CD/LP/Track Review

John Berndt: The Private Language Problem (2008)

By
MARK CORROTO,
Mark Corroto

Mark Corroto

Senior Contributor since 1999

Mark misses his large dog Louie, but endeavors daily to find and listen to new and interesting sounds.

Recent articles (998 total)

Published: September 18, 2008
John Berndt: The Private Language Problem

Has anyone ever suggested that an activity in which you are participating is an attempt to "reinvent the wheel"? Listening to the experimental instruments and electro-acoustic manipulations of sound artist John Berndt leads to the conclusion that he has it in mind to scrap music as you know it, for an entirely new world of sound.

Berndt applies his trade to the intersection of the paths of art and sound by creating new instruments and constructing sound art. After an inspired meeting with free-thinking saxophonist Jack Wright, he has pursued similar spontaneous improvisations. These recordings, made over a period of seven years, are explained to be "pre-improvisation." They do not, however, lack the imagination that improvised music provides.

The nearly 14-minute track "Dry" is from a daylong installation at the High Zero Festival. The sounds are the sampled frequencies of a recording from a fire. The decomposed tones, when explained, are recognizable only in their intensity. This sounds like a highly evolved version of a GX Jupiter-Larsen/The Haters recording of a house fire. On other tracks he utilizes percussive elements ("Grace") and keyboard feedback ("Sound of Madness").

As the tracks progress, his later work is marked by more complexity and texture. For instance, he revisits the percussive aspect on "Dragon Paths," playing a stainless steel dome by rolling spheres that contain bells. The meditative effect is evident, as on the electronically processed guitar on "Older Now," where the sounds approximate a slide guitar dream sequence. He dabbles in waves of minimalist sound on "For Lois Vierk" and crazy cartoon laboratory bubbling made from a synthesizer that interfaces with flesh! Yes Sherman, Mr. Peabody has set the Wayback Machine to the dawn of life on this planet. This won't hurt a bit.

Track Listing: Grace; Dry; Enough Pain; Sound Of Madness; For Lois Vierk; Evolutionary Biology Determining The Possibility of its Own Conceptualization; Dragon Paths; Older Now.

Personnel: John Berndt: production.

Record Label: Sort Of Records
Style: Beyond Jazz

comments powered by Disqus

Giveaways

Marc Ribot

Marc Ribot

About | Enter

Jeffrey Gimble

Jeffrey Gimble

About | Enter

Tommy Flanagan

Tommy Flanagan

About | Enter

Dan Lehner

Dan Lehner

About | Enter