Shipwreck Radio Volume One: Seven Sonic Structures from Utvær
Tracks
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Disc A
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June 15 (16:01)
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June 17 (30:39) [
MP3
]
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July 24 (15:22)
Disc B
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June 5 (15:13)
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July 6 (15:02)
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June 3 (15:57)
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June 20 (15:26)
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Label
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ICR
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Country
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UK
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Catalogue
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ICR41
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Format
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2xCD
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Date
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November 2004
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Edition
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ICR41. Edition of 500 copies in digipak
First 150 copies came with
Lofoten Deadhead
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Sleeve Notes
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Sleevenotes:
Anne Hilde Neset & Rob Young
Cover design:
Jonathan Coleclough
Photos:
front cover
Steven Stapleton
- mirror men
Colin Potter
- cod & trolls Anne
Hilde
Neset
Thanks to:
Anne Hilde Neset & Rob Young - Per Gunnar Tverbakk & Camilia Eeg - Ole
Petter
Refsedahl - Eivind Furnesvik - Lofotradioen - Mrs Livery - Alzetta &
Parthena
Kamara - Jonathan Coleclough - Paul Bradley
Between June & July 2004, as guests of Kunst I Nordland, NWW broadcast
twenty four unexpected radio transmissions from the Arctic Lofoten Islands,
seven of which are included here.
An ICR/United Dairies Production
JANUARY 1432...
"...We reached land at almost the fourth hour of night. As we approached, we
observed that we were surrounded by underwater skerries; the waves broke
against them. There is nothing the seaman fears more than having to lay ashore
at night in unfamiliar waters. All our joy and consolation was suddenly turned
to deep sorrow and despair, and waiting, we surrendered to our Lord... And the
Lord took pity on us and helped us in our peril, for just as the boat hit one
of the skerries, a wave arrived which, with one blow, lifted us off the rock,
and we escaped unscathed. We edged continually closer to our isalnd of refuge,
but nowhere could we find a beach where we could easily come ashore... Then a
great miracle occurred: the Lord our Shepherd led us to the only existing
beach, and tired and exhausted as migrated birds, we reached the shore..."
Thus Pietro Querini, a medieval Italian merchant, recorded the moment he and
his crew were blown away off course from their intended destination in
Flanders. The violent tempest carried them up the North Sea and pitched them
onto the southernmost tip of the Lofoten islands, a tring of land shadowing the
Northern coast of Norway, just above the Arctic Circle. As they later learnt,
this was the tiny island of Røst, and the islanders - mostly fishermen - were
bemused by these finely dressed aliens. Their immediate reaction was to offer
help and clothing suitable for a life in temperatures of minus 20 degrees and
under. Querini never forgot the hospitality of the people of Røst, and set up
trade links in dried cod between Lofoten and Italy that survive to this day.
MAY 2004
Nearly 600 years later, Lofoten was revisited by Nurse With Wound's
Steven Stapleton
and
Colin Potter
in a conscious echo of Querini's experience.
Bringing no instruments they were left in the tiny fishing village of Svolvær
with minimal equipment, and told to get out and make whatever they wanted,
sonically, out of their experiences of exploring the islands. The only catch
was that three times a week, their work in progress had to be aired on the
local radio station, Lofotradioen.
Lofoten never darkens in summer. The air was saturated with the background reek
of drying cod, and the headless fish could be seen everywhere, dangling from
huge wooden drying racks all over the island. Exploratory walks around the
streets of towns like Svolvær , Kabelvåg and Henningsvær revealed strange
homemade garden trolls, elves, organic effigies: knotty carved guardians of
domesticity that reverberate with a deep rich pagan history.
Every single sound you hear is sourced from environments and objects in
Lofoten: buildingd, ships, harbourside tackle, local characters encountered
during the period of abandonment on the island. The broadcasts began with
relatively untreated material but as the weeks went by, and our poor sailors
became more and more hallucinatory, sounds, voices and textures are
increasingly distorted, maltreated, mashed into a singular and vivid vision of
a community and a place far outside the scope of everyday eyes. Listen for the
gulls and terns, squeaking in the background. Or the sound of marching bands
and crowds at the local festival, 'Codstock'. The clanging hulls of fishing
trawlers and the metallic paraphernalia of a dockside becomes a thundering
rhythmic pulse. Voices drifted in and out, from visiting arts officials to
Lofoten's more invisible community, like the Namibian refugees Steven and Colin
befriended in an apartment on the edge of town.
A memorial to Pietro Querini adorns the crest of a mountain on Sundøya, the
neighbouring island to Røst, where his sailors were initially belched up by an
unforgiving sea. No such statues for Nurse With Wound - but this music serves
as living, breathing, clanging testament to the experience they survived.
Welkommen til Utvær. Welcome to Shipwreck Radio
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Reviews
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Steven Stapleton and Colin Potter's voluntary
three-month banishment to the icy realms of Lofoten, Norway has borne
fruit in the form of this double album on ICR. As was reported, these
two prime movers of experimental sound were sent high above the Arctic
Circle May through July of this year, with limited recording equipment
and no musical instruments, to record a series of audio responses to
their harsh environment, which were then transmitted to the local
mariner's radio station at unannounced intervals. Stapleton and Potter
have further edited and processed the original broadcasts, ending up
with a total of two hours of sound, seven lengthy tracks. Shipwreck
Radio works best when Stapleton and Potter seem to be genuinely
interacting and responding to their alien, inhospitable environment,
rather than falling back on familiar NWW strategies. The microcosmic
sound world of ice slowly melting and cracking apart merge with the
lonely, distant calls of arctic seabirds on the compelling "June 17,"
which slowly backslides into glacial crevasse where a mutually
indecipherable conversation between Stapleton and a Norwegian child is
repeatedly looped and mutated. Each track is named for the date that it
was broadcast, and a handy map of the Lofoten Archipelago is printed on
the discs themselves, showing the geographical location where each
recording was made. When the artists seem to be most engaged with their
environment — forming makeshift percussion out of blocks of ice, parts
of vessels and disused metal scrap and transforming recordings of
arctic creatures, water runoff and wind tunnel noises into organic
drones — Shipwreck Radio really clicks as an album and a concept. On
the opposite end of the spectrum are tracks like the album's opener
"June 15," which renders the source recordings completely
unrecognizable, digitally processing them into a distorted,
post-industrial rhythmic dirge that wears out its welcome well before
the ten-minute mark has been reached. Colin Potter's droning muse seems
to have exerted a stronger influence on disc two, which exploits
environmental noises and subtle looping and processing to create
textural expanses of beautifully chilly ambience. "June 5" sounds like
an orchestra slowly succumbing to the pulse-deadening effects of
hypothermia, stretching out each chord to epic lengths, as ever more
minute bits of audio detritus pan around the stereo channels. As the
album trudges on, things become darker, more menacing and more
sluggish, perhaps as a result of the inevitable fatigue experienced in
such a hostile environment where the sun unmercifully shines for nearly
24 hours each day. There is an organic, impromptu feel to much of this
music that lends it an immediacy not usually experienced with Nurse
With Wound music, which often seems rather painstakingly processed,
mutated and generally tortured to within an inch of its life. This
helps the album operate as a sort of freeform travelogue or audio
diary. The first edition of 100 copies came with a bonus disc, Lofoten
Deadhead (a reference to the excerpted bit of Norwegian radio where a
local explains why the Grateful Dead is "the ultimate band"), which
contains more variations on the same audio sources, as well as a
30-minute track of untreated recordings of Stapleton and Potter
experimenting with different methods of creating compelling noises from
their surroundings, fussing about with objects and arguing with each
other. It's unfortunate that this was not included on the album proper,
as it is both entertaining and provides a glimpse into the duo's
working methods that enriches the material on the other two discs.
Taken together, even with its momentary lapses of originality,
Shipwreck Radio is a fascinating entry in both artists' substantial
discographies. - Jonathan Dean
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