Alejandra and Aeron: not bombastic
Feb. 5th, 2007 12:52 amI've gone on about this before, but there's something friendly, superior, sensitive and deeply humane about the work of Alejandra and Aeron. Their recent album, Be Mine, contains people talking about the things -- and people -- they love, over field recordings, sounds, and fragments of songs. It's a sort of documentary CD, and also the record of an installation held in Berlin in 2005. How could I not love a record that begins with two tracks featuring friends of mine -- Anne Laplantine Loves The Sea But Loves Her Computer Most and Xavier Loves Videogames?

So, anyway, yesterday, out of the blue, I got an email from Alejandra Salinas and Aeron Bergman saying they were in Berlin, and would I like to meet up for coffee? A couple of hours later we were sitting in Kauf Dich Glucklich, sawing with teaspoons at banana waffles and exchanging CDs. Theirs come in beautiful rough-papered artisanal sleeves, still overseen by Alejandra's mother in Spain, although the couple are now living in Gothenburg, Sweden, where Alejandra is doing a second degree at the art school.
"We met young and married young," says Aeron in a "confession" on the "Be Mine" album, "we have an ongoing love story." It's true; they make quite an impression -- Alejandra (29) has a high voice and the most incredibly enthusiastic vitality, making fierce-yet-kind eye contact all the time, bursting often into laughter. Aeron (35) is much more measured, serious and studious. He's from Detroit, but hasn't lived there for years, though he went back to gather sounds and stories for the pair's contribution to the Shrinking Cities exhibition.
Alejandra and Aeron met in Toronto, married when Alejandra was just 20, lived in Barcelona together, then moved to Sweden, where they'll stay for at least another couple of years. After that they may even move to Berlin, who knows? We tried to think of other artist couples who've stayed and worked together. They suggested Vladislav Delay and Antye Greie, Otomo Yoshihide and Sachiko M (I didn't even know they were a couple!). I suggested Christo and Jeanne-Claude. Nobody said Sonny and Cher, which I suppose is just as well.
Later, I went to the first event in the Kleine Field Recordings Festival, at which I'll be performing on February 9th. I went to see my friend Bernhard Gal's set, which contained a witty juxtaposition of a printer and meadow insects (they sounded very compatible). But I couldn't help feeling that some of the other performers were using raw, natural sound in too "musical" a way, and that meant becoming bombastic. Raw sound mostly isn't bombastic, but a certain (and understandable) human desire to impress makes it so when it's edited and played back in a concert setting. And I was reminded of just what it is I like about Alejandra and Aeron -- their sounds are sweet and soft and friendly and cool and objective. They're two of the least bombastic people alive.

So, anyway, yesterday, out of the blue, I got an email from Alejandra Salinas and Aeron Bergman saying they were in Berlin, and would I like to meet up for coffee? A couple of hours later we were sitting in Kauf Dich Glucklich, sawing with teaspoons at banana waffles and exchanging CDs. Theirs come in beautiful rough-papered artisanal sleeves, still overseen by Alejandra's mother in Spain, although the couple are now living in Gothenburg, Sweden, where Alejandra is doing a second degree at the art school.
"We met young and married young," says Aeron in a "confession" on the "Be Mine" album, "we have an ongoing love story." It's true; they make quite an impression -- Alejandra (29) has a high voice and the most incredibly enthusiastic vitality, making fierce-yet-kind eye contact all the time, bursting often into laughter. Aeron (35) is much more measured, serious and studious. He's from Detroit, but hasn't lived there for years, though he went back to gather sounds and stories for the pair's contribution to the Shrinking Cities exhibition.
Alejandra and Aeron met in Toronto, married when Alejandra was just 20, lived in Barcelona together, then moved to Sweden, where they'll stay for at least another couple of years. After that they may even move to Berlin, who knows? We tried to think of other artist couples who've stayed and worked together. They suggested Vladislav Delay and Antye Greie, Otomo Yoshihide and Sachiko M (I didn't even know they were a couple!). I suggested Christo and Jeanne-Claude. Nobody said Sonny and Cher, which I suppose is just as well.Later, I went to the first event in the Kleine Field Recordings Festival, at which I'll be performing on February 9th. I went to see my friend Bernhard Gal's set, which contained a witty juxtaposition of a printer and meadow insects (they sounded very compatible). But I couldn't help feeling that some of the other performers were using raw, natural sound in too "musical" a way, and that meant becoming bombastic. Raw sound mostly isn't bombastic, but a certain (and understandable) human desire to impress makes it so when it's edited and played back in a concert setting. And I was reminded of just what it is I like about Alejandra and Aeron -- their sounds are sweet and soft and friendly and cool and objective. They're two of the least bombastic people alive.
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Date: 2007-02-05 04:59 am (UTC)Is the Alejandra and Aeron record available in the States as of yet? Or is the crafty old Internet my best bet?
You look much better without a beard.
Date: 2007-02-05 05:59 am (UTC)It's in the States
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Date: 2007-02-05 03:54 pm (UTC)"That was a good exhibition," I mused, "it drew some original people".
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Date: 2007-02-05 04:48 pm (UTC)also, serge gainsbourg & jane birkin lasted for quite some time, i think?
lamonte young & marian zazeela! i read, they never spent a night separate during at least 40 years ...
from the tate concert
Date: 2007-02-05 06:47 pm (UTC)kopya
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Date: 2007-02-05 09:55 pm (UTC)Thomas S.
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Date: 2007-02-05 10:31 pm (UTC)Actually, I guess I "performed" as artist in residence at Future University back in 2005 by putting together radio programmes recorded on small handheld devices. Not having good equipment was turned into a virtue (portability, accessibility, ubiquity, simplicity) back then too.
Re: It's in the States
Date: 2007-02-05 11:06 pm (UTC)For their other releases, ordering direct from Lucky Kitchen is a good way to go (only a few $$ more from outside Europe)...
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Date: 2007-02-05 11:23 pm (UTC)The best of luck with the gig.
Thomas S.
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Date: 2007-02-06 03:35 am (UTC)Also, with the Bombastic field-recording thing, I think there comes a time with too many effects and layers when it begins to not actually matter what the field-recording is of, which i think is bad. so, paradoxically, maybe it is in the *editing*, simply choosing which sounds to play, that virtuosity in such a field can be apparent ..? Gal's set sounds about right.
lo-fi
Date: 2007-02-06 02:25 pm (UTC)My big welcome to no-fi!
Those who will come tomorrow to the festival will see and hear some more equipment then laptops.
Greetings from das kleine field recordings festival,
Rinus
Re: lo-fi
Date: 2007-10-12 12:51 pm (UTC)greetings,
Jamie Huligan