Sold Date:
November 21, 2015
Start Date:
October 20, 2015
Final Price:
$62.87
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
22051
Buyer Feedback:
9
SEALED
re-pressing on coloured
vinyl
At long last, having originally surfaced on CD via the Install label,
this genre-defining hauntological masterpiece gets a long overdue
digital release. Although this album invites aesthetic comparisons to
works by the likes of Philip Jeck, William Basinski and Janek Schaefer -
draped as it is in an obfuscating, soupy crackle - there's a very
specific conceptual agenda at work here. Part of 'Persistent Repetition
Of Phrases' success comes from the attention it pays to the function of
'the loop', not only as a narrative ordering system in modern music, but
as a means by which the brain itself recalls and interprets
information; it's as old as recorded sound itself, but in this context
the repetition of small shards of auditory information becomes an elegy
to fading memory and the worn-out synapses of old age. The track titles
offer signposts through Kirby's labyrinth of faulty remembrances,
pointing their way towards the peculiarities dictating the manner by
which the mind stores and attempts to recover information: 'Lacunar
Amnesia' references a condition that leaves a specific event absent from
the sufferer's memory, and Kirby's music sounds suitably stuck on a
prelude to something that never happens. Bathed in gusts of crackle, the
piece gets stuck on what might be a start of something, but we never
get to hear what. Many of the pieces refer to different ways the memory
might find itself caught in a holding pattern: 'Von Restorff Effect',
'Rosy Retrospection' and the title track itself are all suggestive of
re-living a single event or point in time - here, both music and memory
are united by the notion of 'glitch', whereby a fault or fissure causes
the replaying of the same pocket of data over and over again, but what
distinguishes Kirby from so many other musicians operating within the
field of loops and broken recordings is the unnerving, ghostly
sentimentality that courses through this process. 'Long Term (remote)'
is particularly explicit in its reaching back through the first half of
the 20th century, exhuming snatches of music hall romance, now warped
into a sinister new form by the erosions of time. It's like watching
John Carpenter's The Fog only to find that instead of vengeful phantoms
emerging from the mist, it's The Glenn Miller Band. More eerie still is
the detachment from authorship endemic to this sound - at no point do
you really sense the presence of a composer's hand; this album just...
is. A remarkable thing that only seems to have improved with age,
Persistent Repetition Of Phrases wears and fades just as the memory
does.
Cat: HAFTW003 LP. Rel: 2013
Downtempo: vocal/lounge/dub