Showing posts with label experimental music interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label experimental music interview. Show all posts

Sunday, December 13, 2020

Interview to Terbeschikkingstelling (2020)

 

INTERVIEW TO Terbeschikkingstelling


Today we did an interview to the experimental, multi-instrumentalist composer Terbeschikkingstelling from Netherlands.


 https://sturmunddrang.bandcamp.com/

 https://www.facebook.com/T.B.Stelling/

 

First say welcome to this written interview for Cian Orbe blog.

Glad to be here and thanks so much for the invite.

 

-What means the name: Terbeschikkingstelling?

Terbeschikkingstelling, abbreviated to tbs, is a measure in Dutch criminal law that a judge can impose on a suspect of a crime, with a minimum of four years imprisonment or of a few specifically mentioned offenses ( e.g. threats and stalking). The condition is that the judge is convinced that the suspect was suffering from a defective development or morbid mental disorder at the time of the offense. I think you would literally translate it it as a noun meaning something like being put at disposal. In descriptions and artwork I also incorporate mental state related subjects and references.  

I have also always used it as putting my music and performance art at the disposal of those willing to dive into the experience. As a joke I took a stagename Volker Störtebeker, since old bandmate Emiels lastname starts with T and B, so our combined last names would form our abbreviated bandname, TBS.

- Which are the concept behind your music, how you categorize your own music?  

In January of 2017 Emiel and I started as a duo combining improvisation, noise, absurdism and performance art. It was our goal to create music that could not be valued as in that people could not say it was good or bad music, but it appealed to you or not. Having images when we played like creating noisescapes. People would ask us what we thought of it, we would always dodge that question and say that that didn’t matter, it was/is much more interesting and important to us what it meant to the person asking.

In 2019 Emiel quit the band and our duo became my uno. Since than I have been seeking ways to reinvent Terbeschikkingstelling, I did so collaborations with friends here. 2020 is my most productive year, corona blessed me. I have done loads of collaborations, compilations and met dozens of immens nice and lovely people from all over the world to work with.

We called Terbeschikkingstelling avantgarde improv noize. I guess now I’d say I am an improvisor trying out multiple ways to “survive”… sometimes testing just one instrument in absurd improvisation, sometimes creating chaotic analog noise or ambient, all pretty crude raw and lo-fi. Playing trombone, euphonium, sousaphone, didgeridoo, bassguitar, a little percussion and trying to learn how to create digital/electronical noise (stompboxes / daw). 


- Do you release music only under Terbeschikkingstelling name of you have other monikers or music projects, bands?

No, Terbeschikkingstelling is one of some acts I am in. 

- My oldest band is my skaband Knight Susan (est. 2011). 

- Rutger van Driel from Lärmschutz and me are both trombonists and friends, we did some things together and decided to form LärmSchutzTerBeschikkingStellingCOÖPeratie (LSTBSCOÖP).

- In 2020 I started Dolph S. Lundgren for my love of creating crappy crude raw artwork and to create experimental lo-fi noise. 

- I joined/cofounded Manet Nox, an absurdist instrumental doom venture. 

- I am part of international noisecore act Pillow Humper

- Recently I joined the ranks of free jazzpunk / experimental funkband 7DSC (also international). 

 

- In what year did you start making music? which was your first band/project?

I started playing trombone when I was 9 years old in 1990. I joined a marching band which supplied me with my first trombone. It was probably 1996 when I started to play the bassguitar because my passion was hardcore punk and founded my first band with two friends called Funky Monkey Business.

 


- Which inspiration you have from the place where you live? There's some inspiration from your country in your music?

I have been formed by the country and place I grew up in. But I can’t say that the fact that I am from the Netherlands inspires me in my music. Although I do like the creative atmosphere in my hometown Groningen. There is no closing time and there is a lot of options for culturally engaged people. Th experimental scene is tiny. You know each other. Some acts and festivals, of which also organise one. Sound Art Festival “het Rumoer”. Making deals is easy because you know all the people and everbody works with a similar d.i.y.-mindset. So inspiration maybe from the commitment of the people, whether it is in experimental or ska music (also play and organise ska: Knight Susan & Skasjock), both are marginal scenes but all involved have big hearts and all do it for the love of the music.  

 

- Which are your favorite music projects and visual/plastic artists who inspire your work?

Kurushimi, Naked City, Dead Neanderthals, Zu, My Minds Mine, Denak, Skatalites, Diploid, Duma, Specials, Grachan Moncur III, Roswell Rudd, Ornette Coleman, Slayer, Minor Threat, Slapshot, The Ex, The Clash, Sin Dios, Charles Bronson, Napalm Death, Youngblood Brass, Mnozil Brass, Fanfare Ciocărlia, Lärmschutz, NSNC, Sexy Crocodile for Dinner, Ambrass Band, Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra and many, many more.

I have taken a lot from the raw and do it yourself attitude from hardcore punk (my roots), from (free) jazz I have taken my love for improvisation, from grindcore the agressive and political nature and vocals and experimental music the continuous way of rediscovering the usage of your own instrument and the playground that it is.

For my artwork I like raw crudeness, the absurdity of surrealism, liveliness of expressionism and clarity of soviet realism. No particular artists well Banksy is a hero.  


- How do you see the current Experimental music scene?

I think it is a very warm and diverse community. You can approach a lot of people very easily and everyone, I have met up until now, is very cooperative and all think in opportunities. Whether is is musicians to collaborate with, netlabels that produce collaborations or just people to talk with, it is a very welcoming openminded bunch. I feel right a home.

 

- We have always seen that you love collaborations, which have been your favorites?

Impossible task I’ll mention some. I really liked doing my Covid Collaboration series it was my first actively reaching out to work with others. A special thanks to Neal D. Retke ({AN} Eel), because he responded first and opened this wonderful international community to me. Also all of my collaborations with members of the Veneto Noise Crew, Luca and Alex (Sexy Crocodile Frederico, Dark Alley and Toilette), there is a kindred spirit and love for the raw and unpolished. The Symbolist was awesome very talented and with loads of humor in the process. Last but not least LSTBSCOÖP (Lärmschutz + Terbeschikkingstelling) Rutger and me both play trombone, work fast and just try everything we would want. Which works fabulous!     

- Do you play live performances?

Yes, and from that I get most energy… I am very extraverted and outgoing and love to just goof around and be between people whilst creating music. If someone would like to see some footage just type Terbeschikkingstelling in youtube and look for my ugly head 😉.

 

- Which is your favorite song and album created by yourself?

Pfff, this is a hard nut to crack. Favorite song really, I couldn’t say. Album I think I would say all the collaborations. If I have to choose I think I am damned proud of “¿¡…Paleolithic Diet…!?” which is the first compilation I curated. Only vocals and based around the theme of cavepeople. I was so amazed by all the response and people participating and really like the mix of different vocal approaches.

https://sturmunddrang.bandcamp.com/album/paleolithic-diet

 

- Tell us about the concept & the creation process of one of your latest works: "Trøpix Döndûr" released by Kermesse Records.

link: https://archive.org/details/terbeschikkingstelling-tropix-dondur-krnet062

For me a lot of times I start with cover art, so for a long time I had the cover and the name, but no idea what to do with it. I slightly play sousaphone and sometimes the way I play it reminds me of a tropic storm. So one afternoon I was goofing around and made it my mission to cover the song “You Suffer” by Napalm Death, which fittingly became Soussuffer. After that al the songs came.

I had listened to a lot of Kermesse Records already and like the outlook Topi and his label have, kindred to my approach. So we started talking and Topi liked the music and wanted to publish it. As a little detail I asked if I could at their logo to the cover, because it looks very nice and cute. Topi saw the fun in that and so it is there. Also nice to converse in Español since it is the language of my girlfriend and speaking about music in it adds an extra layer to it. ¡De nuevo, muchas gracias por la oportunidad, Topi, buena honda!


- Tell us about the underground music scene in Netherlands or in your zone. and which are your favorite artists from your country?

It is very tiny a microscene. I would say it is not really regional but national, you have clutters of music in some places but to me I don’t see a regional base. A lot is d.i.y. in squats, community centers and spaces you can find to do stuff. But all in all very creative and approachable. Some nice bands are Dead Neanderthals, Albatre, Lärmschutz, Machinefabriek, Orphax, Cactus Truck, Waan van de Dag, North Sea Noise Collective, Kasper van Hoek, Zeisz]] and Elaltitan and many more. 

 

- Any anecdote that you want to share with us in the creation of some track?

The creation of Soussuffer was a hard one, since the original is just 3/4 seconds. I pushed it to hard burst my lips and my mouthpiece turned bloodred. After taking care of it I recorded the rest of the album.

 

- Any news for 2021 in your music project?

I am gonna do a jazz album, there will be a second part collab with Frederico Zgomot / The Symbolist and probaly collab with Juanito))) about Ikea.

 

- Any other thing that you want to say to your listeners?

Always eat your vegetables and embrace your internal lunacy, it’s wicked fun!

 

 

 

Monday, December 7, 2020

Interview to Rutger van Driel (2020)

 Interview to Rutger van Driel

https://larmschutz.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/larmschutzmusic/

http://www.larmschutz.nl/  

 

First say welcome to this written interview for CIan Orbe blog. Today we make an interview to the multi-instrumentalist dutch composer Rutger van Driel (part of Lärmschutz duo)

- Which are the concept behind your music project, how you categorize your own music? 

Whatever Lärmschutz does, it is (almost) always free improvisation, whether it is for our semi-classical Tafelmusik-series, our attemps to harsh noise, the jazz-like Wood and Tin-series (just guitar and trombone) or the more rythmic approach for our latest split with Noiose. We do whatever we feel like and wherever the music takes us. We even have one recording on which the music demanded us to sing, which we have never done before and never after. It is up to you to find out which one. So we touch upon a lot of genres but is always created out of nothing with a diy-attitude.

 


- Do you release music under your name? or only under the duo Lärmschutz?

do you have other active or past music projects?

There have been very few occasions when I’ve released music under my alias RVD. One was for tow prepared guitar solo’s for a compilation on Humanhood Recordings on which my Lärmschutz partner in crime Stef Brans also contributed, so to avoid confusion we did this under our own name.
I also have a project with Spelonk, a violin/electronics musician from my hometown Utrecht. We have released two albums so far, called Spelonk vs RVD and RVD vs Spelonk. Everything else I create in this genre I do under the name Lärmschutz. This can be solo, duo or even an octet.


I have a variety of active bands: 

- Graeae (dark-jazz/soundtrack improvisation)

- Black Wall (groove noiserock)

- In Bad Met Marie (reggae/no wave impro)

- Extra Sneaky (nineties Mr. Bungle-like rock)

Furthermore are there a few regular collaborators with whom we perform and record, like Michiel Teunissen (bassclarinet), Jan Schellink (everything) and Niels Terhalle (poems). I have too many past projects to name, but they go from singer-songwriter (A Tergo) to ska (The Shenanigans) to indie (Eccentric Women and Sad Men) to noise (Gorgo), to name but a few.

 

- Lärmschutz is your main project? or do you have other active moniker or band?

Lärmschutz is definitely my main band. I can do whatever I want and Stef will follow and vice versa. We both challenge each other in doing new things and realizing there’s no limit to what we want to do. Since we have our own label we can release anything we like. In my other active bands (see previous post) there are much more limitations, wether it is in the songs or in the genre. I like that too,  but the ‘anything goes’ with Lärmschutz has definitely my preference. All musicians with whom I play in other bands, can also play a part in Lärmschutz, and many do. For example, there is this band Makaak and with the bassplayer and the singer we have as Lärmschutz released two albums called Macaca. I love this jazzlike crossover attitude.

 


- As multi instrumentalist, How many instruments you play, which is your favorite and why?

I think I can use every instrument in my recordings for Lärmschutz. I know enough about all kinds of instruments and my own limitations to use them in a Lärmschutztracksupporting way. My favourite is the slidetrombone. This is an instrument which you don’t usually see a lot in bands who make this kind of music. I really like experimenting with prepared trombone, all kinds of mutes, pedals and other effects and of course the natural sound. I like the double bass as well. This instrument is being played with your entire body and the vibrations are felt from your head to your toes. For both instruments your hearing is very important. There are no frets or keys or marks where the notes are. It’s all about listening and feeling. Very intense instruments, for both your body and your mind.

 

- In what year did you start making music? which was your first band?

In the part of Holland where I come from it was a custom to start playing the recorder at the age of seven for two years (that was in 1982) and then decide if you want to play another instrument in an orchestra, so I started playing the slidetrombone in a youth orchestra when I was nine. My first band was a coverband when I was fifteen. I played the bass in a band called Perception. My first real band came a few years later when I was nineteen. I started playing trombone in a skaband The Serial Skankers, the first of a couple of skabands for the next years. 

 

- Which inspiration you have from the place where you live? There's some inspiration from your country in your music?

I don’t really draw inspiration from the place where I llive. In my city, Utrecht, there is a pretty big indiescene, but there’s not really a scene in which we can take part. Not much room for bands who like to colour outside of the lines. There are other places in the Netherlands where there are more like-minded bands and places to perform, like Rotterdam or Nijmegen. I don’t take my country as an inspiration in any way.

 

- Which are your favorite music projects and visual/plastic artists who inspire your work?

All projects of Mauro Pawlowski, RudyTrouvé, John Zorn, everything Mike Patton, Zu and espescially Massimo Pupillo, Psychotic Quartet, Cactus Truck, Jeb Bisshop, dEus, Dead Neanderthals, X-Legged Sally, Frank Zappa, Dale Cooper Quartet, Colin Webster but also more mainstreamprojects like Arctic Monkeys, Beck, David Bowie, Nick Cave and I am a really big Queenfan (so I gladly took the chance to record Bohemian Rhapsody for the 60/70 bands-compilation).

  

- How do you see the current Experimental music scene?

I think the experimental music scene is connecting as never before. Al kinds of platforms make it possible to play with people from all around the world, and make and hear recordings with whoever we like. This was in the old days not possible. All the hometaping and stencilled fanzines were charming, but it was really difficult to get to music from different parts of the world. There’s a real lively scene on Bandcamp, Facebook and what not with musicians who find eachother and challenge each other. Also there are a lot of enthousiastic people who run (net)labels and create a space to put our music. Good times for the scene.

 

- What has been the experience of make live performances under Lärmschutz project or with other artists?

I love playing live. With Lärmschutz we always try to invite other people to play with on stage. We try to play with as many different people as possible. We always start with no appointments and no regulations, so it’s always kind of exciting what we come up with. We never choose the easy way, not for 5 people, not for 200 people. It’s really an adrenalinerush to play with Lärmschutz. It’s almost meditation. It is uncomparable.

 

 

- Which is your favorite song or composition and album created by yourself?

This is an unanswerable question. We only record stuff we like. There are some releases that come to mind. I think the dronesplit with The Howl Ensemble turned out really nice. Also the split with Jorge Nuno is really different for us. Very relaxed and acoustic playing. This worked really well. The third one I like to mention is The Battle of Nürnberg. This is an improvisationwe played while watching a soccergame. The game was Portugal versus The Netherlands. This was a massacre with sixteen yellow card and four reds. We invited Jan van Wessel to play drums and Niels Achtereekte joined us on bass. We were also divided in two teams and played against each other in stead of with each other. It was also a long take, one whole soccergame last at least ninety minutes. Very intense and exhausting, but a nice, chaotic result, just like the game.

- Tell us about the concept & the creation process of one of your latest albums "Heaven's Gate" released by Camembert Electrique.

The main idea for this album came from our regular collaborator on bass Niels Achtereekte. Like many we have an interest in people who are a bit different. For this recording we took an audiotape of Do from the Heaven’s Gate cult which he used to brainwash people to join his cult and eventually to commit suicide. We cannot understand these people and think a guy like Do is mad, so we tried to capture the madness of the cultleader and the uncertainty and doubt of the followers.

 

- Tell us about the underground music scene in The Netherlands. and which are your favorite artists from your country?

It is really small, but then again, it’s a really small country. Everybody knows everyone and has played with everyone. There are a couple of place to play live, but not that much. A part of the scene takes place in the squatworld. There are a couple of great Dutch bands, my favourite by far is Dead Neanderthals, but also Albatre is really great. I love the performences of Donné and Desirée. Those bands are part of a scene called The New Wave of Dutch Heavy Jazz. Highly recommended.

 

- We have always seen that you love collaborations, which have been your favorites? 

I really like it when collaborations go fast. With Lärmschutz we like to record and release our music as quickly as possible. It is a take on the moment and shouldn’t be kept on a shelf for too long. I think the one with Juan Carlos (as Storyteller 6666) is one with which really captured the moment of our lives at that time. The collab with {AN} Eel is also very cool. The collaborations for the Tafelmusikseries are also worth mentioning. We played with a lot of different artist for this serie in which we use Barocmusic to improvise. Carla Genchi was the first guestmusician to use vocals on a Lärmschutzrecording. As LSTBSCOÖP we (Lärmschutz and Terbeschikkingstelling) have started a frequent collaboration and have recorded and released quit a few tracks already, including our Noise Audio Book-series, and an album with only trombones. 


On another level we have been collaborating with Sander Reijgers for our coverart, and I think his work really works with our music. Both abstract and for both of us is the road towards the work equally important as the result.  

 

- Any anecdote that you want to share with us in the creation of some track?

We tried to record a soundtrack for a director once. The movie was about streetartist. We couldn’t make the music fitting to the movie to the approval of the director, so the project was cancelled. We released this music on our first edition of the Rejected Soundtracks. When we had the tapes duplicated we used the wrong take, one with almost no music. This turned out to be great fieldrecordingtrack, but totally not what we intended.

 

- Any news for 2021 in your music project or future collaborations?

There are a couple of works in the pipeline. We have some more editions of our Faux Amisseries. In this serie we invite an artist to fill one side of the tape, and we as Lärmschutz fill the b-side with an improvisation inspired by the recording on the a-side. We are also working on a more regular base with the ideas and concepts of Michiel Teunissen (saxophone and bassclarinet) so that one is probably coming soon. There are plans to do more stuff with {AN} Eel and Juan Carlos. I am working an album with Sergei Tumanov. There’s always enough music the make!

 

- Any other thing that you want to say to your listeners?

If you have come this far, thanks for taking an interest in me and in Lärmschutz. On larmschutz.bandcamp.com we have collected all the Lärmschutzrecordings. We have also our own little label, called Faux Amis (fauxamis.bandcamp.com) for mainly Lärmschutz related recordings, but we have a couple of other projects waiting for a release. If you want to join us in a recording, just let us know.

 

RELEASES BY Lärmschutz IN CIAN ORBE:

- Gian Monsters (split with other artists) (2020): https://archive.org/details/giant-monsters-split

- Inviting EP (2020): https://archive.org/details/larmschutz-inviting-ep 

 

 

Sunday, December 6, 2020

Interview to LEZET (2020)

 INTERVIEW TO LEZET

 

Greetings to all CIAN ORBE blog viewers and thank you for visiting. 

This time we make an interview to the experimental composer LEZET from Serbia.

https://lezet.blogspot.com/ 

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2cSExQ4mwtotBAUXh2jWGQ

https://soundcloud.com/lezet 

 https://twitter.com/Lezetmusic

https://www.discogs.com/es/artist/663607-Lezet

 

- What is the meaning of LEZET name?

Lezet is a Turkish word that can mean prettiness, joy , but also propriety. I fell in love with the word back in the 90s and it was the name I had in mind for the crossover metal band I was trying to form back then.

 - Do you release music only under LEZET name? do you have other active or past music projects or monikers?

With me it was never just about Lezet , I’ve been part of other projects and bands. Lezet is my only moniker I release music under as a solo artist though. My past and present projects and bands include:

·        - Focal Point (fusion/rock band I played bass in from 2007-2013)

·        - Koi Karp (experimental music duo with Ade Rowe of HNM founded in 2018)

·        - FiXtion (apocalyptic dark folk band I play synths and organ in, formed in 2017)

·        - Protecious (industrial funk hiphop rock duo /trio/4tet/5tet I played keys in 2007-2018)

·        - Gid (an experimental extreme metal duo Sergi Saldana Masso and I formed in 2020)

·        - The Headless Dolls (the early-to-mid-2000s Mike Patton-influenced experimental instrumental hip hop with Ken Protecious and the great late Jared C Balogh, 2008-2013)

·        - NOMA (experimental/jazz project of 2017/2018 founded and fronted by Alessandra Lagana of Plot Noir)

- Which are the concept behind your music, how you categorize your own work?  

I’d like to think of myself as an experimental music maker and Lezet draws upon a number of genres and styles, just like many other experimental music projects out there. I usually have a concept behind each álbum that I map out before I start recording it. It is never lyrical- it might be based on the use of a particular instrument, a compositional approach, or a style I haven’t tackled before, or it might be a singular outing (the typing álbum, the proto –linguistic experiments, the humming álbum, the distorted voice álbum etc)

 

- Favorite music genres?

Free improvisation, free jazz, tech-death/jazz-death, avantgarde metal, RiO, IDM experimental electronic, 20th century classical, synth-pop etc

 

- You have released more than 130 albums in countries around the globe. What inspire you to create more and more content?  From where you find the inspiration for be a prolific artist?

I enjoy the process of making music more than any other aspect of being a music maker.There are dozens of approaches and styles I haven’t tried, there are thousands I know nothing about and would love to explore and learn about. The fascination with music is what drives me- I’m one of those ardent music lovers with unquenchable thirst for new music and horizons in music, listening to an average of 3 new albums a day. Furthermore, music is the only area (apart from being a parent) that I feel I made a meaningful contribution to, being a small and tasty morsel in the vast continuum of adventurous music. In this day and age where time is the greatest commodity it is immensely satisfying to find out somebody out there spent a portion of their time they will never get back listening to my music. It is a true artistic triumph and it makes me want to do more and more music.   

 

- in what year did you start making music? which was your first band/project?

I made my first track in 1996 and then a home recording demo to attract potential band members, but it didn’t go particularly well. At that time guitars reigned supreme, and keyboards were not in high demand with rock bands. Lots of my personal friends I grew up with formed bands that later became important national and regional acts. There were always busy with their projects, so I started making music myself again in 2002 and released the debut álbum in 2006. Lezet was my first project. 

- Which inspiration you have from the place where you live? There's some inspiration from your country in your music?

Not much apart from being a bit bleak and dreary with very little Sun and a lot of fog. I try to make music be about music and not about my immediate surroundings, though this lockdown situation has inspired a few albums that allowed my hometown and people in it to creep in. I hate traditional Balkan music and neo-turbo-folk crap, it all sounds exactly the same to me, it’s omnipresent and listened to by 90% of young and old people alike. When you keep hearing the same piece of garbage in every nook and cranny of your country all the time you naturally become averse to it. Plus it’s the only style of music that pays the rent here so no, thank you. 

 

- Which are your favorite music projects and visual/plastic artists who inspire your work?

I’m inspired by both mainstream and underground artists. Mainstream childhood/early adulthood héroes include: Stockhausen, Nono, Ligeti, Zappa, Mike Patton, Joe Zawinul, Apex Twin, Chick Corea, Chroma Key, Cynic, Autechre, Amon Tobin… There are many contemporary mainstream artists/bands I absolutely love listening to like Liturgy, Imperial Triumphant, Titan To Tachyons, Tim Hecker, Sarah Davachi, Lychgate, Horse Lords, Oval, Greg Fox, Sex Swing, Neptunian Maximalism, Bill Orcut, John Zorn, Botanist, Sofie Birch…

There are hundreds of underground artists that I love listening to and working with: Pendro, {AN} Eel,, Murmurists, Awser Derf, Daywand, Djozr, Litmus0001, Lomz, Dako Loop Orchestra, M.Nomized, Copor, HNM, Wilfried Hanrath, Antonella Eye Porcelluzzi, Peter Wullen, Topi Reta, Convivial Cannibal Clan, Corpseweed, Marco Lucchi, Mean Flow, Razabri, Suzana’s Bauten, SRVTR, Jukka-Pekka Kervinen, Snowfeeder, Tunnel Rat, Visszajaro, Frederique Bruyas, George Christian Vilela Pereira, Ergo Phizmiz, Mikhail Lezin, In Vitro, Wings of An Angel, Matthew Sforcina, Pentliczek, Tearpalm, Colin Johnco, Kaoss99, Jason Kavanagh, Cabrini Green, Craig Furkas, Mike Martini, Pangea, Leo Alves Vieira, Mini-Mutations, Tentatively a Convenience, Heraclitus Akimbo, Zumaia, Garbageface, A.H.Fork, Qkcofse, Petar Alargic and many, many others.

As for visual art I’m into everything that the 20th century had to offer, Rothko being a personal favourite. 

 

- How do you see the current Experimental / Noise /  music scene?

The scene is there and is as potent and diverse as it’s ever been. Same potential, same ego clashes.

 

- Favorite noise and electronic composers?

Right now it’s Sex Swing and the Caretaker.

 

- We saw in your discography that a lot of your music is available for free download released by classic netlabels in the internet archive platform.  why you like this non-profit option?

I’m truly happy when a label wants to reléase any of my music in any shape or form, so the choice is really up to them. I love physical as well as digital releases.

 

- Do you make live performances?

Unfortunately, no. I never felt comfortable being alone on stage , and I have tried to build a real band around Lezet, with full-time members contributing to the music and vision as much as I would/was. There were several iterations of Lezet the Band, but none of them really worked well enough to be presentable.

- Which is your favorite song or composition and album created by yourself?

These days it’s the “3” album , a continuation of Lezet 1 (2006) and Lezet 2 (2007), only this time around  it’s about 20-50-second songs with lyrics sung in English. Took a few years to finish, and I’m really proud of it. The lyrics didn’t turn out that bad either.

My favourite Lezet songs are now “Hall 03” and “Hall 05” from the “Hall” album (Saatvaland Records, Brazil 2016) link: https://archive.org/details/LezetHall03

 


- Tell us about the concept & the creation process of one of your latest works " "Curds 10" released by Murmure Intemporel.

link: https://archive.org/details/MI377-Lezet-Curds_10 

“Curds 10” is the tenth álbum in a series of albums of miscellaneous tracks originally made for compilation that never got released or were no longer available. I felt that some trackss I made for compilations simply needed to be re-released, but they didn’t really fit into any of the albums I was working on , and so I started this series. Vol.10 contains melodic, yet heavy electronic tracks.

 

- Tell us about the underground music scene in Serbia or in your zone, and which are your favorite artists from your country?

There is no underground music scene in West Serbia except for a few lone guns like Skrec Majstor Ljuban and Raven, most artists are located in larger towns. I’ll mention some among many that I find unique and worth getting into: Visszajaro, Dako Loop Orchestra,Alen Ilijic, Lomz, Consecration,Jan Nemecek, Ex You, Svetlana Maras, Manja Ristic, Tearpalm, Bicikl, Szilard Mezei, Eruption, Petar Alargic, Organizam, Straight Mickey And The Boyz…


- Any anecdote that you want to share with us in the creation of some track?

A lightning hit the local powergrid while I was in a middle of exporting a file. It was saved when the power came back on , and the file contained strange glitches and distortions that I ended up using on another track.

 

- Any news for 2021 in your music project or future collaborations?

I’m planning on releasing a dark-ambient tribute to my hometown with Murmure Intemporel soon. Other albums in the pipeline include an album of fast and incoherent spoken utterances, a second álbum of accordion music, an album with Antonella Eye, and guest appearances on the next Corpseweed EP. I will also be working on the first GID record with Sergi in 2021.

 

- Any other thing that you want to say to your listeners?

Thank you for caring about me and my music. Stay strong, stay safe and keep healthy. And let me know about your new project- I’d love to hear it!

 

 LEZET APPEARANCES IN CIAN ORBE COMPILATIONS:

https://archive.org/search.php?query=lezet+cian+orbe