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March 24, 2020
Start Date:
August 29, 2017
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The legendary debut of Jocy De Oliveira
- and a landmark classic from the 70s Brazilian Electronic music scene.
To quote Keith Fullerton Whitman, this is the "lost Tropicalia / Psych /
free-Vocal / Ring-Modulator freakout / jam hybrid that you’ve only
dreamt about!"
It is difficult to overstate the importance of Jocy De Oliveira.
Defined by a body of singular music spanning seven
decades, within the histories and continuing legacies
of avant-garde practice, she is without equivalent.
Her work is a lens - a window into breadth, idealism,
and actualities of her many eras - of all the
possibilities they’ve held. While she remains a widely
celebrated voice in her own country - Brazil, perhaps
more than any other figure, Oliveira’s life and
career, with her album Estórias Para Voz, Instrumentos Acústicos e Eletrônicos from 1981
- resonating through a shimmering body of organised
sound, unveils truths lingering in the shadows -
histories long suppressed and lost - the sins suffered
by the Latin American avant-garde, with the
actualities of its astounding heights.
Oliveira began her career as a concert pianist,
dedicated to the cutting edge works of the
avant-garde. She left Brazil at young age to study in
America and Europe, before being recruited by major
orchestras across both continents - working under
Stravinsky, and having pieces written for her and
premiering of works by Berio, Xenakis,
Santoro, Cage, and Manuel Enriquez. Her rendering of
Messiaen’s Catalogue D'Oiseaux is still widely held as
the definitive version. During the early 1960’s,
Oliveira shifted her efforts toward composition. A
wildly restless creative mind, she embarked on a
process of folding organised sounds across nearly
every context it could inhabit - public and private
interventions, theatre, installations, film, video,
tape, as much as the concert hall - blurring the lines
between performance and composition, incorporating
diverse media well beyond the world of sound. In 1961,
within a collaborative theatre work written with
Luciano Berio - Berio Apague Meu Spot Light, she
instigated the first performance of electronic music
staged in Brazil. In 1968 she joined Pauline Oliveros and Annea Lockwood as one of the only women asked to contribute to the legendary publication Source: Music of the Avant Garde
- entering its fourth and seventh editions, and
became its sole Latin American contributor. Only the
beginnings of what, over the coming decades, would
rise as her singular and astounding body of
achievement and work.
Released in 1981, during the last years of her
country’s military dictatorship, Estórias Para Voz,
Instrumentos Acústicos e Eletrônicos was met by
controversy before quickly sinking from view - heard
by almost no one beyond Brazil’s borders.
Among the most astounding realisations of
electroacoustic process ever recorded - a work of
shimmering beauty and potential, across its two sides,
Oliveira yields works which level the field. A series
of sonic stories for voice, and acoustic and
electronic instruments - prepared piano, violin,
percussion, synthesizers, electric celesta, etc, it
the album’s singularity, culture, humanity, and
introspection which can not be displaced. Like its
composer, Estórias Para Voz, Instrumentos Acústicos e
Eletrônicos is Brazilian, and to be be Brazilian, is
to be many things at once. It’s works draws on a
diverse range of the country’s musics and percussion
traditions, as well as Indian raga structures,
and Japanese Shomyo singing - inspired in part by the
sounds of immigrant communities within Sao Paulo, the
city where Oliveira grew up. Across the album’s
breadth, electronic music returns home - distilling
the entirety of Oliveira’s being, radically diverse
culture, and idealism. A work of profound democracy,
optimism, and truth - reforming history, and in so
doing, placing the future of the avant-garde back into
its own hands.
Reissued for the first time since it original
release, this marks the return of one of the 20th
century’s most important electronic works. Presented
with the care and craft for which Blume editions has
become known, these are the wonders of art - the
towering heights of sounds - the realm where countless
possible utopias unfold. The LP comes as a
limited edition, in full color cover with a printed
inner sleeve housing a Nagaoka anti-static record
sleeve, Red colored vinyl and an original insert
that functions as Obi as well.