Month: April 1980
CONSUMER'S GUIDE TO WELFARE (PART 2)
CONSUMER’S GUIDE TO WELFARE (PART 2)
MAGAZINE
APRIL 1980
Consumer’s Guide to Welfare is a series of photocopied magazines written and published by Martin Hall during 1980 and 1981. Guest writers such as Jesper Reisinger appeared in several of the publications. Four issues were released. The last edition of the magazine was called Consumer’s Guide to Stupidity (Part 4).
The magazines featured essays and poems as well as a few (very abstract) reviews of books and records. The publication also contained a series of Hall’s characteristic collages and graphical works.
Consumer’s Guide to Welfare (Part 2) was published in 50 copies and could be purchased in two shops at Copenhagen, Gry and Haase.
1ST – 18TH
1ST – 18TH
MARTIN HALL
MC
APRIL 1980
OWN RELEASE (MH1)
1st – 18th is a cassette release recorded on a two-track Grundig reel-to-reel tape recorder during Martin Hall’s high school days. Drums were recorded during Ballet Mécanique rehearsals. Per Hendrichsen provided the synthesizers for “Toys”.
The opening tracks on each side of the tape – “Evocative Inelegance” and “”Feet on Glass”– consists entirely of sounds from the environment, machine noises made from sources such as hair dryers and refrigerators.
The tape was released in 40 copies that could be purchased in two shops at Copenhagen, Gry and Haase. It was Hall’s first release.
1. Evocative Inelegance (2:10)
2. Emotional Censorship (2.27)
3. Locale (0:52)
4. Suite for Oboe And Piano (0:22)
5. In Anger (1:56)
6. Ablaut (0:59)
7. Die Goldene Stadt (1:05)
8. Toys (1:17)
9. Concept (2:43)
10. The Dance (1:08)
11. Feet on Glass (1:57)
12. Curtain (1:53)
13. Rosary (0:58)
14. Bilateral Room (1:50)
15. Lyceum (1:29)
16. Displacement (2:08)
17. Re-Envision (2:07)
18. A Glass of Wine (1:53)
Martin Hall: Vocals, instruments
Per Hendrichsen: Synthesizer
Design: Martin Hall
Given the opportunity to make two-track recordings on a borrowed Grundig recorder, Martin Hall plays most of the instruments on 1st – 18th, his first tape. However, being engaged with both Ballet Mécanique and his electronic duo Dialogue at the same time, his colleague Per Hendrichsen from the latter plays the second synthesizer on the track “Toys”.