| This is Apegenine's main series of releases, focusing on music with a pop influence, blending and experimenting with different forms of electropop, idm, hip-hop, folk and rock. |
| The Chapitre series is for our more textural releases, adventuring in the outer regions of ambience and modern composition. |
| A.D.D. ( Apegenine Digital Distribution) is a pay-per-download showcase of special b-sides or eps. |
| Ap3 is Apegenine's freely downloadable mp3 and flac collection, special gifts from our releasers ! Hope you enjoy |
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| David Kristian - Rhythms for a rainy season |
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01 "Consisting
of archived material recorded between 1999 and 2001, Rhythms
for a Rainy Season is purportedly the final collection of
IDM/electronic work to be issued under David Kristian's own
name. Having produced music for more than twenty years, the
Montreal-based composer has decided to shift his focus to
soundtrack work while also operating under the Gentle Bakemono
and Malamutant guises (the experimental drone outing The Mariana
Trench and Ghost Storeys, a CD/DVD collaboration with Ryosuke
Aoike, are among Kristian's latest works).The new
release's evocative snapshots perpetuate the sound of last
year's Sweet Bits, though on the whole the material seems
slightly more animated and wide-ranging stylistically, in
essence an encompassing mini-portrait of IDM-ambient styles.
While dark and gritty tremors underscore “Yuletow,”
“Rainchelled,” and “Overweigh Filter,”
the buzzes and crystalline tones of “Antique”
suggest spacier climes. Kristian's compositions unfold measuredly,
their layers gradually accreting though never claustrophobically.
In general, the pace is relaxed and the mood becalmed; though
throbs and swishing beats in “Norways” and the
scurrying “Chorithm” exude aggressive flavour,
for instance, they're anything but gabba. Spurred by all manner
of bleeps, blurts, and croaks, “Mincet” and “Lorette”
are textbook samplers of electronic sound design while “Collie
Chargette” exudes the kind of reverberant billow much-loved
by BOC aficionados. If Rhythms for a Rainy Season is Kristian's
'final' electronic release, it's a more than credible, if
rather unassuming, exeunt.
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- Textura
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02 "Canada’s
‘David Kristian’ is giving up the IDM for a jaunt
as soundtrack producer, an obvious move no doubt for this
creator of all things moody and futuristic. This his final
work ‘Rhythms for a Rainy Season’ pays homage
to the past and opens the door to what will soon be. Fans
of Kristian’s work will clearly be bona fide analogue
junkies; intent on exploring every last bleep, tweak and drone
that Kristian so meticulously constructs, and this album will
not disappoint. 16 tracks in all, Kristian once again uses
his midi-note system (a system that I will not venture to
explain) to produce down tempo pieces of deeply engaging electronica.
Not quite a sunshine and lollipop listen, this is the place
where machines share their darker and more intense moments.
Where submerged droning basslines meld into scattered rhythms
and oppressive grooves. (Alpan Nibble, Yuletow, Helium Mixer
Socialite). The wayward pace will leave you slightly on edge,
one minute its casual and deliberate (Folkforms), the next
fast, bent and erratic (Mincet, Chorithm). Whilst the darker
of moods blankets the album, warm and gentle moments emerge
from the circuit board to fill in the gaps (Owl’s Head
Sang to Me, Collie Chargette) and its a beautiful thing. Eloquent,
captivating and beautifully menacing, ‘Rhythms for a
Rainy Season’ is one great send off. I look forward
to seeing the imagery that will one day marry the Kristian
sound. "
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- In the mix
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03 "Would
you have it that the I in IDM stands for introspective, the
d for diverse and the m for melancholy, you might have found
a label for David Kristian, but alas, that acronym is given
away already. For 70 minutes and 16 tracks Kristian presents
a variety of impressive electronica that mixes the bleeps
and beeps of IDM with the analoge sweeps and washes of ambient
into a defying mixture. The groove can be found somewhere
inbetween the songs, or even between the beats or samples.
A delicate and emotive ride through various places that Kristian
has visited in the years past. No need to fasten you seat
belt, your captain will take you up, away and down again gently
and safely. Basically, it should be of no interest wether
an album was recorded live or produced over a longer time,
especially in electronic music, because after all it is the
results that matter. Moreover, the expectation of superb genius
moments in a live recording versus great and refined skills
in a produced record is obviously bullshit, as there are many
examples in both directions (positive and negative). Lokai
for instance spend a gazillion of hours in the studio with
great results, whereas Evol or Keiji Haino turn on the recorder
and off they go. And Fennesz has done both with great results.
(As usual and according to my review-policy I won’t
mention bad examples here). And how the heck am I to compare
all of them? Anyway, I came to this point because of David
Kristian, who describes the process in which the tracks and
sounds on this record were produced on the innersleve of the
CD in quite some detail, and while reading about the amplitude
envelopes and pitch bend ranges assigned to each sample and
about banks of 127 samples making up a a matrix of 1524 micro
synths and so on I couldn’t help but think, what do
I care about all that if it doesn’t help the music?
During the whole 70 minutes of “rhythms for a rainy
season” I couldn’t find a single track or sequence
of a track that seemed directly traceable to his style of
production (of which, by the way I am unable to say if it
is something special or common ground). Improvisation or composition
can’t be answered right away, especially when those
distinctions blur and mesh a lot anyway in this field of music.
Actually, I very much prefer the simple drawing on the centre
of the booklet to meditate on and get into while listening
to this music. Its shades of brownish moving into yellow,
with the white dots as if by accident and the simple line-drawing
of a strange tree, makes up a much better analogy or mirror
image to the music than the technical rant on the side before.
(the cover image is a mirrored part of that painting) In a
few words: it looks simple enough, though on closer inspection
it certainly isn’t and the result is pleasant and intriguing
in a special way that combines laid-backness with the brooding
excitement of something about to happen, which though a little
sombre never reaches a point where you might call it “dark”.
The pace is sleepy, or rather like waking up from anaesthetics
while finding yourself taking a walk, for most of the time.
There are slight hints at IDM here and there – a place
where Kristian came from but has long since departed –
especially when the speed heats up for some time. And it does
so quite definitely and then reaches deeply into the realms
of IDM. Other tracks span back in time and space towards movie-soundtracks
of the mid Eighties or even those big walls of synthies that
used to cover up the music of (huh?) Howard Jones or even
(gasp!) Jean Michel Jarre. Yes, I took these two on purpose
because for one, they describe some of the soundscapes derived
from his midi-files and submerged into beats and bleeps and
blinks perfectly, and for second, because these two musicians
direly need a re-evaluation of their true worth to music history.
So there, I said it. And I never even liked their music back
then nor now. David Kristian’s work (which I admit,
I haven’t followed closely) has covered a wide range
ever since he started in about 15 years ago or longer and
there is an impressive discography available at his website
(and an even more impressive list of the equipment he owns,
aptly called “toys”). There was IDM, ambient,
field recordings and ever so on (Maybe that makes him write
down what he did in a record.) which all helped to fill up
the spectrum of sounds from which Kristian so eloquently draws
for his invented tracks. There aren’t many people who
seem to drench themselves so deeply into sound and soundproduction
on a daily basis. Kristain might be on a completely different
place today anyway, or even headed back already, but these
tracks on here were recorded some years ago already. Do they
still possess any kind of worth in a hectic and speedy world
such as this one of experimental electronica? I sure think
so, because they are still above average in comparison to
what I get to here mostly. As I hear Kristian has moved on
from electronic musician to soundtrack composer and sound
designer – as if he hadn’t been all the time?
"
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- Cracked reviews
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04 "The
news of local producer David Kristian's "retirement"
from the IDM game came as no surprise - while DK has been
a staple in the Montreal experimental music scene for a decade,
any self-respecting fan would know that he's too restless
an artist to stick to one thing for too long. So here it is,
his final IDM record. Lucky for us, with all its beautiful
bittersweet melodies, warm analog sweeps, gushes and rhythmic
intricacy, it's classic Kristian, recorded between 1999 and
2001 using a special "matrix sequencing setup" (described
in detail in the liner notes, for those serious trainspotters).
Kristian once again transcends transistors and breathes soul
into circuit boards. 8.5/10 (Raf Katigbak)"
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- Montreal Mirror
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05 "Apperentely
this is the last David Kristian CD that we will see, at least
under his own name. As of now Kristian moves towards a career
as a film soundtrack composer. The material on this album
was recorded from 1999 to 2001, and it's described in detail
in the booklet how these pieces were made. It takes too far
to rewrite the process (and besides it's all a bit technical
for me to fully understand), but let's say that Kristian uses
a bank of sounds which are controlled by the use of 127 midi
notes, allowing to freely play around with them. Each of the
tracks is mapped and then recorded almost in real time. My
main objection against Kristian's previous record 'Sweet Bits'
(see Vital Weekly 458) is covered here: the tracks are shorter,
develop quicker and have therefore more tension among them.
The rhythm box ticks away in mid tempo, piano's and synthesizers
wave along in melancholiac mood. Some of these pieces have
a strong minimalist yet groove rhythm, much alike some of
the best Pan Sonic material, like 'Chorithm' that, along with
some of the more introspective movements here, make this is
into a well-varied bunch of musics. A strong end I'd say.
And hopefully some of his soundtracks will see the light of
day on CD too. (FdW)
Address: http://www.apegenine.com."
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- Vital
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apegenine main series | CD/DIGITAL |
Released August 30th 2005 |
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Artwork by Clara Fauvel |
Design by Vincent Fugère |
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05 - Owl's head sang to me
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06 - Submurmurring
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08 - Play it by ear and nose and throat
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13 - Helium mixer socialite
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14 - Folkforms
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