Idioblast (album)

Idioblast
Studio album by John Fekner City Squad
Released May 1984
Recorded 1983 - 1984
Monkey Hill Studios, Aura Sonic Mobile Recording, Queens, NY
Genre Avant-garde, experimental, industrial, rock, hip hop, rap rock, spoken word, poetry
Length 36:34
Label Vinyl Gridlock Records
Producer John Fekner Dennis Mann Steve Grivas
John Fekner City Squad chronology
2 4 5 7 9 11 - Rock Steady
(1983)
Idioblast
(1984)
Concrete People
(1986)

Idioblast is the first full-length album by multidisciplinary artist John Fekner, recorded and released in 1984 under the name John Fekner City Squad. Primarily a visual artist and pioneer of the Street Art movement, Fekner began using audio tapes and creating sound components as part of his stencil graffiti art installations and video projects in the late 70s.[1] In addition to playing keyboards, electronic drums and vocals, Fekner wrote and composed the music and lyrics for the eight songs on the album. Idioblast, released on Fekner's own independent record label Vinyl Gridlock Records, is an experimental and eclectic mix of songs featuring extensive sampling and tape loops of TV, radio, Native American voices, phone and airport controller transmissions over rock, rap and hip-hop beats.

Background

In 1983, the Walker Arts Center and Minneapolis College of Art and Design presented a joint exhibition entitled When Words Become Works that included Laurie Anderson, Fab Five Freddy featuring Graffiti Rock, Barbara Kruger and other contemporary artists. Invited by Diane Shamash, director of MCAD gallery, Fekner agreed to create two new songs specifically for the show to be released as a 12" 33 1/3 rpm EP limited-edition vinyl record under the name of "John Fekner City Squad." The A-side, 2 4 5 7 9 11 featured Kwame Monroe, aka Bear 167, a South Bronx graffiti artist as the guest rapper. 2 4 5 7 9 11 opens by beautifully incorporating the "I'm-as-mad-as-hell-and-I'm-not-gonna-take-it-anymore" dialogue from the movie Network. Vocals are shared by Fekner, Sandra Seymour and the late Bear 167. It is a high energy rap songs about turning off the television and finding out that "what life is all about is right here on the block."[2] The B-side "Rock Steady" with Dave Santaniello on lead vocal was subsequently remixed with new lyrics, appearing as The Beat on Idioblast.

Recording

Fekner recording tracks in 1983 and 1984 with his fellow musicians Dennis Mann, Sandra Seymour, Jim Recchione, Paul Sottnick, Robert Morales, Richard Maffei and Steve Grivas, releasing Idioblast in May 1984. Fekner, who was not trained as a musician, would used whatever tools were necessary when composing his music on electronic keyboards and drum machines. He experimented and extensively utilized Votrax and Software Automatic Mouth(SAM), two new text Speech synthesis programs for personal computers. Besides the main vocals and instruments, all the other aural information on the album was recorded on an inexpensive Walkman. “Sophisticated equipment isn’t that much of a necessity,” says Fekner.[2] During the years of stenciling outdoors, Fekner would have audio cassette recorders, still, video and 8mm film cameras readily at hand in his car to not only document his visual work, but to record ambient city sounds or interview people on the street.

Theme

Most of the lyrics on Idioblast focus on concepts that Fekner addresses in his outdoor spray-painted messages seen in New York and other cities in Canada, England, Sweden and Germany. Like the stenciled messages, most of lyrics are slanted ideologically to the left and serve as warnings about corporate media, television, toxic wastes and other social issues. "Virtually every tune on the album is based on the Street Art experience. In a tune called Rapicasso Fekner raps, "Musicians were painting, painters were playing/ Styles were blending like the current trends...Watch the street see the modern art/ It's present and future tied to his heart."" [2] Fekner parades a series of found sounds, approximate rap, beat poetry and quick-cut imagery against a steady, pre-fab pulse. But unlike the worst cases of art-rock hybrids where the pretentious intent overwhelms the medium, Idioblast sounds good, beat box or not.[3]

Track listing

Side one
No. TitleWriter(s)Lead vocals/voice Length
1. "Halley's Comet/Rapicasso"  J. FeknerJ. Fekner 6:08
2. "The Beat"  J. FeknerD. Santaniello 3:32
3. "Travelogue The 80's"  J. FeknerRecorded sound/voices loops 9:19
Side two
No. TitleWriter(s)Lead vocals/voice Length
1. "2 4 5 7 9 11"  J. FeknerBear 167, J. Fekner, S. Seymour 6:26
2. "I Get Paid To Clap"  J. FeknerJ. Fekner, S. Seymour 4:34
3. "The Sight Of The Child"  J. Fekner James RecchioneA. Lelcht 2:12
4. "Wheels Over Indian Trails"  J. Fekner D. SantanielloD. Santaniello 4:23
Total length:
36:34

Recording Session Musicians

Credits from Idioblast liner notes

Reviews

Upon its release, Idioblast was popular among Club DJ's, college radio stations and independent music pools, receiving good reviews via CMJ and Rockpool music magazines. In her review In Stroll Magazine, Susan Orlean wrote, "Idioblast offers plenty to chew on, both mentally and rhythmically. The rough sound and production do not detract from music that is basically tuneful and engaging, and images that are vivid.” [3]

In Domus (magazine), critic Robert C. Morgan stated, "Although Fekner has been involved in serious art-making since 1972, he experienced what might be termed an ideological shift in the 1970s. His recent work has been intensely political without sacrificing a certain innate poetic quality sound. He mixes fragments of televised political speeches with advertising and other pre-recorded mundane statements. These collaged sound fragments are backed-up with an intense rock and roll beat. It reminds me a bit of John Cage’s Variation IV, also a sound collage (1965), with an uptempo beat. There are also elements of real time “ phase music,” particularly the early repetition of Steve Reich where fragments of speech are recorded on a tape loop. Fekner’s music is less refined and plays heavily upon the media glut." [4]

Notes

  1. Russell, John "Art: 'New Work New York' at the New Museum" New York Times March 19, 1982. p. C24 (1 page).
  2. 1 2 3 Michael Pepe article R.U.A. Vidiot? The Music Paper’s Musicians’ Exchange -The Video Signal August 1988
  3. 1 2 Susan Orlean Stroll Magazine Spring 1985
  4. Robert C. Morgan Domus Magazine Italy 1985

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.