Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Sat Stoicizmo

SAT STOICIZMO

SAT Stoicizmo was a trio of Croatian futurist composers active between 1981 and 1987, the liner notes of this challenging CD explains. Mah 2 was recorded in 1984-5, and is an exceedingly complex work based on four of the core concepts of futurism: simultaneity, acceleration, power and machinery. Furthermore, the four compositions on Mah 2 -- which was originally intended as a double-LP with each piece closing in endless exit grooves -- were arranged according to morse-code patterns. The result is a deeply fascinating work that really only comes to its right, if listened to with complete attention and concentration. Due to the minutely detailed quality of SAT Stoicizmo's music, the accompanying text advises the listener to listen at high volume. It is also recommended to play the CD both through speakers and headphones at the same time, in order to achieve a heightened simultanistic listening experience. The legitimacy of these instructions is immediately apparent when playing the CD; the music is both deeply layered and strikingly dynamic. "9:36:57 po Srednjeevropskom" (which translates into "9:36:57 Central European Time") opens with wailing air raid sirens, and it is a sound that is familiar by the end of the CD, as it serves as a consistent motif throughout most of Mah 2, and especially on this first track. Fifteen minutes long, "9:36:57 po Srednjeevropskom" is a kaleidoscopic aural collage, the details of which are interrupted at times by the aforementioned sirens. The piece moves through sequential patterns of dynamic acoustic percussions, montages of radio tunings, racing piano arrangements, harsh streaming electronics, and so on. Perhaps, if all of these segments between the sirens were placed all on top of each other -- with the sirens as reference points -- and played simultaneously, the piece would be a composite sonic photograph of Central Europe at 9:36:57. The second piece "Avionom" ("By Airplane") begins with a segment of intensely cut-up recordings of an airplane breaking through the sound barrier. The musical and rhythmic qualities of this explosive sound are explored and deconstructed to the point where the source sound becomes a continuous, pulsating, strobe-like tone. Eventually, the piece breaks into an extended drum sequence, still with the distant echoes of jet engines audible in the background. True to the theme of power, which is the conceptual foundation for "Nehaj" ("Levity"), this piece features extensive use of extremely harsh and noisy electronics and percussion. A long passage of recitations in Croatian run through the first half of the track, at first disassociated from the flow of the music, but later spoken faster and faster, and in rhythmic spurts that complement the over-all forward-rushing quality of the piece. "Nehaj" is again bookended by the disconcerting screams of sirens, and is the most dynamic and "structured" track on the album. The final, and longest piece -- "Futur Egzakni" ("Future Two") -- opens and closes with subtle passages of humming machine ambiance. Subdued, metallic clanking fades in supported by soaring tones as of wheels spinning, and other aural signatures of the industrial age. The treated groans of a herd of cattle (waiting for the rotating blades at the butcher plant?) become audible, and is succeeded by a tinkling loop as of millions of shards of shattered glass; armies of camera flashes go off in unison, and the rhythmical workings as of a giant clock briefly enter and exit this restless catalogue of sounds depicting a sterile, machinated, compartmentalized modern society. Mah 2 along with the rest of SAT Stoicizmo's body of work has been unavailable for more than a decade. Now, the German label Artware has re-released Mah 2 in both a limited double-vinyl edition (500 copies) and on CD (likewise in 500 copies)." from: http://www.lastsigh.com/reviews/satstoimah2.htm

here are some reviews

Jacati Tjelo Sportom LP:

This limited edition single-sided LP was pressed shortly before this Croatian
band split in 1987, and as been picked up by Artware for distribution. I can do
no better than quite from the press release: "In contrast to most other
'industrial' artists SAT Stoicizmo did not just exploit futuristic power to
illustrate vague cultural pessimism. They really were futurists, which gave them
the possibility to make powerful music without any need to 'apologize' for it by
decorating it with nazi-terror, squashed foetuses, the futility of the world in
general or whatever other childish dabbling". Too bloody right: this record may
be short, but its excellent savage aestheticised rhythm and noise needs no
further explanation. [Artware]

Mah 2

"9:36:57 po Srednjeevropskom" (which translates into "9:36:57 Central European Time") opens with wailing air raid sirens, and it is a sound that is familiar by the end of the CD, as it serves as a consistent motif throughout most of Mah 2, and especially on this first track. Fifteen minutes long, "9:36:57 po Srednjeevropskom" is a kaleidoscopic aural collage, the details of which are interrupted at times by the aforementioned sirens. The piece moves through sequential patterns of dynamic acoustic percussions, montages of radio tunings, racing piano arrangements, harsh streaming electronics, and so on. Perhaps, if all of these segments between the sirens were placed all on top of each other -- with the sirens as reference points -- and played simultaneously, the piece would be a composite sonic photograph of Central Europe at 9:36:57.

The second piece "Avionom" ("By Airplane") begins with a segment of intensely
cut-up recordings of an airplane breaking through the sound barrier. The
musical and rhythmic qualities of this explosive sound are explored and
deconstructed to the point where the source sound becomes a continuous,
pulsating, strobe-like tone. Eventually, the piece breaks into an extended
drum sequence, still with the distant echoes of jet engines audible in the
background.

True to the theme of power, which is the conceptual foundation for "Nehaj"
("Levity"), this piece features extensive use of extremely harsh and noisy
electronics and percussion. A long passage of recitations in Croatian run
through the first half of the track, at first disassociated from the flow of
the music, but later spoken faster and faster, and in rhythmic spurts that
complement the over-all forward-rushing quality of the piece. "Nehaj" is again
bookended by the disconcerting screams of sirens, and is the most dynamic and "structured" track on the album.

The final, and longest piece -- "Futur Egzakni" ("Future Two") -- opens and
closes with subtle passages of humming machine ambiance. Subdued, metallic clanking fades in supported by soaring tones as of wheels spinning, and other aural signatures of the industrial age. The treated groans of a herd of cattle (waiting for the rotating blades at the butcher plant?) become audible, and is succeeded by a tinkling loop as of millions of shards of shattered glass;
armies of camera flashes go off in unison, and the rhythmical workings as of a
giant clock briefly enter and exit this restless catalogue of sounds depicting
a sterile, machinated, compartmentalized modern society.

Mah 2 along with the rest of SAT Stoicizmo's body of work has been unavailable
for more than a decade. Now, the German label Artware has re-released Mah 2 in both a limited double-vinyl edition (500 copies) and on CD (likewise in 500
copies). It is the intention of Artware to make more of SAT Stoicizmo's
material available in the future, and a "magazine" with the band's aesthetic
manifesto along with an in-depth interview has already been published in
German -- an English translation is forthcoming. Mah 2 and the Sat Stoicizmo
publication are available directly from Artware per mail order.


Here are some links that we found that you may find useful:

Mah 2 LP
Jaceti Tjelo Sportom (1987)

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