Sold Date:
May 10, 2018
Start Date:
September 13, 2017
Final Price:
$22.00
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
641
Buyer Feedback:
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Nuno Canavarro’s Plux Quba hails from three decades in
the past, yet the simple profile of it’s abstract/ambient/cutup collage
makes it a record that sits quite comfortably in our IDM- informed
future.
In 1988, Plux Quba was a primal dark horse in the world of
pants-forward electronic music—an obscurity issued with little
explanation from the laid-back west coast of Europe: Portugal, of all
places!—though the casual listener could hardly know that from an
examination of the LP jacket.
The vanguard of electronics in late-80s Europe was being pushed by organizations like Nurse With Wound, The Hafler Trio, HNAS – and yet, when Christoph Heemann
came across this recording, it struck his ears and the ears of fellow
listeners like nothing before. Plux Quba was handed around between the
principles of the early 90s A-Musik scene: Jan St. Werner, C-Schulz,
Frank Dommert, Georg Odijk, plus interested fellow travelers like Jim
O’Rourke, to the intense curiosity of all. To ears that were already
saturated with all things kraut, the dark corners of prog and the
frontline of experimental and improvised music, it proved elusive. Not
simply in how it sounded and how that sound was achieved, but in where
it was coming from — like later Robert Ashley at times;
certain stretches of melody recalled some of Eno’s ambient pieces – but
mostly, it was a completely alien sound- scape! And who was it? Was the
band called Plux Quba? The record? The label? These sorts of mysteries
are at the heart of records that require close listening and
re-listening. As it was absorbed, it grew to be an influence on the
Köln sound — Mouse On Mars, Lithops, and Heemann’s many and varied
projects — as well as Jim O’Rourke, Fennesz and many
others. Music and sound of this nature have for many years been made
available by bands like Autechre, labels like Mille Plateaux — but for
the first ten years of its existence, Plux Quba was rarely heard.
O’Rourke
reissued it as the first record on his Moikai label in 1998, and it had
a good run through around 2005 before the last of the print parts were
filled. It’s almost a decade since Plux Quba was available, which is way
too long considering that we live in an era where it is necessary to
have an LP of this on hand for your contemporary listening distractions.
And so, Drag City has stepped in to reissue the Moikai reissue of Nuno
Canavarro’s classic Plux Quba.