Canaxis 5 | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1969 | |||
Recorded | 1968 | |||
Studio | Studio für Elektronische Musik, [1] (Cologne, Germany) | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 37:54 | |||
Label | Music Factory | |||
Producer | Holger Czukay Rolf Dammers (co-producer) | |||
Holger Czukay chronology | ||||
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Canaxis 5 (or simply Canaxis) is the only studio album by the Technical Space Composer's Crew, released in 1969 by Music Factory. On later issues, the artist credit was changed to Holger Czukay and Rolf Dammers. The album was remixed for Spoon Records releases and again for the Revisited Rec. release. [6]
Mark Prendergast of Record Collector describes it as "an experimental album of taped sound collages, mixing various field recordings with electronic tones", a direction he noticed Czukay digressed from to be bassist with Can. [2] Music and Musicians wrote that Canaxis 5 is the result of Czukay – a pupil of Stockhausen's – working with found sounds and musique concrète in collaboration with Rolf Dammers, adding that the "tape segments and multiple editing" utilised in the piece were based on the concepts of Pierre Henry and Pierre Schaeffer, who "are credited with its invention in Paris during the late 40s." [4]
Czukay's first album, it was created for the private label Music Factory, and according to the musician, sold well. He said he created the album by taking music from around the world, including Africa, Asia, Australia and Vietnam, using the radio to collect many of the extracts, and then "mixed the completed tape recordings with European music, e.g. choral music using tape loops. [7] Czukay said of the process: "Recordings were monaural and were made in the West German radio station at night when nobody was there. ... I can admit that I took the key without permission and went into Stockhausen's studio after he had left, to work through the night on my music. I really couldn't have done my composing any other way at the time. The basic equipment consisted of three tape recorders that were used to record sounds and tape loops from which two or three layers were built up." [7]
"Boat Woman Song" contains samples from a shortwave radio recording of the traditional love song "Doh Dam Tara", performed by members of the Cham culture, who primarily live in Cambodia and Vietnam. It was inadvertently credited as a completely different ethnic Vietnamese song, "Hò Mái Nhì", when the album was initially released. [8]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [9] |
In December 1972, New Musical Express published the third instalment of Ian MacDonald's "Krautrock: Germany Calling" feature on the birth of krautrock, in which MacDonald reviewed several "late arrivals" including Canaxis 5, which he identified as an "Inner Special Production". He wrote: "It features Roland Dammers and Can's Holger Czukay playing with loops, electronics, and field-recordings of Vietnamese peasant-songs – which could have been very interesting but, through self-indulgence, isn't." [10] In his review for AllMusic, Ted Mills described the music as "a hybrid of ambient soundspaces, musicological sampling, and a sort of Steve Reich-like loop system." [9]
Can biographers Rob Young and Irmin Schmidt deem Canaxis 5 to be "one of the great crossover works of the sixties, an electroacoustic tape piece created in do-it-yourself circumstances." They add that it is sometimes credited as "the origin of sampling of music," and while they add that this is not strictly true, the album "nevertheless adeptly dovetails the parallel disciplines of loop-based minimalism, superimposition and cultural appropriation, a picking from the 'exotic' Far East that is firmly rooted in the horrors of the Western war being waged there. It is, therefore, a non-academic piece of concrete tape music that plays directly to the counter-cultural political concerns." [5]
Both pieces composed by Holger Czukay.
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Boat-Woman-Song" | 17:39 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Canaxis" | 20:15 |
Adapted from Canaxis 5 liner notes. [11]
Region | Date | Label | Format | Catalog |
---|---|---|---|---|
Germany | 1969 | Music Factory | LP | SRS 002 |
1982 | Spoon | SPOON 015 | ||
United States | 1995 | CD | ||
Germany | 2006 | Revisited Rec. | REV 063 |
Musique concrète is a type of music composition that utilizes recorded sounds as raw material. Sounds are often modified through the application of audio signal processing and tape music techniques, and may be assembled into a form of sound collage. It can feature sounds derived from recordings of musical instruments, the human voice, and the natural environment as well as those created using sound synthesis and computer-based digital signal processing. Compositions in this idiom are not restricted to the normal musical rules of melody, harmony, rhythm, and metre. The technique exploits acousmatic sound, such that sound identities can often be intentionally obscured or appear unconnected to their source cause.
Can were a German experimental rock band formed in Cologne in 1968 by Holger Czukay, Irmin Schmidt (keyboards), Michael Karoli (guitar), and Jaki Liebezeit (drums). They featured several vocalists, including the American Malcolm Mooney (1968–70) and the Japanese Damo Suzuki (1970–73). They have been hailed as pioneers of the German krautrock scene.
In music, tape loops are loops of magnetic tape used to create repetitive, rhythmic musical patterns or dense layers of sound when played on a tape recorder. Originating in the 1940s with the work of Pierre Schaeffer, they were used among contemporary composers of 1950s and 1960s, such as Éliane Radigue, Steve Reich, Terry Riley, and Karlheinz Stockhausen, who used them to create phase patterns, rhythms, textures, and timbres. Popular music authors of 1960s and 1970s, particularly in psychedelic, progressive and ambient genres, used tape loops to accompany their music with innovative sound effects. In the 1980s, analog audio and tape loops with it gave way to digital audio and application of computers to generate and process sound.
Krautrock is a broad genre of experimental rock that developed in West Germany in the late 1960s and early 1970s. It originated among artists who blended elements of psychedelic rock, avant-garde composition, and electronic music, among other eclectic sources. Common elements included hypnotic rhythms, extended improvisation, musique concrète techniques, and early synthesizers, while the music generally moved away from the rhythm & blues roots and song structure found in traditional Anglo-American rock music. Prominent groups associated with the krautrock label included Neu!, Can, Faust, Tangerine Dream, Kraftwerk, Cluster, Ash Ra Tempel, Popol Vuh, Amon Düül II and Harmonia.
Holger Schüring, known professionally as Holger Czukay, was a German musician best known as a co-founder of the krautrock group Can. Described as "successfully bridg[ing] the gap between pop and the avant-garde", Czukay was also notable for having created early important examples of ambient music, for having explored "world music" well before the term was coined, and for having been a pioneer of sampling.
In music, montage or sound collage is a technique where newly branded sound objects or compositions, including songs, are created from collage, also known as Musique concrète. This is often done through the use of sampling, while some sound collages are produced by gluing together sectors of different vinyl records. Like its visual cousin, sound collage works may have a completely different effect than that of the component parts, even if the original parts are recognizable or from a single source. Audio collage was a feature of the audio art of John Cage, Fluxus, postmodern hip-hop and postconceptual digital art.
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Back in 1968 Holger Czukay , a Stockhausen pupil , did some work with ' found ' sounds or musique concrète in partnership with Rolf Dammers . It resulted in an artefact titled Canaxis 5. This piece , using tape segments and multiple multiple editing , was based on the ideas of Pierre Schaeffer and Pierre Henri (sic) , who are credited with its invention in Paris during the late 40s.
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