1/ Briefing For a Descent Into Hell (ST Remix) (Thelen,Torn) 7.44
2/ Fractal Guitar (ST Remix) (Thelen) 9.25
3/ Urban Nightscape (Bill Laswell Remix) (Thelen,Torn,Reuter) 17.40
4/ Road Movie (ST edit & mix) (Thelen) 7.06
5/ Waves and Particles (Thelen) 8.47
6/ Half Moon Bay (Walker) 5.34
7/ Beckoning Bells (Cleveland,Thelen) 8.01
Recorded at various locations across Europe & North America between August 2015 & April 2018
Bill Laswell Remix: Orange Music, West Orange NJ, February 2019
Engineer at Orange: James Dellatacoma
Mix Translation: Bill Laswell
Originally produced by Markus Reuter and Stephan Thelen
Executive Producer: Leonardo Pavkovic for Moonjune Records
Vinyl Master by Alexander Vatagin
David Torn: electric guitar (1,3), live looping (1,3); Jon Durant: cloud guitar (1); Matt Tate: U8 touch guitar (bass) (1,2,3,4); Manuel Pasquinelli: drums (1,4,5);
Stephan Thelen: fractal guitar (1,2,3,4), granular loops (2,4), organ (3), blue sky guitar (4), guitar (5), piano (5), bass (5), e-bow guitar (7); samples (3); Markus Reuter: U8 touch guitar (2,3,4,5), soundscapes (2,3,4,5);
Barry Cleveland: guitar atmospheres (2,7); Andi Pupato: percussion (2); Benno Kaiser: drums (2,3); Bill Laswell: bass (3), electronics (3); Bill Walker: guitar (6), live looping (6).
2019 - Moonjune Records (Switzerland), no catalog number (digital)
2019 - Moonjune Records (Switzerland), MJR096-LP (12")
Note: The 12" only contains tracks 1-3. Purchase of the 12" on Bandcamp gives access to a download of all thr tracks.
The remix album begins as the original did, with "Briefing for a Descent into Hell." Thelen's remix makes a more direct statement, cutting almost immediately to David Torn's guitar solo, and fading out ahead of the long atmospheric section that concluded the original track. The running time is reduced by almost eleven minutes. Thelan's "Road Movie" remix is similarly lean and mean; after building atmosphere like the original, it focuses on Markus Reuter's touch guitar solo, then cuts quickly to the thunderous original ending (reducing the running time by about six minutes).
The centerpiece of the album is legendary bassist-producer Bill Laswell's remix of "Urban Landscape." The running time is the same, but there are many changes in the mix, large and small. It opens with the same slow build, but with a less prominent guitar ostinato. Laswell brings out the atmospheric electronics, adding more, plus a bit of almost ambient bass. Just before the five-minute mark he completely mixes out a fast guitar part, substituting a bass and drum breakdown. About nine minutes in he makes an even more dramatic breakdown, looping Benno Kaiser's drums into a driving rock rhythm and adding a supportive new bass line. Laswell's largest playing contribution comes with the bass improvisation and additional electronics added during the atmospheric section at the end after the drums drop out.
The extras are a varied lot; "Waves And Particles" is the original version of the track that was later used on the Sonar with David Torn album Vortex (Rare Noise Records, 2018). The personnel here consists of Thelen on guitar, Sonar drummer Manuel Pasquinelli, and touch guitarist/soundscaper Markus Reuter standing in for the rest of the band. It's an interesting look at the basic structure of the Sonar track, as well as a fine performance in its own right, Reuter contributing both bass parts and guitar solos.
Guitarist Bill Walker contributed electric guitar and live looping to the original version of "Road Movie." His "Half Moon Bay" is his own composition, with Thelen contributing mixing and editing. "Beckoning Bells" is a collaboration between guitarist Barry Cleveland (who played on two of the Fractal Guitar tracks and is also credited with atmospheres and mix here) and Thelen, who plays eBow guitar. These tracks are a lovely ambient ending to the program, stylistically harmonious with David Torn's looping on several of the earlier tracks.
Fractal Guitar Remixes and Extra Tracks is a resounding success which builds on the excellent framework of the original album while also improving on it in many ways. Kudos to Stephan Thelen, Bill Laswell, Bill Walker, Barry Cleveland, and the cast of additional collaborators.
4.5/5
Mark Sullivan (courtesy of the All About Jazz website)