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MACHINE FOR MAKING SENSE - The Act of Observation becomes the Object Itself

Format: CD
Label & Cat.Number: Rossbin Production RS026
Release Year: 2006
Note: Australian improvisation group around tape manipulator RIK RUE which was mainly active in the 90's, with stunning, complex studio recordings from 2001..."...a lot of sound, constant, densely layered and one has to keep the full attention span as not to make loose anything that is going on here. Not really easy listening, laid back improvisation, but sturdy and powerful. Peal off some more layers, and more beauty will unfold." - special oversized cover
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"Stevie Wishart - hurdy gurdy, vocals + electronics
Amanda Stewart - voice + text
Rik Rue - anaolog and digital manipulations
Jim Denley - wind instruments + electronics
recorded July 2001 at UWS studio in Sydney by Emma Stacker.Edited, mixed and mastered by Jim Denley thanks the University of Western Sydney, the NSW Ministry of the Arts, Joan Grounds, Michael Atherton and Julian Knowles." [credits]

Over the many years of their existence, Australia's Machine For Making Sense have had many members. They play hurdy gurdy, vocals and electronics and wind instruments and electronics. Here they are together with Amanda Stewart (voice and text) and Rik Rue (analog and digital manipulation). As a 'band they explore relations between linguistics, poetry, speech, music, notions of sound, science and politics.' To that end the conversation is important - be it the conversation between instruments, the conversation of techniques applied as well as the multitude of voices that they use and which come to the listener in all sorts of appearances, many of them not to be dissected as voices. Above and beyond all doubt Machine For Making Sense is a group of musicians who play improvised music. Even when this was recorded in 2001, the group uses extended techniques, anywhere for regular playing of their instruments to the 'instrument as object' treatment from the world of silence improvisers. Text bits fly about, and the whole thing requires a lot of attention. Despite being inspired by the onkyo posse, Machine For Making
Sense make a lot of sound, constant, densely layered and one has to keep the full attention span as not to make loose anything that is going on here. Not really easy listening, laid back improvisation, but sturdy and powerful. Peal off some more layers, and more beauty will unfold.

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