Month: March 2013

PHASEWIDE, EXIT SIGNS

PHASEWIDE, EXIT SIGNS

Martin Hall’s 2013 album song by song

In the following article written for GAFFA (Denmark’s biggest music magazine) Martin Hall comments upon each of the ten tracks on his new album Phasewide, Exit Signs released on the 2nd of April 2013. The record was his first solo release for seven years. Hall didn’t give any Danish interviews in relation to the release.


1. Emblematic:

I recorded the opening track ”Emblematic” with the pianist Othon Mataragas whom I’d met in relation to a performance at Warehouse 9 in 2010. Othon has formerly worked with names such as Marc Almond, Current 93 and now deceased Peter Christopherson from Coil and Throbbing Gristle, but is classically educated, so there are quite a few parallels between his way of working and my own approach to music. I think the song is a good opening to the new album.

2. Muted Cries:

The main recording for this track is made in Montreal with another pianist, the Danish newcomer Linus Carlsen. From an overall point of view the songs on Phasewide, Exit Signs form a kind of musical logbook – they’re all written and recorded in a number of different contexts around the world. ”Muted Cries” was one of the first tracks I finished for the album and I think the song captures the sense of recurrent disorientation that I’ve felt in my life for the last couple of years very well. I always feel relieved when music plays itself as easily as this is the case.

3. L:

As it is with most music, the individual experience is often governed by the context it appears in. ”L” is an intermezzo, a crossover point, but nevertheless an important part of the full picture. Underneath the title you can hear the album’s “sub-sound” work … as it does most of the time throughout the record.

4. Tin Music:

The vocal for this track is recorded in a hotel room in the Polish city Białystok late at night, just after I had performed at The Podlasie Opera in the summer of 2012. I was completely exhausted, but travelled with a dictaphone, and the sheer mood and atmosphere surrounding the visit and the night itself – the city, the old opera and the enthusiastic responses from the audience – kept resonating in me. I hadn’t expected that I would use the recording for anything, but later in the process, after I’d returned to Denmark, I was quite surprised to hear how “ensouled” the recording was.

In general the new album is characterized by an occasional almost sketch-like production where the methods of recording include the application of dictaphones and old-fashioned cassette machines. In its final version ”Tin Music” was extended with a complete string arrangement, but at its core the song is based upon this very frail recording made in the hotel room.

5. Meth:

Something as straightforward as a declaration of love. The themes of the new album revolve around subjects such as loss, beauty and perdition. Aging and wear. The female body and its ever-changing cartography. The record is a series of instant images exposed over a quarter of a century. My generation has reached the age now where the years show, and if you’ve followed another person closely over a longer period of time, then it can be equally heartrending and touching to witness the silent changes that occur, physically as well as mentally. This also applies for the figures in the periphery – faces I remember from my early youth and by chance occasionally catch a glimpse of. Many of these people have paid a high price for their uncompromising way of life. I particularly recall a girl I once knew, a very composed as well as completely lost individual who basically survived on coffee and cigarettes and the stuff in-between. Later she took her own life. I imagine what it would have been like to sit in front of her alive, today.

However, as it generally is, a song rarely revolves around one single image – the face it describes is often put together by several characteristics. In the same way ”Meth” circles around a polyphonic gallery. It’s a portrait based on several lives.

6. Retrograde:

Quite a few people probably think that you write songs all the time if you’re a songwriter. Well, it’s not like that for me. I write remarkably few songs and lyrics for myself. I guess it’s an occupational hazard when you’re working with music, that it easily begins to feel quite pathetic to constantly express oneself. It has become quite a challenge for me to write lyrics for myself. By the same token it’s very rewarding if a song has its own power of persuasion – its own will and its own ”voice” – something that ”Retrograde” had from the very start.

It’s the second song on the album where I collaborate with Linus Carlsen and already the day after I wrote the basic melody line on top of the chords, the vocal version of the song was recorded. Technician and co-producer Johnny Stage listened one time to the tune after which he replaced the studio’s professional microphone with an old clips mike which he then carefully installed in the alcove of the window at the other end of the room. Then we recorded the song in the first take.

7. Forgetting the Details:

This track is recorded with Christian Skeel whom I have worked with on several occasions – e.g. on our 2001 album Metropolitan Suite. ”Forgetting the Details” was the first track I recorded for Phasewide, but for some reason the project then went into pause mode for quite a while. Meanwhile a very different version of the song was released in form of a single called ”Mirrorball”.

8. Red Lips, Marble Eyes:

I’ve always wanted to work with a brass band – not coming from any wish to explore the jazz genre as such, more out of a fascination for the kind of music used at funerals in the Southern States of America, particularly New Orleans … the swells of colonial melancholy and the sounds of twisted brass, the worn-out suits and starched shirts’ stubborn attempt to keep the ritual going. As a little boy I once saw a film where a funeral procession slowly passes by a crowd of random observers on a street corner in the French Quarter of the town. The funeral party is full of grieving people and musicians with trombones and trumpets, all dressed in black. The next minute one of the spectators is killed. All mechanically the mourning procession then picks up the corpse and puts it in the coffin – the very object that the dead guy stood and watched seconds earlier.

I wanted ”Red Lips, Marble Eyes” to have a similar twisted ceremonial sense to it … a kind of distressed reluctance. Make it sounds as if the song was about to crumble under its own weight. However, it demands quite an effort on the part of the musicians to make things limp in that manner, but my expectations were completely fulfilled by the team. It’s actually the only place on the album where you’ll find real percussion. Horns and percussive instruments.

9. Site Specific:

”Incestuous needs, a tender display on your pillow”. From Salon Kitty to Reeperbahn – it’s all about cues and impulses. I don’t think one should try to explain everything. As a matter of fact I think it’s been one my career’s biggest errors … that I’ve far too often tried to explain myself. It’s much better to just tell the tale.

10. Phasewide:

The title track and last song on the album was recorded under improvised circumstances one late night/early morning. I’ve always been very fond of recordings that make use of the authentic sound environment and on this track it’s quite evident how the room is working alongside the performance itself. The take appears as a kind of sonic biopsy. Not that this fact in itself necessarily is a good thing, but taking into account all the self-criticism and self-allergies that have aggregated in me during the years, then it’s slightly remarkable for me to be able to listen to the recording afterwards and not focus entirely on my own role as a singer.

Those who have followed my work over a longer period of time are probably aware of the fact that I don’t really regard myself as a great singer. However, a lot of the performers I’ve listened to during the years aren’t necessarily technical brilliant either. You work with what you’ve got and express yourself with the available means. What you might not have of technical superiority, you can hopefully compensate for with some kind of intimacy or personal presence. Hopefully. But that’s all up to the listeners to assess.

Martin Hall, Maundy Thursday 2013 (March 28)


"MUTED CRIES" – NEW VIDEO OUT

”Muted Cries” is a song taken from the forthcoming Hall album Phasewide, Exit Signs that will be released on the 2nd of April 2013. The track is recorded in Montreal and Copenhagen with pianist Linus Carlsen and guitarist Johnny Stage.

The video is filmed by the Danish photographer Robin Skjoldborg and edited by Henrik Möll. Additional footage is taken from a performance made by Anastasija Kiake.

 


PHASEWIDE, EXIT SIGNS

Buy at BANDCAMP

PHASEWIDE, EXIT SIGNS

MARTIN HALL
LP/CD
APRIL 2013 (EUROPEAN RELEASE OCTOBER 2013)
PANOPTIKON (OPTIK 40)

Phasewide, Exit Signs is a Martin Hall solo album – at its release his first in seven years – a musical log book recorded in cities such as Montreal, London and Brussels.

On the record Hall works with several international collaborators, one being the Greek-English pianist Othon Mataragas (probably best known from his works with names such as Marc Almond, Current 93 and Peter Christopherson from Coil and Throbbing Gristle).

1. Emblematic (2:23)
2. Muted Cries (4:18)
3. L (1:49)
4. Tin Music (6:55)
5. Meth (8:29)
6. Retrograde (3:44)
7. Forgetting the Details (5:11)
8. Red Lips, Marble Eyes (4:29)
9. Site Specific (2:36)
10. Phasewide (5:45)

EMBLEMATIC

I felt a sigh pass your lips
I saw the weight on your eyelids
Yet there you swagger and there you go
The mise-en-scène of your mercy drome

Too many images at play
Too many faces in a day’s work
Your sweet incentive, it’s so relentless
My grief’s been waiting for this day

No easy answers, only hard choices
I guess we came to the end of the road
Your random gender, my desolate needs
The splintered voices of lost beliefs

Trading commodities with no fixed presets
No traces left of a long gone starlet
Pornographers and secondhand consumer rights
All sons and lovers of 70’s delight

MUTED CRIES

The clouds in her eyes
A whispering need
Shedding her light all over me

Try recall the cities in twilight
The clubbing
The cigarette sky
As you notice the silence
The carvings
The memory lines
The muted cries

A jaded desire
A comforting need
Walls coming down
On callous beliefs

Try recall the cities in twilight
The clubbing
The cigarette sky
As you notice the silence
The carvings
The memory lines
The muted cries

TIN MUSIC

Tin music
Seeping out into the street
Jasmine scented, stagnant air
Hatching any need
While the summer lingers on you tell the tale

Still hiding
Just a face within the crowd
Running ‘round
Falling down
Guess it’s all the same
So embarrassed by the loss of all this weight

The intimacy of casual ease
It’s no relief

METH

Wide eyes, swollen lips
She examines herself like she’s about to fade
Into air
Into all she disbelieves
Skin engraved with burns
Like a jaded belief about to disappear
There’s no need
To enact this line of ways

Trace the fading needs
The ebbing desirability
You’re turning away
Still hiding your face
Don’t you know your name?
Through all of these years it stayed the same
It’s always been you
I just couldn’t choose

Lines
She wets her lips
Leaning back with her arms wrapped around her knees
To adjust
To recalibrate the need
Words in pantomime
Eyes like shimmering marble
Pressure veiled by grace
Once again
Seems to settle for reserves

Don’t you feel the weight?
The slight hesitation, the delay
Aesthetic beliefs
Won’t cover this need
Don’t you know your name?
Through all of these years it stayed the same
Whatever I do
It’s always been you

Try to hold back the dawn
Try to hold back the morning
Hold back the night
If just for a while

RETROGRADE

Still lying wide awake
Imagining your face
A cool, white offering
Caught in this retrograde

Lips drawn and quivering
Veins faintly shimmering
All pierrots in rags
Spastics and acrobats
Discredit every move
Condolences to prove
The friction and the heat
Your genuine belief

A gravitational pull that never seems to decrease

FORGETTING THE DETAILS

Cheekbones made of light
Somewhere it’s morning
The languid grey of night
Leaving the fragrance of a cry

Guess you’re sliding back into your life
The pressure on your eyelids
Patterns of waiting
Of suffocating
Replaying the same scene
Recalling the same dream

Cover any feeling
Cover any reason now
You’re breathing the same air
The same hysteria
Like a mirrorball that shines
Just another flash of light
Deteriorating
Forgetting the details
Rewriting the scene in your mind

The exit signs of light
She’s lying beside me
She’s hidden in a sigh
In the changes of a room

Guess she’s sliding back into her life
The pressure on her eyelids
The time that it’s taking
Before she wakens
It feels like a lifetime
A memory rewind

RED LIPS, MARBLE EYES

Lights from cars slowly driving by
Her eyes reflecting a desert sky
Lover’s rental
Sentimental child
Guess you’re hiding
Down along the line
Dresses in fields
Shirts on the sea

Imagine yourself then
Imagining yourself now
Red lips and marble eyes
Bourgeois bohemia high

They say nobility grows out of contained emotion
Well she feels a bit bloated right now
Skin like alabaster
Swollen like a plaster
I guess she’d rather look like somebody else
It’s like a seal
A heap of needs

Imagine yourself then
Imagining yourself now
Another poster girl
Fake fur and high-heel spurs

All of these sons of Cain and girls with wings
Still staring at the ceiling
The illegitimate desires never fade

SITE SPECIFIC

Incestuous needs
A tender display on your pillow
Diverging beliefs
Written all over your face
The look in your eyes
A desolate kingdom of reason
The crown that you hide
Revealing a pagan belief

Enemy
Find the key
Anomaly

PHASEWIDE

Look at us now
This is what we’ve become
She can’t recognize anyone
Her arms ‘round her knees
Her eyes closed to see

Don’t expect too much
This is what we’ve got
Let’s just lie here
Watch the lights appear

Cosmetic disapproval
Descending like snow
The residue of daylight
Flickers in the street
Flickers in the heat

Don’t expect too much
This is all we’ve got
Let’s just lie here
Watch the lights appear

”Haunting beauty and a delicate, melancholic desperation.”
Rating: 4 out of 6 stars
Jyllands-Posten – Anders Houmøller (March 27, 2013)
(Denmark’s biggest newspaper)

”The ever changeable Hall in disturbingly good shape.”
Rating: 5 out of 6 stars
Gaffa – Finn P. Madsen (March 31, 2013)
(Denmark’s biggest music magazine)

”This album is a delight to listen to.”
Rating: 5 out of 6 stars
BT – Henning Høeg (April 1, 2013)
(Denmark’s equivalent to The Daily Mirror)

”Breathtakingly beautiful.”
Rating: 5 out of 6 stars
Lydtapet – Peter Krogh (April 3, 2013)
(Danish site for independent music)

“Beautiful and unique.”
Politiken – Kim Skotte (April 3, 2013)
(The Danish equivalent to The Guardian)

”An altogether stunning experience.”
Rating: 5 out of 6 stars
Aarhus Stiftstidende – Thomas Nygaard (April 4, 2013)
(Danish daily newspaper)

”Extremely present.”
Information – Anna Ullman (April 8, 2013)
(Denmark’s equivalent to The Independent)

”One of the most important records of 2013. Outstanding.”
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Nowamuzyka – Łukasz Komła (April 15, 2013)
(Polish site for independent music)

”Quite simply an aesthetic experience.”
Rating: 5 out of 6 stars
Undertoner – Thor Penthin Grumløse (May 1, 2013)
(Danish site for independent music)

“A very positive surprise … impressive.”
Rating: 11 out of 15 points
Baby Blaue – Siggy Zielinski (August 23, 2013)
(German site for independent music)

”To bow before such an artist is a duty, to enjoy his art a pleasure not to be denied.”
Rating: 8 out of 10 points
Darkroom Magazine – Roberto Alessandro Filippozzi (September 14, 2013)
(Italian site and magazine covering independent music)

“Intoxicating … be sure to check it out.”
Orkus Magazine – Manuela Ausserhofer (September 25, 2013)
(Major German music magazine)

“A quiet, thoughtful and spherical album.”
Rating: 7 out of 10 points
Der Hörspiegel – Michael Brinkschulte (September 29, 2013)
(German site for independent music)

“A testament to creativity and sovereignty that allows deep insights into what a brilliant artist Hall is.”
Alternativ Musik – Tristan Osterfeld (October 1, 2013)
(German site for alternative music)

“A rousing album.”
Music Scan – Daniel A. Rabl (October 3, 2013)
(German music site)

“Dark and hypnotic: Hall understands the award of forging strong tension.”
Rating: 12 out of 15 points
Musik Reviews – Jochen König (October 17, 2013)
(German site for alternative music)

“A poignant, but obscure experimental album that comes in a kind of cabaret format making it more accessible.”
Rating: 6 out of 7 points
Side-Line Music Magazine – D.P. (December 17, 2013)
(Belgian music site)

Martin Hall: Vocals, dobro, guitar, tapes and keyboards
Othon Mataragas: Piano
Linus Carlsen: Piano
Johnny Stage: Guitar, mandolin, glockenspiel and ring modulator
Henriette Groth: Piano
Ida Bach Jensen: String bass
Eskild Winding: Harmonium
Peter Marott: Trumpet
Mads Mathias: Alto saxophone
Vincent Nilsson: Trombone
Jakob Munck: Sousaphone
Esben Duus: Snare drum and percussion
Søren “Blackfoot” Frost: Bass drum and percussion
Christian Skeel: Piano, string arrangements
The Vista Dome Ensemble: Orchestra
Karoliina Koivisto: Solo violin
Cathérine: Speak
Nele Devillé: Televox

Design: Kenneth Schultz
Photo: Territorium

Phasewide, Exit Signs is recorded on a series of different locations around the world. It’s characterized by an occasional almost sketch-like production where methods of recording include the application of dictaphones and old-fashioned cassette machines (as an example one lead vocal is recorded in a hotel room in Białystok in Poland). Although the album both musically and lyrically remains soaked by a strong sense of isolation, the many different places used during the recordings have obviously all had an impact on the final sound and style of the title.

Martin Hall didn’t give any Danish interviews in relation to the release of the album, but wrote the following notes for the Danish music magazine GAFFA:

In October 2013 the album was released in Germany, Austria and Switzerland where it received excellent reviews. In relation to the European launch Hall gave one of his rare interviews to the German music magazine Orkus. You can read the English translation of the interview here.

At the end of the year Martin Hall was nominated for two GAFFA awards (in the categories “Danish album of the year” and “best Danish male artist”). Furthermore Phasewide, Exit Signs was elected “album of the year” by the Polish site Nowamuzyka (top 10 featured artists such as Flaming Lips and Mazzy Star).

”The ever changeable Hall in disturbingly good shape.”
( * * * * * )
Gaffa (Denmark’s biggest music magazine)

”Haunting beauty and a delicate, melancholic desperation.”
( * * * * )
Jyllands-Posten (Denmark’s biggest newspaper)

”To listen to Phasewide, Exit Signs is quite simply an aesthetic experience.”
( * * * * * )
Undertoner (Danish site for independent music)

“Breathtakingly beautiful.”
( * * * * * )
Lydtapet (Danish site for independent music)

”An altogether stunning experience.” ( * * * * * )
Aarhus Stiftstidende (Danish daily newspaper)

“Beautiful and unique.”
Politiken (The Danish equivalent to The Guardian)

“Extremely present.”
Information (Denmark’s equivalent to The Independent)

”This album is a delight to listen to.”
( * * * * * )
BT (Denmark’s equivalent to The Daily Mirror)

“One of the most important records of 2013. Outstanding.”
( * * * * * )
Nowamuzyka (Polish site for independent music)

“Intoxicating.”
Orkus Magazine (major German music magazine)