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Peregrination

by Standard Grey

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Gravol Tora 04:24
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about

Support the label and Daniel's hard work! Physical copies available over here:

unfathomless.bandcamp.com/album/peregrination

Beautifully-desgined glass mastered CD, edition of 180.
Coming to stores in Japan soon!

Reviews:
A Closer Listen
acloserlisten.com/2023/05/15/standard-grey-peregrination/

"A peregrination is a journey akin to a pilgrimage. Over the course of two years, Christopher Olson (Standard Grey) undertook such a pilgrimage in Nara, Japan and surrounding areas, investigating rivers, trails, mountains and shrines. This journey began before the pandemic and ended mid-COVID, which made the process of recording a panacea.

Having lived in Japan for a dozen years, the artist accumulated a collection of “favorite places,” both physically and sonically. Even though acclimated to the city sounds some might call “noise,” he cherishes the times when he can escape to quieter climes. This sense of spiritual transition is first apparent in the breakdown of the quarter-hour opening piece, as the natural cacophony recedes, if only for a brief period. A fragile peace rushes through the sonic cracks, replaced by an encroaching drone. When one has lived in the city for so long, does one yearn more for industrial sounds while in the forest, or forest sounds when surrounded by industry? Splitting the difference, Olson presents both, blurring the lines between organic and inorganic. The crackle at the end of the piece may be precipitation, sparking wires or a hybrid of both.

When “Saille” introduces the sound of abraded chimes, the spiritual aspects become more evident. Keyhole-shapes burial mounds called kōfun decorate the Yamanobe no Michi trail that leads to the Miwa shrine. Mallet percussion contributes one sort of harmony, the amplified wildlife of “The Monday Spot” another. One understands why the artist wants to keep this location secret; this is his private refuge, a place for rejuvenation. When the artist invites listeners to “find their own” spot, he’s not being territorial as much as he is open-handed. The water is flowing at the Monday spot as the sun sets and the waterfowl bid each other goodnight.

If peregrination has a unique teaching, it is that one’s Monday spot may not be a nature spot, but a generator, a railway, a city square. “iPhone Drowning in a Koi Pond” is surprisingly lovely while open to interpretation: is this the actual sound of a drowning iPhone, or is it a hydrophone? If the artist is in no hurry (8:38) to rescue said iPhone, is it because the device is a distraction, or because it is doing its job so well it cannot be interrupted? The title is a metaphor for the poles of tech and peace, although to be fair, koi ponds are usually human-made.

“Gravel Tora” sounds like a slow avalanche, an answer to those who believe that escaping the city means escaping the din. When the sound suddenly stops and resets, one realizes that it has been manipulated to make a larger point: steady sounds, no matter how loud, may be lulling (which is the foundation of drone music), while interrupted sounds can produce a fight-or-flight response. The downpour of the closing piece explores this facet further; the rain is so loud it drowns out everything but the thunder, but without lightning strikes, the effect is soothing. From this white noise emerge separate strands of sound, one animal and one human, a dual comfort zone. On peregrination, nature can be a temple, but any sound can be a shrine. (Richard Allen)"

Vital Weekly
www.vitalweekly.net/1386.html
"Despite various releases on such labels as Metaphysical Circuits, Midnight Circles, Tandem Tapes, Muzan Editions, Falt, Modern Concern and Audio Visual Atmosphere, I had not yet encountered the music of Christopher Olson. For twelve years, he has lived in the Japanese town of Nara, the city that was the capital of Japan before Kyoto and Tokyo. A town with lots of temples, shrines, and rural roads, and Olson goes around town with a recording device, a digital one, but also cheap cassette recorders, lo-fi microphones, contact micro, hydrophones and mallets. The city is an instrument. An instrument but not in a strictly musical sense, not like last week's Duplant/Vélez release on the same label. Olson has a lengthy story about this release, recounting familiar places for him, which doesn't mean much if Nara is not a usual place. It is an exciting text, certainly in combination with the music. Maybe it serves as an explanation, clarification or a poetic context. Move from there to just the music, spread across five pieces, and there is the hustle and bustle of a cityscape, with back alleys, creeks and animal sounds. The cover mentions the use of "assorted IOS granular synthesis apps, pedalboard, kalimba, DIY spring box", which means, I think, that this is not a cityscape but expanded far beyond the registration/documentation of a city. Some of these granular syntheses are sometimes quite apparent, sometimes a bit more hidden inside pure field recordings. 'Saille/The Monday Spot' opens with the granulated kalimba, making a rare move into a more musical domain. What I found interesting is that, at times, Standard Grey isn't about careful sound treatments but has a more brutalist approach that we don't often see on this label (just as last week's musical/instrument approach). Maybe this is all about the label moving in other directions? I don't know, but it is tempting to think about a slow expansion, moving further afield from a more traditional approach towards field recordings. (FdW)"

credits

released April 24, 2023

LOCATIONS : Field recordings from hikes and cycling trips made in and around Nara, Japan between 2019 - 2020,
mostly on the Yamanobe no Michi trail, Heijo Palace, Saho River,
Kasuga Primeval Forest, Omiwa Shrine and various ancient Imperial burial mounds.

Gear : Zoom H6, SONY TCM 400 cassette players, Usi Pro mics,   
JRF & Crank Sturgeon contact mics, Crank Sturgeon hydrophones,
assorted iOS granular synthesis apps, pedalboard, kalimba, DIY spring box, sticks, seeds, gravel.

Assembled and mixed by S. Grey at Kotatsu Sessions, Nara, Japan 2020 - 2021.
Mastered by OVRSCN (Holosuite Mastering).

Cover & card design + treatments by Daniel Crokaert.
Based almost exclusively on photos by S. Grey and experiments within Midjourney.

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about

Standard Grey Nara, Japan

A Canadian in Nara, Japan who makes tape-concrète and field recording-based sound work.

Physical releases on
Metaphysical Circuits
Midnight Circles
Tandem Tapes
Muzan Editions
Falt
Modern Concern
Audio Visuals Atmosphere
and
Unfathomless.

Frequent contributor to Framework Radio and a Duck in a Tree, and previously served as art director for Muzan Editions from 2017-2021.
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