INSKRIPTION
INSKRIPTION
MARTIN HALL
CD
SEPTEMBER 2003
PANOPTIKON (OPTIK 01)
Transmitted live on National Danish Radio on the 5th of September 1983, Inskription was a scandalous, soon to become legendary event performed by a 20-year-old Martin Hall. Using only vocals, tape recorders, violins, sound modulators and echo machines, the performance is still regarded as a highpoint in Danish avant-garde.
In 2003 – 20 years after the night of the concert – the recording was released in a remastered cd-version.
1. Introduction by Ingolf Gabold (3:25)
2. Inskription (A) (4:55)
3. Inskription (B) (4:48)
4. Inskription (C) (2:44)
5. Inskription (D) (4:06)
6. Inskription (E) (6:33)
7. Inskription (F) (1:20)
8. Inskription (G) (2:56)
9. Inskription (H) (7:35)
10. Inskription (I) (4:31)
11. Applaus (0:40)
Martin Hall: Vocals, modular systems, echo machines, violin, tapes
Design: Kenneth Schultz
Photo: Casper Sejersen
The performance took place in the concert hall of the National Danish Radio in relation to the National Fund for the Endowment of The Arts’ yearly grants to new Danish talents. Martin Hall was as one of the four recipients invited to perform at the occasion. Being given the grant for his work in the field of experimental electro-acoustic music, the young composer shocked the audience completely by generating a noise level never before heard on the premises. When the Danish newspaper Information (The Danish equivalent to The Independent) reviewed the concert a few days later, the headline simply ran: “Sound spanking”.
The 2003 edition of Inskription – released by Panoptikon in cooperation with the National Danish Radio – contains several essays and articles about the event. Henrik Marstal, author of an acclaimed Danish book on the development of electronic music, Filtreringer (2001), writes about the work in relation to its classical connections, whereas Steffen B. Pedersen from the Danish electronic music magazine Geiger writes about its relation to the rock and industrial genres. You can read a translation of the latter article here:
INSCRIBE YOURSELF
INSCRIBE YOURSELF
A consumer’s guide to Inskription (“Inscription”) in relation to the cd-release of the original 1983 performance 20 years later, written by Steffen B. Pedersen
When punk hit the Danish capitol Copenhagen in the late 70’s, it became a catalysing factor in the formation of a much more experimental and fertile musical environment, which reached its artistic peak in the early 80’s. Leaving the original “three chords and the truth”-dictum of the punk scene behind, a vast number of bands, solo artists and musical workshops started exploring a huge variety of musical possibilities to take this influence to a new level of application. And then again: Punk did create a new sense of musical anarchism – but the nihilistic impulse, which tended to follow the angry roar of punk almost everywhere, also trapped many of the Copenhagen bands in a pseudo-goth identity, making most of the releases from this period sound fairly ridiculous today. Very few of the post-punk artists were able to infuse their material with enough originality and honesty to transcend that point in time – notably the darkly psychedelic rock group Sort Sol, the art-rockers Kliché (who came from a similar scene in Aarhus, Jutland) and Martin Hall.
Since then, both Sort Sol and Kliché have been the subjects of pretty thorough re-release strategies. But not Martin Hall. Consequently, most of the many releases, he was involved in between 1978, where he entered the scene as a member of the rudimentary punk band R.A.F., and 1986 – the year he concluded the post-punk phase of his career with the double album Cutting Through – The Final Recordings – have become expensive collector’s rarities today. Why? Well, Martin Hall is the kind of artist, who doesn’t like to dwell too much on his past. The intense sense of presence, which runs through his production, very much applies to his release strategy as well. What’s done is done – what’s next? Which is quite a shame, really: In the early 80’s, his work with groups such as Ballet Mécanique, Under For, SS-Say, Pesteg Dred, Front and Fantasy and Before was definitely strong enough to justify a thorough re-release programme today. The same can be said about his solo output from the same period: The Ritual 12” (1983), the Relief album (1985) and Cutting Through – The Final Recordings. For almost 20 years, the cassette-only release Inskription – a solo concert for violin, voice and tapes, which was performed 5/9 1983 at Radiohuset, Copenhagen, and put out in 1984 as an appendix to the Kong art magazine – also seemed destined to descend into the same well of obscurity. Now, however, this concert has been rescued from the archives to reveal itself as not only a classic in the Martin Hall catalogue, but also a true classic of its period.
In retrospect, Inskription is the culmination of several internal and general tendencies surrounding Hall and his musical production at this point in time. First of all, the work is almost a pure slice of industrial, incorporating and expanding upon the noisy, extreme cut-up aesthetics of British pioneers like Cabaret Voltaire and Throbbing Gristle, who in their turn found their central source of inspiration in the beat novelist William S. Burroughs – the man, who invented the cut-up method with Bryon Gysin. The many “found sounds” and tape loops in Inskription make this connection seem pretty obvious – and like these two bands, Hall used an early kind of sampling technology, which methodically anticipated the house boom of the late 80’s. Unlike the house pioneers in Detroit, New York and London, however, he used this technology to convey a sense of extremity – to create a shock. A feature which referred more closely to the working methods of the early industrial pioneers than their dance-influenced heirs. This is demonstrated by the many playback recordings of sexual activities and screaming animals, which runs through Inskription. But also the accentuations of tribalism, physicality and absolute subjectivity in the parallel manifesto reflects a knowledge of the neo-primitivism of Throbbing Gristle as well as the deeper aspects of the cut-up theory according to Burroughs. To Burroughs, the cut-up method was a tool to break down the systems of significance, which penetrate and define the common human consciousness – the linguistic dualities, that trap the human mind in a constant countdown to a violent extinction – through strategic manipulations. In a sense, Hall cuts up his own reality in the same manner – even if he philosophically seems to be less radical. Instead of destroying the then-current reality completely, he speaks of creating an “existential synthesis of a given industrialism and a latent tribal identity” through his musical collages.
Another evident musical inspiration for Inskription is the American minimalist music of the 60’s, which found a new and enthusiastic audience in the post-punk climate. The many repetitive passages in the work might very well remind the listener of composers like Philip Glass and especially Steve Reich, who consciously used repetition as a tool for reaching a state of primal, almost transcendental being. After studying the trance-inducing methods of the Balinese gamelan-tradition, Reich started defining a new way of composition, which was able to unite the repetitive and generative dimensions of existence effectively. One way of doing this was to make the given musician play to same succession of notes a large number of times, recording each round unto tape and playing the loops simultaneously. Sooner or later the minor failures of each round became so evident during the performance that the theme was altered and expanded through pure imperfection, creating a kind of development through defective monotony. This fundamentalist approach was not entirely reflected in Inskription, but the fine balance between repetition and metamorphosis in this work at least echoed that methodology.
Finally, Inskription was a truly successful example of a central theme in the work of Martin Hall, which continues to permeate his recordings to this day. Even at an early stage in his career – as a member of Ballet Mécanique – he started combining the dynamics of rock with the vast sonic spaces of the classical tradition. The two essential albums by this highly experimental trio – The Icecold Waters of the Egocentric Calculation (1981) and For (1982) – as well as a succession of privately released solo cassettes were more or less different explorations of this basic aim, often incorporating the same cut-up strategies and repetitive elements that are so important to Inskription. Many of these early experiments leaned more to the rock side than the classical side, however, and Inskription was the first true synthesis between the two traditions, establishing a musical space which is violently dynamic and incredibly vast at the same time. The only real parallel in his early catalogue is the Ritual 12” – and even there the two impulses were less integrated for artistic and philosophical reasons. In the last few years, however, a similar and less tormented synthesis of the two musical principles has resulted in equally essential works like Metropolitan Suite (2001) and Camille (2002).
achieve with Inskription? Well, despite the academic rhetoric of the manifesto, the answer to this question is pretty simple after all: Everything and nothing at the same time. Through his performance – which, symbolically, is documented in real time without overdubs – he defines a stretched moment in the reality of the early 80’s. A musical moment, which – according to a number of strict methodological rules – encapsulates the essence of the there and now and makes it refer to more eternal principles. The basic structure of Inskription – which is repetitive and dynamic at the same time – reflects the basic modus operandi of existence itself. By incorporating both trance- and shock-inducing elements, he also forces the listener into an intensive state of physical and mental presence. Finally, the composition – through its use of noise, fractured structures and a consciously deformed tonality – reflects the undercurrents of pain and frustration, which permeate both the industrial society and the musician himself. That’s as close as you’re likely to get to the intention of the work … but it’s more than close enough. The actual interpretation – and that’s one of the best things about Inskription – is wisely left to the mental and physical subjectivity of the listener. Are you feeling pain or elevation, when you’re listening to the work? That’s your interpretation. Do you hear an aural reflection of heaven or hell? That’s more or less your interpretation again – even if most people might agree that the composition is more infernal than celestial. But as long as you’re present – and as long as both your body and your mind is involved in the listening experience – Inskription has worked its own particular magic: To inscribe both your name and the name of the composer into the moment as well as eternity itself.
When the work was originally performed, most listeners thought the composition reflected the nihilism of the post-punk scene. Looking back, however, Inskription was rather an attempt to exorcise the self-destructive mood of the moment than to emphasize it. In other words, Inskription was an attempt to replace the sicknesses of the modern mind with a primal, healthy human self. In that respect, the less you say about the sociological, philosophical and biographic circumstances surrounding the work, the better. The composition should be experienced as it is – and as you are. Actually the only reasonable way to end this introduction is to cut the academical crap and start to listen. The only thing I’ve left to write is my own inscription:
Steffen B. Pedersen, Geiger
BACK THEN IN THE EIGHTIES
BACK THEN IN THE EIGHTIES
ANTHOLOGY
JUNE 2003
GYLDENDAL (ISBN 87-02-00409-7)
Back then in the 80’s is an anthology made up of interviews, photo series and articles about the eighties and the generation of young Danish creative minds that formed the local scene and youth culture at the time.
Focusing particularly on the underground scene of the period, one of the book’s most extensive articles is an interview with Martin Hall about Ballet Mécanique, the music group he started as a young artist.
In a very open-hearted chapter Hall tells his version of the story of the group – from its beginning to its much publicised breakup live on stage in October 1982.
EVERYTHING THAT MUSIC IS CAPABLE OF
EVERYTHING THAT MUSIC IS CAPABLE OF
INTERVIEW BOOK
JUNE 2002
ASCHEHOUG (ISBN 87-11-11585-8)
Everything that Music Is Capable Of is a book based on conversations between its author, Henrik Marstal, and a series of influential Danish performers and songwriters.
In his conversation with Martin Hall – the longest section in the book – the talk revolves around the latter’s early inspirations in music and literature as well as the currency of his work.
Other artists featured in the book are names such as Kim Larsen, Thomas Knak (Future 3, Opiate), Kasper Eistrup (Kashmir), Signe Høirup Wille Jørgensen and Jens Unmack.
The book contains individual portraits of all artists.
POEMS FOR THE BOYS
POEMS FOR THE BOYS
ANTHOLOGY
MAY 2002
GYLDENDAL (ISBN 87-00-75816-7)
Poems for the Boys (“Digte til drengene“) is an anthology featuring a line of poems suited for male readers according to its editor, literary critic and writer Lars Bukdahl. Its extent is 197 pages.
Among the many contributors you’ll find names such as Benny Andersen, Bo hr. Hansen, Christian Dorph, Claus Carstensen, Dan Turèll, Emil Bønnelycke, Eske K. Mathiesen, F. P. Jac, Helle Helle, Henrik Nordbrandt, Ivan Malinowski, Janus Kodal, Jens August Schade, Jens Blendstrup, Jeppe Aakjær, Jørgen Leth, Niels Frank, Per Aage Brandt, T. S. Høeg, Thomas Krogsbøl and Tom Kristensen.
Martin Hall’s contribution to the book is a writing called “Circus Nero”.
THE LADY OF THE CAMELLIAS
LADY OF THE CAMELLIAS
CATALOGUE
JANUARY 2002
GLADSAXE TEATER
In the process of writing the musical soundtrack to Gladsaxe Teater’s major 2002 launch, The Lady of the Camellias, Martin Hall also wrote an extensive essay about the creative process and the references at play for the show’s catalogue.
In his written piece A Composer’s World of Association Hall sets up a series of parallels between the work of the writer of the play, Alexandre Dumas (fils), and the French philosopher Jean Baudrillard.
The photo for the poster is taken by Casper Sejersen and the design for the catalogue is made by e-Types. It’s the actress Stine Stengade playing the role of Marguerite Gautier in the play.
The show played from January 2002 until April with a fair amount of extra dates added.
MEMORIAL (FINEST MOMENTS AND FAMOUS LAST WORDS)
MEMORIAL (FINEST MOMENTS AND FAMOUS LAST WORDS)
IRMA VICTORIA
CD
NOVEMBER 2001
MNW (MNWCD369)
On the one-year anniversary of Danish “diva” Irma Victoria’s death (November 10, 2001) Martin Hall and MNW released the album Memorial – Finest Moments and Famous Last Words. The double-cd is a mix of her best recordings as well as a few at the time unreleased tracks. The release also includes a bonus disc, a Danish National Radio programme commemorating the life and art of Irma Victoria, originally broadcasted on the 9th of December 2000.
1. Expo 1: A Hospital Room (1:09)
2. Shine The Light on Me (3:33)
3. September Song (0:45)
4. Heart of Darkness (3:17)
5. Expo 2: The World Is Everything that Is the Case (3:13)
6. The Devil in the Flesh (0:44)
7. River of Light (3:45)
8. The Gospel According to Anti-Christ (1:01)
9. Expo 3: In Memory of Liberace (1:13)
10. The Beauty of Emptiness (4:40)
11. Palladium (2) (3:26)
12. European Need (2:59)
13. Expo 4: The Chatterbox Revisited (1:02)
14. Fight It Part 2 (2:21)
15. Tears and Morphine (4:06)
16. The Voices of the Dead 1:25)
17. Expo 5: Worst Case Scenario 0:35)
18. Angels and Devils 1:37)
19. Silent Rage 1:59)
20. Expo 6: In Transit (0:55)
21. Itsi-Bitsi (4:44)
22. Life Is but a Dream (3:03)
23. Expo 7: Famous Last Words (1:04)
24. Memorial (3:53)
25. Irma Victoria til Minde (14:55)
Aud Wilken: Backing vocals
Christian Skeel: Keyboards
Henrik Marstal: Bass
Jens Brygmann: Drums
Lars Top-Galia: Guitar
Martin Hall: Instruments
Ole A. Laursen: Backing vocals
Ole Hansen: Trumpet
Peter Westh: Backing vocals
Sharin Foo: Backing vocals
Torben Engberg: Organ
Design: Kenneth Schultz
Photo: Henrik Möll/Casper Sejersen
Born on the 2nd of September 1923, Irma Victoria made her debut at the age of 66 with the song “Memorial” on the Martin Hall production The Hall of Mirrors released in September 1989. The track instantly became a cult classic and mystique subsequently rose as to who this new Martin Hall finding was. In September 1990 she performed on the ep Palladium and in November 1990 she released her debut album The Rainbow Theatre – an album that quite surprisingly earned her a Danish Grammy nomination in the category “best female singer” in February 1991. Competing with the Danish multi-platinum act Hanne Boel and legendary Savage Rose lead vocalist Annisette, Irma Victoria unfortunately didn’t win the award.
Having received The Medal for Meritorious Service, a distinction handed to her personally by The Queen of Denmark, Margrethe II, for loyal service in the Danish Department of Defence, in the autumn of 1993, Irma Victoria released her second and highly anticipated album Phantasmagoria – The Second Coming in October 1994. The record contains contributions from several prominent musicians on the Danish independent music scene (such as members from the original punk and post-punk bands Sort Sol and The Poets) and the release received massive media coverage … all helped along very nicely by a widespread poster campaign sponsored by Carlsberg.
Phantasmagoria received a line of great reviews in both Denmark and abroad and was exported to France, Germany and England. At the time of the release several tracks wound up in heavy rotation on the French radio station Scandal and a few years later the British neofolk group Death in June used the album as lounge music on their 1997 European tour.
In the autumn of 1995 Irma Victoria performed on the controversial tribute album to the legendary Danish sixties band Steppeulvene, Hip, where she interpreted the group’s signature song “Itsi Bitsi” (the track was singled out as one of the highlights of the album by the press, although several journalists found her version to be an outright desecration of the original song). In the spring of 1997 she furthermore appeared on the ep Hallmark 1–4 performing the title “Tears and Morphine”, a new version of “Tears in the Rain” from Phantasmagoria.
By invitation of the Danish record label Addiction Martin Hall and Irma Victoria discussed the possibility of recording a newly written narrative by Hall shortly before Irma Victoria’s death. Due to the singer’s deteriorating health the idea was never realized, but the titles “Expo 1–6” on the Memorial compilation album are based on the test recordings made towards this end at Holbæk County Hospital.
Irma Victoria died on the 10th of November 2000.
Memorial was released concurrently with the exhibition A Hospital Room at Ystad’s Konstmuseum (a Swedish art gallery), an audio installation made by Martin Hall about Irma Victoria. The exhibition ran from October 20th until November 25th 2001.
As a special feature on the Memorial album, Sharin Foo – singer and front figure in the world famous Danish indie darling act The Raveonettes – appears as guest singer on the “River of Light” track.
All songs on Memorial are written and produced by Martin Hall except “Itsi Bitsi” which is authored by Eik Skaløe and Stig Møller.
When Irma Victoria died several international artists expressed their grief with her passing. Among names such as Jean Pierre Turmel from the French avant-garde label French Sordide Sentimental and Martyn Jacques from the renowned English cabaret band The Tiger Lillies, the most fierce appraisal of her talent probably came from Douglas P., singer and front figure in Death in June: “Her work was fantastic. May her soul live forever.”
“This voice that seemed to emerge from such depths immediately talked to my unconscious, passing my understanding completely by. This was her quiet strength. Irma Victoria: a true person, complicated and different … not only a human being, but a real individuality!”
Jean-Pierre Turmel, Sordide Sentimental, France“I have enjoyed so much listening to Irma Victoria. I dislike/do not listen to virtually any contemporary music, so this has been such a pleasant surprise.”
Martyn Jacques, The Tiger Lillies, England“Phantasmagoria is one of the most haunting albums I have ever heard. A desolate, sinister and totally honest work … a broken story that will drive you to tears if you listen carefully! Once it has grabbed you, it will never let you go, it will never leave your heart and soul. It is hard for me to hear that Irma Victoria is dead. A legend already in her own lifetime, she is ready to become real cult now. We already miss her sadly!”
Ecki Stieg, Grenzwellen/Music United, Germany“Her work was fantastic. May her soul live forever.”
Douglas P., Death in June, England
ELIA
ELIA
MARTIN HALL
CD
NOVEMBER 2001
POUL KRISTENSEN GRAFISK VIRKSOMHED A/S
(ISBN 87-7468-419-1)
In the summer of 2001 Martin Hall was given the honour to write the music for the inauguration ceremony of the Danish-Swedish visual artist Ingvar Cronhammer’s grand-scale monument Elia in Herning (a Danish city), a work of art that was opened to the public on the 27th of September the same year.
A cd with the music was enclosed with the book release about the project. The book itself is available in both Danish and English.
Elia is a steel dome that, with a diameter of 60 meters at ground level, rises above the field at Herning. From the top of the dome (about 11 meters up) rise four steel columns, so the total height is approximately 32 meters. Two 10-meter wide stairs are laid on each side of the sculpture. In the middle of the sculpture sits a large gas burner which once during a 19-day period makes an 8,4 meter high and 1 meter wide fire column for about 30 seconds. The timing of the discharge is random and controlled by a computer. The sculpture is designed to receive lightning strikes. When this occurs, the sculpture will respond with an echo of approximately 40 seconds duration.
Martin Hall’s composition Elia is a 23-minute long orchestral work with a main theme played by a piano. You can read more about the installation as well as listen to the music here:
“It is both awe-inspiring and thought-provoking to stand here. What is the idea of all this grandiosity? Thus asked Mr. Ivar Hansen, Speaker of the Danish Parliament, in a speech at the September 2001 inauguration of the colossal sculpture, Elia. He speculated that Elia might be a comment on the present or that, perhaps, it looks unfathomably into our future. Ivar Hansen gave the answer himself: Elia is exactly what we make of it. Art reaches out to the diversity of the individual.”
Gorm Albrechtsen (1941-2015), former editor in chief of Herning Folkeblad.
KOMMUNIKAZE
KOMMUNIKAZE
MARTIN HALL
DIARY
MARCH 2001
LINDHARDT OG RINGHOF (ISBN 87-595-1661-5)
Kommunikaze is a diary written by Martin Hall between January 1998 and December 2000 and is a set of writings that follows him through thick and thin for a period of three years.
As reader you’ll witness his immense work load and personal crisis during the period, the recordings of several albums and his ongoing literary work. You also gain insight into his collaborations with Danish directors such as Ole Bornedal (director of the Hollywood film The Night Watch) and Flemming Enevold (director of Camille).
Depicitions of journeys to Berlin, Stockholm and London alternate with film and video recordings, and stories from international exhibitions with bizarre tv and radio appearances. Not surprisingly, the speed of life ends up taking its toll on Hall.
Genre: Diary
Pages: 301
Design: Kenneth Schultz
Photo: Casper Sejersen
"This is a symptom above intellectual vanity ... that's how my literary debut The Reconstruction Is Greater from 1983 opened, and I might as well have started these new journals with the same set of words."
”Martin Hall writes stylishly. And funny. And incredibly sharp.”
Berlingske Tidende (the Danish equivalent to The Times)
”Exquisitely sarcastic and aristocratically stylish proclamations about all and everything.”
Weekendavisen (the Danish equivalent to The Observer)
“Touching because it reveals the cracks in Hall’s rock hard ego manicure.”
Information (the Danish equivalent to The Independent)
“An effective cementation of the myth about Martin Hall.”
Politiken (the Danish equivalent to The Guardian)
“Pearls of refreshing intellectual arrogance.”
Jyllands-Posten (Denmark’s biggest daily newspaper)
”Martin Hall – who at one and the same time appears both highly modern and almost altmodisch – remains delightful company.”
Euroman (the Danish equivalent to to GQ Magazine)
The most harsh part of the book has to be Martin Hall’s comments on the Danish music industry and Copenhagen’s literary circles. However, his criticism of these establishments is always balanced by a sobering process of self-reflection and he never spares himself along the way.
At the other end of the spectrum you’ll find small examples of Hall’s indifference to the passing fame and glory of all things – such as an incident where his new gold record award for the Boel & Hall album ends up in a supermarket plastic bag and gets lost.
MY ARGENTINE ROSE
MY ARGENTINE ROSE
MARTIN HALL/CHRISTIAN SKEEL
CD SINGLE
FEBRUARY 2001
MNW (MNWCDS300)
My Argentine Rose is a single released to support the classically orchestrated album Metropolitan Suite made in collaboration with visual artist Christian Skeel. The single was Martin Hall’s first release as a singer since his gold record achievement with the Boel & Hall album in 2000.
The album features 25 musical fin de siècle vignettes. Electrical instruments were banned on the recordings, a method of working that secured the album its fine air of Viennese exclusivity.
1. My Argentine Rose (1:52)
2. Pantomime Bloodline (2:46)
MY ARGENTINE ROSE
She’s a cool breeze of discontent
She’s like a story that never ends
She’s my Argentine rose
She’s such a delicate rose
See the twenties within her eyes
Eternal stardust that never dies
She’s my Argentine rose
She’s such a delicate rose
She’s my melancholic maybe
Come and save me
Come and set me free
Christian Skeel: Piano
Martin Hall: Vocals
The Vista Dome Ensemble: Orchestra
Design: Kenneth Schultz
Photo: Casper Sejersen
Less than a year after Martin Hall’s gold selling collaboration with Danish platinum act Hanne Boel, Hall and Skeel released the album Metropolitan Suite, a labour of love that had taken the two gents three years to finish.
With titles such as “Walking on Eggshells”, “Unzipping the Abstract” and “Plaza Flesh” the audience was given a fair warning – this was not a work of intending radio hits, rather a joyous voyage of exploration into the literary realms of vaudeville, chamber music and cabaret-styled intellectualism.
Quoting Hall from an interview made at the time of the release, Metropolitan Suite was his idea of “the perfect follow-up album to the Boel & Hall success”. Despite critical acclaim the record was obviously destined to remain a niche release, so although Metropolitan Suite was an artistic highpoint, it remained a commercial disaster costing Hall’s new label MNW a fair amount of money.
The single “My Argentine Rose” included the instrumental bonus track ”Pantomime Bloodline”.