatropic was formed in 1997 by Akis Boyatzis, who had found success in the states with his band - Hum, a group born in 1989 around the now notorious musical region of Champaign, Illinois. Hum released their first album on a label created by The Poster Children and a lineup changed soon followed, with Poster Children members Jeff Dimpsey and Tim Lash taking up bass and guitar responsibilities respectively. Hum was soon signed to a major label and scored a radio hit in the mid-nineties with a catchy little ditty called "Stars". After Hum's demise, Boyatzis went home to his native Greece and created what would become the group Sigmatropic, which left behind the New Wave power pop punk of Hum, in favor of a sound meshing "breezy Mediterranean flavored beats with ice-chilled Electronica". Putting out an album and an E.P. on the Greek label Hitch-Hike, Sigmatropic released "16 Haiku & other Stories" in Greece in 2002. It became a smash hit and releasing an English version was talked about soon after. The original Greek version of "16 Haiku & other Stories" contained a majestic musical and literary odyssey with spellbinding soundtrack like music underneath vocalization of Haiku poetry. In short, it was pretty fucking cool. For the English version, it was decided to put together an all-star cast of indie rock's most notable Haiku lovers. I don't know the Haiku love thing for certain, but it's a safe assumption. On this album you can find the legendary Robert Wyatt, Laetitia Sadier of Stereolab, former American Music Club frontman Mark Eitzel, Lee Ranaldo of Sonic Youth, Dream Syndicate founder Steve Wynn, Howe Gelb of Giant Sand, Cat Power, Jim Sclavunos of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, and Alejandro Escovedo to name just a few. And man do they kick it. The unconventional song structure that Sigmatropic provides complements the poetry beautifully. These aren't just poems turned into songs, they're works of art crafted into even better works of art. It's like taking the Mona Lisa and adding cleavage. The mood never fails to accentuate the content of the original poetry, and each vocal performance blends into the music in a way that makes perfection an understatement. The concept isn't new, The Doors released "An American Prayer" in 1978, but it is taken to the highest levels imaginable on "16 Haiku & other Stories". It's simply an amazing album. www.plan9music.com REVIEW Sigmatropic: Sixteen Haiku & Other Review by: John Benson For those music lovers who continually seek challenges with their listening time, here is a release from start to finish that will test anyone’s obscure listening habits. Ingeniously inviting a host of diverse and internationally renowned artists - most of which have through-the-roof indie cred - to interpret George Seferis’s Greek poetry into English, the experimental Sigmatropic provides the musical foundation on SIXTEEN HAIKU AND OTHER STORIES, which incorporates an earthy aesthetic juxtaposed with electronic additions and guitar noises. The result is completely odd with contributions by Cat Power and Edith Frost worth a listen but this novelty record never rises above such a description. Then again, if out-there is where your musical tastes are, this 22-track disc should be right at home. Buy "Sixteen Haiku & Other" at Plan9Music.com copyright ©2001 plan9music Cat Power, Boyatzis Go Greek Sigmatropic project fuses poetry with indie rock By pairing haiku by Greek Nobel Laureate George Seferis with the voices of Sonic Youth's Lee Ranaldo, Cat Power, Mark Eitzel and Howe Gelb, Akis Boyatzis isn't likely to strike sales gold. But Akis Boyatzis' arcane project, titled Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories (which he recorded with a roving cast of Greek musicians under the moniker of Sigmatropic), is nonetheless one of the most fascinating and lovely creations of the year. Well, actually last year. Sixteen Haiku was originally released in Boyatzis' native Greece until he recently made the decision to record rework the music, translate the poetry from Greek to English and bring a cross-section of independent rockers to play on it. The new set will be released by Thirsty Ear records on January 20th. Akis Boyatzis, haiku enthusiast Add to Favorites! Email this story Printer friendly version Boyatzis says that idea for the project came to him thirteen years ago as he was reading through some books of Greek poetry. "Some poems by Seferis impressed me for their atmosphere and the musicality of their words," he says. He eventually began to put music to a pair of poems, but pocketed the idea for nine years. It wasn't until 2000 that Seferis happened upon Seferis' Sixteen Haiku collection. "These short poems drew my attention from the first moment," he says, "as they had the water, the wind and the sun as key elements and were sometimes dark, sometimes funny and at times subversive. The whole thing became so clear that it immediately sparked the engagement of this poetry with music." Boyatzis and his Greek label Hitch Hyke teamed with the London-based label Tongue Master Records, which helped assemble the list of guests who were given the original Greek album along with a set of translated lyrics. "Their interpretation of the music and the whole concept in general was really interesting," he says, "emphasizing a unique point of view in each case. In all cases these were really brilliant and very engaging approaches, with excellent vocal qualities. They helped to suddenly see the relationship of this poetry with the music through a new window." Part of Boyatzis' challenge was to fuse the disparate voices. "Cohesiveness of the result was one of the main things I was looking for," he says. "The music was reworked, and this is the reason why the production of this material meant more than mixing an English-sung vocal layer on top of the instrumental layer that already existed." And in some cases, like Gelb's haunting collaboration on "This Human Body," Boyatzis incorporated new music from his counterparts. Gelb was approached to contribute to the album, but it took him a year to get around to doing it. "I just yanked around some wires on my sonic shed's floor," he says. "I managed to play some electric guitar in parts and some plonk piano, besides the mutter of the lyric." The song features Gelb's Leonard Cohen-esque vocal resting above his skronky guitar lines, which Boyatzis and his Sigmatropic fuse with strings and a shuffling drum beat. Boyatzis says that several artists offered up variations on more than one track, which left him with a surplus of material that might see the light of day on various vinyl releases, suggesting that this line of music isn't anywhere close to played out. "Besides," he says, "there are still more poems by George Seferis that already met with the Sigmatropic music that are unused. I cannot rule out the possibility of eventually using some of these songs in one of our future releases." The track listing for Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories: "Introduction (On Stage, 2)," with Robert Wyatt "Haiku One," Laetitia Sadier "Haiku Two," Martine Roberts "Haiku Three (In the Museum Garden)," Mark Mulcahey "Haiku Four," Alejandro Escovedo "Haiku Five," Carla Torgerson "Haiku Six," Carla Torgerson and Akis Boyatzis "Haiku Seven" "Haiku Eight," Edith Frost "Haiku Nine," Mark Eitzel "Haiku Ten," Cat Power "Haiku Eleven," Simon Joyner "Haiku Twelve (Unprofitable Boat Line)," Lee Ranaldo "Haiku Thirteen (Sick Fury)," Alex Gordon "Haiku Fourteen" (sung in Greek) "Haiku Fourteen," John Grant (sung in English) "Haiku Fifteen," James William Hindle "Haiku Sixteen," Lee Ranaldo "Dead Sea (Logbook II)," James Sclavunos "Water Warm (Sketches for Summer)," Pinkie Maclure "This Human Body," Howe Gelb "The Jasmine," Steve Wynn ANDREW DANSBY (November 19, 2003) SLUG Magazine Dec. 2003 CD Reviews http://www.slugmag.com/ Sigmatropic 16 Haiku & Other Stories Thirsty Ear This is quite possibly the most beautiful recording I’ve ever heard. Not beautiful in the sense that I was personally deprived of my breath in a moment of surreal ecstasy though; it’s more of a stereotypical beauty (is that an oxymoron?), as if they set out in the beginning to actually make the most beautiful recording of all time, so it loses quite a bit in its superficiality. This album is the poetry of Greek poet laureate George Seferis translated into English, read by indie rockers like Sonic Youth’s Lee Ranaldo and Stereolab’s Laetitia Sadier and set to the ethereally spacey music of Sigmatropic. The poetry is good, but this recording overall is a bit unbearable. For one thing, most of the poems are haikus (very short) and the songs are all two or three minutes long. This leaves, in some cases, quite a bit of dead space while the listener is craving more words, or in others, a lot of repeating single lines while the listener wishes they would shut up. I’m torn on whether or not to recommend this album, and if I do, who exactly to recommend it to, so I’ll puss out and take the safe bet by saying “Try reading a book, you uncultured, illiterate slobs!” –Nate REVIEWS | FEATURES | DEPARTMENTS | BOOMBOX | FORUM | MISC http://www.splendidezine.com/ Sigmatropic is a revolving group of Greek musicians, brought together by producer and multi-instrumentalist Akis Boyatzsis to create electronica of considerable subtlety and finesse. This is technically the third release of 16 Haiku -- but don't worry, it's far from being merely reissued or retooled. The first version was released in Greece and featured the poetry of Greek Nobel Laureate George Seferis. Given its success as a domestic release, the rest of Europe decided to take a crack at Sigmatropic's mojo last year. The poems were translated into English and sung by a host of indie rock royalty: Cat Power, Robert Wyatt, Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab), Mark Eitzel, Steve Wynn, Howe Gelb, Lee Ranaldo, et cetera. Now, Thirsty Ear has brought the album stateside for its "third release". Sigmatropic 16 Haiku and Other Stories Thirsty Ear Format Reviewed: CD Soundclip: "Introduction" As you can imagine, such a varied list of vocalists is bound to bring with it a variety of approaches. It's unlikely that any but the most stalwartly open-minded of indie fans wouldn't play favorites (even just a teensy bit) with 16 Haiku's guest list. That's all right -- so many prominent groups/artists are represented that there's something for everyone. One of my favorites is Robert Wyatt's haunting reading of the introduction, accompanied by Fender Rhodes, violin and drums. There's a spare economy here that supplies plenty of room for Wyatt's pliant reading of the poem, which begins, "Bells were heard, and messengers arrived, I wasn't expecting them..." Equally compelling in its own way is "Haiku Ten", sung by Cat Power's Chan Marshall. Stathis Ioannou's electric guitar finds a timbre and demeanor that reflects the vocalist's own solo work, while Antonis Livieratos and Kriton Beyer fill in the sonic landscape with a variety of effects and Yannis Tryferoulis creates a rich rhythmic background with his drumming. Laetitia Sadier's voice is modulated to fit within the fabric of the electronic tapestry woven on "Haiku One", but still rides above the digital swell. Accompanied by Spaghetti Western-styled Telecaster twanging, Mark Eitzel's contribution on "Haiku Nine" is often more intoned (in a basso rumble) than sung -- a delivery that matches the enigmatic tone of the poem "Naked Woman, The pomegranate she threw was full of Stars". The CD's "enhanced" feature is a video of "Haiku Five", on which Boyazsis is joined by Carla Torgerson. This track features a host of instruments (as well as extensive treatment of Torgerson's voice): glockenspiel, wah-wahed electric guitar and viola. 16 Haiku and Other Stories is definitely a case in which too many cooks have not spoiled the stew. The music is compelling, attractive and easily stands up to repeated listening. -- Christian Carey Tiny Mix Tapes Friday, October 31, 2003 Cat Power, Sonic Youth, Stereolab, & Wyatt Practice Haikus Together, Eat Unagi For all you bedroom rockers out there who’d sometimes rather be at home with your nose in a book, the atmospheric Greek band Sigmatropic are releasing Sixteen Haiku and Other Stories in the U.S. on January 20. A variety of indie artists — most notably Chan Marshall (Cat Power), Stereolab’s Laetitia Sadier, Mark Eitzel, Sonic Youth’s Lee Ranaldo, Alejandro Escovedo, Steve Wynn, and Giant Sand’s Howe Gelb — are lending their voices to this interpretation of poet George Seferis’ haiku. Seferis, considered the most distinguished Greek poet of the 1930s, won the Nobel prize for Literature in 1963, and these poems are apparently so good that they’ve also been covered by the BBC Welsh Symphony Orchestra in 1984. With this collaboration, Sigmatropic aims to give “the Japanese chopped up poetry style” (three verses of 5-7-5 syllables usually depicting seasonal changes) its day in the sun, with bandmember Akis Boyatzis in charge of creating a fitting musical backdrop. Sigmatropic’s website explains: “His programming skills weave an ethereal spell full of Spartan peaks and bleak terrains. The voiceovers float around like a magic wand spelling out stories about colours, nature and the seasons ... (the soundtrack is) grainy and mystical.” We shall see! If the idea intrigues you, tide yourself over in the meantime with “The Haiku Year," a book of spare, intimate poetry exchanged between friends Michael Stipe, Tom Gilroy, Douglas A. Martin, Grant Lee Phillips, Anna Grace, and Steve Earle. For more information, as well as some mp3 downloads, go here: http://www.sigmatropic.gr/ Tracklist: 1. "[Intro] on stage, 2" Robert Wyatt 2. "Haiku one" by Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab) 3. "Haiku two" by Martine Roberts (Broken Dog) 4. "Haiku three in the museum garden" by Mark Mulcahy 5. "Haiku four" by Alejandro Escovedo 6. "Haiku five" by Carla Torgerson (The Walkabouts) 7. "Haiku six" by Carla Torgerson & Akis Boyatzis 8. "Haiku seven" by Akis Boyatzis 9. "Haiku eight" by Edith Frost 10. "Haiku nine young fate" by Mark Eitzel 11. "Haiku ten" by Cat Power 12. "Haiku eleven" by Simon Joyner 13. "Haiku twelve unprofitable boat line" by Lee Ranaldo 14. "Haiku thirteen sick fury" by Alex Gordon (Lincoln) 15. "Haiku fourteen A" by Akis Boyatzis (in greek) 16. "Haiku fourteen B" by John Grant (The Czars) 17. "Haiku fifteen" by James William Hindle 18. "Haiku sixteen" by Lee Ranaldo 19. "Dead Sea (Logbook II)" by James Sclavunos 20. "Water Warm (sketches for a summer)" by Pinkie Maclure 21. "This Human Body" by Howe Gelb (Giant Sand) 2.2 "The Jasmine" by Steve Wynn posted by rachel Rock, pop and prose By GINA VIVINETTO, Times Pop Music Critic Published May 20, 2004 A DISC OF HAIKU: 16 Haiku & Other Stories (Thirsty Ear) is an album of poems by Greek Nobel laureate George Seferis sung in English and performed musically by a cast of hep indie rockers including Cat Power, Mark Eitzel (American Music Club), Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab) and Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth). The album was shaped by Greek multi-instrumentalist Akis Boyatzis, better known as Sigmatropic, who was determined to give the disc a global sound, heavy on the cross-cultural vibe. "In this ever-shrinking political world of ours," Boyatzis told Magnet, "people of all backgrounds - especially artists - need to keep abreast of each other's thoughts and world views." http://www.urgentculture.com/jaime/articles.html Sigmatropic -- "Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories" Exotic, peaceful, mystical, and educational, Sigmatropic landed a deal with some poems by the late Greek Nobel Laureate George Seferis and put them to music, with some of our favorite singers telling stories within haiku poems and, as the title reads, “other stories.” The music is ambient, spaced out and patterned around the often-repeated haikus because the poems are so short. It's music that makes me want to drink fine red wine at an intimate dinner party, or lounge in a hot bath while incense is burning, this CD is well worth the exploration of the curious. Lyrics that make you think would not be fitting for a wild house party, so I recommend it for lonely listening. It’s the perfect backdrop for a serious student, reading for midterms on the following day. Sounds of nature make it all the more relaxing and pleasant. With singers like Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab), Edith Frost, Mark Eitzel (American Music Club), Cat Power, Simon Joyner, Howe Gelb (Calexico) and many other rare delights, how can one go wrong? The poems on this record are like paintings. For example: “She rests her fingers/ on the sea-blue scarf/ Look, there: corals” paints such a vivid picture that lingers in the mind, making one hungry to learn more. There are enough to satisfy an appetite here: 22 tracks in total. -- Jaime Ohlsson (January 20, 2004) www.voir.ca [Montreal, Canada] 5 février 2004 Sigmatropic - (Thirsty Ear) Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories Jean-François Dupont Akis Boyatzis, l'âme de Sigmatropic, est peut-être inconnu ici-bas, mais il a un sacré culot d'avoir mis sur pied un projet d'une telle envergure. Boyatzis s'est basé sur les haïkus du Prix Nobel grec George Seferis pour composer une vingtaine de pièces musicales plutôt inclassables, entre folk, rock et musique électro. Puis ont été convoquées à cette expérience étrangement fascinante, aussi atmosphérique qu'organique, les voix de Cat Power, de Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab), de Mark Eitzel, de Robert Wyatt, de Lee Renaldo (Sonic Youth) et de bien d'autres, qui semblent y prendre un grand plaisir... Le plus surprenant est que l'aventure tient la route de façon formidable, malgré son grand fractionnement, et que Boyatzis a donné une belle unité d'ambiance à l'ensemble. Une agréable découverte ! Ny Sida [Sweden] SIGMATROPIC:16 HAIKU & OTHER STORIES Haiku är en japansk poesiform. Tonsatta av George Seferis och framförda av en rad av de största; Robert Wyatt, Alejandro Escovedo, Edith Frost, Howe Gelb, Lee Ranaldo, Carla "Walkabours" Torgenson, Laetitia "Stereolab" Sadier, James William Hindle, Mark Mulcahy, Steve Wynn och ett par till! Snygg - bra! # TMAST002 (251-1) www.flipart.blogspot.com [Portuguese] Sigmatropic/ Sixteen haikus and Other Stories Antonis Livieratos em parceria com Akis Boyatzis que cria a musica para a poesia de nada mais nada menos que de um laureado com o nobel, o Grego, George Seferis produzem este " Sixteen haikus and Other Stories " sigmatropic, é um conjunto de musicos gregos e o album saiu na grecia em 2002, mas Boyatzis resolveu internacionalizar o projecto utilizando a mesmissima musica mas com os Poemas devidamente traduzidos para Inglês e entregou as vocalizações a elite vejam vos mesmos, Robert Wyatt, Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab), Alejandro Escovedo, Mark Eitzel, Cat Power, Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth), Howe Gelb (Giant Sand), Steve Wynn (Dream Syndicate) e ainda ha mais, eu diria que quase me lembra o sahara blue do hector zazou e os poemas do Rimbaud, as faixas são 22 aqui ficam : 1. Introduction (On Stage, 2)(Robert Wyatt) 2. Haiku One (Laetitia Sadier) 3. Haiku Two (Martine Roberts) 4. Haiku Three (In the Museum Garden) (Mark Mulcahy) 5. Haiku Four (Alejandro Escovedo) 6. Haiku Five (Carla Torgerson) 7. Haiku Six (Carla Torgerson - ???? ?p???at???) 8. Haiku Seven (???? ?p???at???) 9. Haiku Eight (Edith Frost) 10. Haiku Nine (Mark Eitzel) 11. Haiku Ten (Cat Power) 12. Haiku Eleven (Simon Joyner) 13. Haiku Twelve (Unprofitable Boat Line) (Lee Ranaldo) 14. Haiku Thirteen (Sick Fury) (Alex Gordon) 15. Haiku Fourteen (Greek) (???? ?p???at???) 16. Haiku Fourteen (John Grant) 17. Haiku Fifteen (James William Hindle) 18. Haiku Sixteen (Lee Ranaldo) 19. Dead Sea (Logbook II) (James Sclavunos) 20. Water Warm (Sketches for a summer) (Pinkie Maclure) 21. This human body (Howe Gelb) 22. The Jasmine (Steve Wynn) PS . os ? em frente aos nomes conrresponde a letras gregas que não aparecem POSTED BY LFLIPCABRAL AT 8/4/2004 Médiathèque http://www.lamediatheque.be/ www.lamediatheque.be [Belgium] Médiathèque de Seraing Nos sélections Sigmatropic « Sixteen haiku & other stories » (Tongue master, Angleterre, 2003) XS353K (rock) 16 haiku (court poème d’origine japonaise, apparu au 16ième Siècle) basés sur l’œuvre du poète grec George Seferis, mis en musique de manière moderne et chantés par des artistes reconnus (Robert Wyatt, Steve Wynn, Lee Ranaldo, Mark Eitzel, Howe Gelb, Cat Power, …). La beauté, la densité et le caractère contradictoire de ces textes, ressortent pleinement, grâce à l’enluminure des voix et des arrangements sensibles (mandoline, guitares, violoncelle, piano, sampling, harpe celtique, basse, glockenspiel). SUPERBE !!! Tonträger-Review Sigmatropic - Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories Hitch-Hyke/Cargo Format: CD Ein Haiku ist eine alegorisches Kurzgedichtform, die im 16. Jahrhundert in Japan entstanden ist und Anfang des zwanzigsten Jahrhunderts Eingang in die westliche Lyrik gefunden hat. Meist in Form hermetischer dreizeiliger Sprüche gefasst, die vor allem atmosphärische Qualitäten aufweisen. Keines Beispiel: Der alte Teich. / Ein Frosch springt hinein- / das Geräusch des Wassers (Bashô). Sechzehn derartiger Formeln, verfasst vom griechischen Diplomaten, Essayisten, Poeten und Nobelpreis-Empfänger Giorgios Stylianou Seferiades und mit Hilfe der weiblichen Walkabouts-Stimme Carla Torgerson ins Englische übertragen, werden hier von der griechischen Formation Sigmatropic vertont. So entsteht ein musikalisches Kaleidoskop, das zunächst durch die Vielfalt der vortragenden Persönlichkeiten und die Unterschiedlichkeit Interpretationsansätze unterhält. Robert Wyatt, Edith Frost, Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab), Alejandro Escovedo, Mark Eitzel, Cat Power, Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth), Howe Gelb (Giant Sand), Steve Wynn (Dream Syndicate) - um nur einige zu nennen - reichen hier als Interpreten den Staffelstab weiter. Aber auch musikalisch gesehen purzeln hier ganz verschieden geformte und unterschiedlich eingefärbte Strasssplitter durch diesen lyrischen Mirkokosmos. Viel elektronisches ist zu hören aber auch klassische Gitarrensounds, die Arrangements - eher arty. Wie schon die Rezeptionsgeschichte des Haikus selbst, so ist auch dieses Projekt ein transkulturelles Phänomen und ein nicht nur interessantes, sondern auch löbliches Unterfangen. Über den ästhetischen Wert von "Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories" kann man allerdings geteilter Meinung sein. -Dirk Ducar- Surf-Empfehlung: http://www.sigmatropic.gr/ www.musicline.de/de/artist/Sigmatropic www.platomania.nl Home>Mania>Genres>Pop & Rock> VARIOUS VARIOUS - Sigmatropic- Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories Dit is een heel bijzonder project. Voor Sigmatropic werden gedichten van de Griek George Seferis op muziek gezet en vervolgens werd een keur aan artiesten gevraagd om de drie- of vier- regelige gedichten in te zingen. En dan hebben we het over artiesten als Robert Wyatt, Mark Mulcahy, Mark Eitzel, Cat Power, Howe Gelb, Lee Ranaldo van Sonic Youth, Laetitia Sadier van Stereolab, Carla Torgerson van de Walkabouts en nog een aantal anderen. Zelfs Alejandro Escovedo kwam van zijn ziekbed om een gedicht op te nemen. Maar laten we bij het begin beginnen. George Seferis is en Griekse dichter die in 1963 de Nobelprijs voor de literatuur kreeg. Zijn werk werd al eerder door Mikis Theodorakis op muziek gezet. De gedichten op de cd zijn allemaal haiku’s, korte gedichten van drie of vier regels met voorgeschreven aantal lettergrepen. Terug naar de muziek. Het is bijzonder om zoveel talent bij elkaar te hebben op ιιn cd. Kritiekpuntje is echter de begeleidende muziek. Die werd gespeeld door een Griekse band en is licht triphop- achtig. Jammer is dat de muzikanten de neiging hebben om de muziek te laten overheersen over de teksten en de vocalen. Wat subtieler opgebouwde nummers als The Jasmine, met vocalen van Steve Wynn, en Carla Torgerson’s Haiku Five vallen dan ook positief op. Bijzonder is Sigmatropic zeker. En voor de snelle beslissers is er een versie beschikbaar met een bonus- cd met nog eens zes nummers. Recensent : Han Orsel Genre: Pop & Rock Verschenen in Plato Mania nr: 185 Datum recensie: 28-11-2003 CD Dit artikel heeft 0 reacties gekregen Plato Mania waardering: http://www.ton-um-ton-records.at Musikjournalisten Reihenfolge nach Eingang der Zusendung Nadir (Now!) 1. David Sylvian Blemish 2. Robert Wyatt Cuckooland 3. No-Man Together We’re Stranger 4. Sigmatropic Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories 5. White Stripes Elephant 6. Bell Oeil Hurle Tout ...Lιo Ferrι 7. John Cale HoboSapiens 8. Joe Henry Tiny Voices 9. The Angels Of Light Everything Is Good Here/Please Come Home Ryan Adams Love Is Hell Pt. 1 & Pt. 2 10. http://www.i-n-f-r-a.net/chronique.php?ID=246 chronique Sigmatropic Sixteen haiku & other stories ( Tongue Master ) - 2003 Etonnant parcours pour ce disque venu de Grèce et signé sous le nom de Sigmatropic, projet musical emmené par Akis Boyatzis : en 2002, cet album en langue grecque marque la rencontre entre la musique et la poésie de Giorgos Seferis, lauréat du prix Nobel de littérature dans les années 60. Puis vient l'idée de donner une dimension internationale à cet album, et c'est ainsi qu'après une traduction des textes en anglais (les premiers écrits de Seferis, dérivés des haiku japonais), Sigmatropic se voit rejoindre par dix-huit prestigieux invités (dont Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab), Robert Wyatt, Lee Ranaldo (Sonic youth), Howe Gelb (Giant sand) ou encore Chan Marshall (Cat power)) pour élaborer une nouvelle version de l'album. Sixteen haiku & other stories offre de multiples combinaisons d'instruments et si les morceaux évoluent dans un registre rock, on notera néanmoins la présence récurrente d'une électronique finalement assez proche du trip hop rencontré sur les albums d'Andrea Parker. Assez rapidement, on se rend compte que chaque participant n'a pas souffert de réels problèmes d'adaptation, parvenant à conserver son identité vocale, même plongé dans un environnement musical inhabituel : un point fort qui permet de maintenir la pertinence des morceaux. Après une introduction signée Robert Wyatt, on entre dans le vif du sujet avec Laetitia Sadier, qui dans son style si particulier dépeint le Haiku one dans la tradition de ces poèmes d'origine japonaise : la description de la nature (couleurs, contrastes, saisons...) sur une structure de dix sept syllabes (en trois vers : 5+7+5). Au fil des titres, la prédominance des textures organiques s'affirme tout en sachant varier les plaisirs, par exemple lorsqu'un trip hop aux reflets orientaux s'immisce sur l'Haiku three de Mark Mulcahy. L'éventail des ambiances proposées est large, entre la voix rauque de Mark Eitzel qui glisse sur des nappes atmosphériques (Haiku nine), et les deux participations mystiques de Lee Ranaldo sur un fond musical minimaliste (Haiku twelve, puis Haiku Sixteen). Mais le véritable bijou du disque est signé Chan Marshall, qui en seulement 1'20, réchauffe l'album de sa voix incomparable sur Haiku ten, titre à la mélodie très particulière (au premier abord, cet instrumental guitare/basse aurait même pu paraître inadapté, mais il n'en est rien). Il manque cependant une certaine cohésion à Sixteen haiku & other stories : l'album souffre de la variété des timbres de voix et de l'hétérogénéité de la qualité des morceaux, qui conduisent à un enchaînement des titres parfois difficile. Il n'en reste pas moins que la version internationale de ce projet de Sigmatropic recèle quelques perles à forte sensualité. Antoine Deux liens pour finir : tout d’abord, le site officiel particulièrement complet, qui propose paroles et extraits : http://www.sigmatropic.gr/ Et pour en savoir plus sur Giorgos Seferis, le site du Nobel e-museum. Tracklist : 1. Introduction ('On Stage 2') - feat. Robert Wyatt 2. Haiku One - feat. Laetitia Sadier 3. Haiku Two - feat. Martine Roberts 4. Haiku Three ('In The Museum Garden') - feat. Mark Muleahy 5. Haiku Four - feat. Alejandro Escovedo 6. Haiku Five - feat. Carla Torgerson 7. Haiku Six - feat. Carla Torgerson and Akis Boyatzis 8. Haiku Seven - feat. Akis Boyatzis 9. Haiku Eight - feat. Edith Frost 10. Haiku Nine - feat. Mark Eitzel 11. Haiku Ten - feat. Cat Power 12. Haiku Eleven - feat. Simon Joyner 13. Haiku Twelve ('Unprofitable Boat Line') - feat. Lee Ranaldo 14. Haiku Thirteen ('Sick Fury') - feat. Alex Gordon 15. Haiku Fourteen (a) (Sung in Greek) - feat. Akis Boyatzis 16. Haiku Fourteen (b) - feat. John Grant 17. Haiku Fifteen - feat. James William Hindle 18. Haiku Sixteen - feat. Lee Ranaldo 19. Dead Sea ('Log Book II') - feat. James Sclavunos 20. Water Warm ('Sketches for a Summer') - feat. Pinkie Maclure 21. This Human Body - feat. Howe Gelb 22. The Jasmine - feat. Steve Wynn 23. Data track Autres articles sur Sigmatropic .... + news : Chamber Music et son prestigieux line-up (16-03-2004) www.liabilitywebzine.com 16*17 syllabes Une compilation très originale sort dans de nombreux pays européens ces jours-ci. Celle-ci est en fait la concrétisation sur disque d'un projet international initié par les grecs de Sigmatropic ayant invité la crème des artistes indés mondiaux à interpréter des haïkus (ces fameux poèmes courts et contemplatifs d'origine japonaise bien connus des Dionysos). Ainsi retrouve-t-on entre autres sur ce "Sixteen Haiku And Other Stories" les voix de la trop rare Carla Torgerson des Walkabouts, de Chan Marshall (Cat Power), Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth) ou Mark Eitzel. Pour vous consoler de l'absence de distributeur pour la France (a priori), vous pourrez vous rendre sur le lien cité en source pour écouter plusieurs de ces morceaux. Source : http://www.sigmatropic.gr/english/16Haiku_Intern/credits.htm (le 23-10-2003 par Thomas F.) www.internautas.org Vocalistas invitados: Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab), Alejandro Escovedo, Carla Togerson (The Walkabouts), Howe Gelb (Giant Sand), Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth), John Grant (Czars), Cat Power, Mark Eitzel, Edith Frost, Steve Wynn, etc. Sigmatropic Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories CD: 21,80 € Akis Boyatzis, nucleo permanente y cabeza pensante de la banda, ha elegido el nombre de Sigmatropic (derivado del de un proceso químico) para firmar su particular combinación de minimalismo, electrónica ingrávida y aires mediterráneos. Estos mismos ingredientes son los que conforman el revestimento sonoro de “Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories”, proyecto concebido para musicar la poesía de su compatriota George Seferis, Premio Nobel de Literatura y destacado luchador por la libertad durante la dictadura de Papadopoulos. Hasta aquí, parece que hablemos de un álbum con poca capacidad para trascender las fronteras helenas y probablemente así hubiera sido si la increíblemente bella música compuesta por Boyatzis y el hipnótico ritmo de la poesía de Seferis no hubiera conseguido seducir a tantos y tantos artistas que se han mostrado encantados de prestar su apoyo al proyecto. Hasta dieciocho artistas de primera línea internacional han aceptado hacerse cargo de las voces para esta edición internacional, íntegramente cantada en inglés, de “Sixteen Haikus & Other Stories”. El listado de vocalistas impresiona a simple vista, pero que nadie caiga en el error de pensar que está frente a un pastiche de excesivas pretensiones intelectuales y con la acumulación de nombres propios como único atractivo. Todo lo contrario, este disco impresiona por su seductora delicadeza, por lo envolvente de las composiciones de Boyatzis y por unas interpretaciones vocales absolutamente magistrales que nos muestran, en muchos casos, insospechadas facetas de músicos de sobras conocidos. Si alguien se plantea otorgar premios a las más gratas sorpresas del año, en Sigmatropic ha encontrado un serio candidato. o dominio dos deuses_[Portugal] A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0-9 Disco Grupo: Sigmatropic Título: Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories [Enhanced Limited Edition] Ano: 2004 Editora: Tongue Master Records Formato: 2CD Obs: Distribuição MusicaActiva Os Sigmatropic são um grupo grego, liderado por Akis Boyatzis, que conseguiu uma proeza difícil de imaginar: reunir num único disco, ainda por cima produzido longe dos habituais círculos nodais da produção pop-rock, nomes incontornáveis da música de qualidade que se faz hoje em dia como Robert Wyatt, Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab, Monade), Carla Torgerson (Walkabouts, Chris & Carla), Mark Eitzel (American Music Club), Cat Power, Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth), James Sclavunos (Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, The Vanity Set), Pinkie Maclure, Howe Gelb (Giant Sand) ou Steve Wynn (Dream Syndicate), para referir apenas os mais mediáticos. Qual o segredo que permitiu reunir toda esta gente? Por um lado o conceito: musicar a poesia de George Seferis, homem das letras, grego, que em 1963 foi agraciado com o Nobel da Literatura. Por outro, a ajuda de Carla Torgerson, que se empenhou pessoalmente no projecto e ajudou a reunir as vozes convidadadas. «Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories» gira em torno de Haiku, uma forma poética japonesa que sugiu no século XVI e que foi adoptada por Seferis a partir de 1929. Originalmente, um Haiku era um poema curto constituído por dezassete sílabas numa única linha. Na sua forma europeia constitui-se em três versos de 5, 7 e 5 sílabas, com a preocupação adicional de evitar rimas. Ao longo dos seus dezasseis Haiku, e de quatro outros poemas, a música dos Sigmatropic surge como o complemento ideal para adensar as texturas de fundo e para sublinhar o tom maioritariamente intimista com que os famosos declamadores se entregam à tarefa de desprender as palavras e de as fazer perdurar. Um disco que, adoptando um conceito que não é novo, acaba por se revelar um dos expoentes do género e de audição compulsiva. www.pitas.com Sexy Singles: * "Haiku 10," Sigmatropic feat. Cat Power * "Offcell," Pinback * "In the Thick," Ill Lit * "New Laboratory Assistant," Sushirobo * "Jersey Lover," Opti-Grab * "P.C.B. 98," Dan Sartain * "Still in Love Song," The Stills * "Memorial," Explosions in the Sky * "But For You," Matthew Dear * "New Year's Eve," The Walkmen * "Yeah (Stupid Version)," LCD Soundsystem www.content.mail.ru/arch/7542/378413.html Участники Stereolab и Sonic Youth Записали Хайку Ряд видных рок-исполнителей приняли участие в записи альбома на стихи лауреата Нобелевской премии Джорджа Сефериса (George Seferis), сообщает сайт billboard.com. Альбом, музыку для которого написал участник проекта Sigmatropic Акис Бояцис (Alis Boyatzis), первоначально вышел в Греции. Затем необходимые тексты Сефериса были переведены на английский. Международная версия проекта "Sixteen Haiku And Other Stories" увидит свет 20 января на фирме грамзаписи "Thirsty Ear". Основа альбома, как ясно из названия, - цикл из шестнадцати хайку Сефериса. Среди музыкантов, принявших участие в записи альбома, - бывший участник Soft Machine Роберт Уайатт (Robert Wyatt), Джеймс Склавонос (James Sclavonos) из Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, вокалистка Stereolab Летисиа Садье (Laetitia Sadier), Ли Ранальдо (Lee Ranaldo) из Sonic Youth, Алехандро Эсковедо (Alejandro Escovedo), сам Акис Бояцис и многие другие. Несколько записанных в ходе работы над проектом композиций выйдут до конца года ограниченным тиражом на двенадцатидюймовой грампластинке. (Rockmusic.ru) Jam [Italy] RockStar [Italy] LA RECENSIONE SIGMATROPIC Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories ETICHETTA: HITCH-HYKE - WHITE’N’BLACK ANNO DI PUBBLICAZIONE: 2003 DURATA: 58m 23s TIPO DI SUPPORTO: CD TRACKLIST: 1> Introduction (On Stage 2) - feat. Robert Wyatt 2> Haiku One - feat. Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab) 3> Haiku Two - feat. Martine Roberts (Broken Dog) 4> Haiku Three - feat. Mark Mulcahy 5> Haiku Four - feat. Alejandro Escovedo 6> Haiku Five - feat. Carla Torgerson (Walkabouts) 7> Haiku Six - feat. Carla Torgerson and Akis Boyatzis 8> Haiku Seven - feat. Akis Boyatzis 9> Haiku Eight - feat. Edith Frost 10> Haiku Nine - feat. Mark Eitzel 11> Haiku Ten - feat. Cat Power 12> Haiku Eleven - feat. Simon Joyner 13> Haiku Twelve - feat. Lee Renaldo (Sonic Youth) 14> Haiku Thirteen - feat. Alex Gordon (Lincoln) 15> Haiku Fourteen (a) - feat. Akis Boyatzis 16> Haiku Fourteen (b) - feat. John Grant (The Czars) 17> Haiku Fifteen - feat. James William Hindle 18> Haiku Sixteen - feat. Lee Renaldo 19> Dead Sea - feat. James Sclavunos (Bad Seeds) 20> Water Warm - feat. Pinkie Maclure 21> This Human Body - feat. Howe Gelb 22> The Jasmine - feat. Steve Wynn Davvero un lavoro interessante quello svolto dai Sigmatropic, una band greca che ha deciso di realizzare un album utilizzando gli haiku ed altri scritti del poeta George Seferis. La strumentazione utilizzata dal gruppo è un melting pot di tradizione (archi, mandolino, pianoforte, glockenspiel…) e modernità (programmazioni, synths e trattamenti elettronici), il risultato ottenuto è altamente suggestivo, nettamente superiore ai lavori di moderna etnicità oggi in voga. “Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories” si muove con sicurezza nella terra di mezzo tra il “folk” ed il “dub”, un suono attuale che non distrugge la tradizione ma ne amplia i canoni con passione ed umiltà. Uno dei tratti distintivi dell’album è la partecipazione di guest vocals d’eccezione: Robert Wyatt, Howe Gelb, Steve Wynn, Mark Eitzel, Cat Power, Edith Frost ed ancora le voci di Stereolab, Walkabouts, Lincoln, The Czars, Sonic Youth ed altri ancora. Le ventidue tracce si susseguono velocemente caratterizzandosi per la spontanea ed ispirata scrittura, difficile quindi citare un brano a discapito di altri anche se “This Human Body” e “Haiku Thirteen” emergono grazie allo splendido lavoro di Howe Gelb e Lee Ranaldo. Un’opera atipica, sfuggente ed a suo modo unica. [Lodo "incostituzionale" Schifani] [ crsvitali@libero.it ] LINK: http://www.idbox.it/external_url.html?url=http://www.sigmatropic.gr/