The Technology of Tears
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The Technology of Tears | ||
Studio album by Fred Frith | ||
Released | 1988 | |
Recorded | United States, 1986–1987 | |
Genre | Avant-progressive rock | |
Length | 01:22:59 | |
Label | RecRec Music, Switzerland | |
Producer(s) | Fred Frith | |
Professional reviews | ||
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Fred Frith chronology | ||
Cheap at Half the Price (1983) |
The Technology of Tears (1988) |
The Top of His Head (1989) |
The Technology of Tears (And Other Music for Dance and Theatre) is a double album by English guitarist, composer and improvisor Fred Frith. It was the first of a series of Music for Dance albums Frith made, and is sometimes subtitled Music for Dance volume 1. It was recorded between June 1986 and April 1987, and released on a double LP and a single CD by RecRec Music in 1988. The CD release omits the tracks from side 4 of the double LP.
The album comprises three suites:
- The Technology of Tears, commissioned by Rosalind Newman and first performed by her dance company at the Joyce Theatre, New York City in February 1987;
- Jigsaw, commissioned by the Concert Dance Company of Boston as a collaboration between Fred Frith, Rosalind Newman and Pier Voulkos and funded in part by the National Endowment for the Arts and the New Works Program of the Massachusetts Council on the Arts and Humanities;
- Propaganda (omitted on the CD release), commissioned by the Creation Production Company, written and directed by Matthew Maguire and first performed at La Mama ETC in New York City from May 1 to 24 1987.
Frith composed all the music and plays most of the instruments, with assistance from John Zorn, Tenko, Christian Marclay and Jim Staley.
Contents |
[edit] The music
On Technology of Tears, Fred Frith continues his exploration of world dance music he began on Gravity and Speechless, this time supplementing traditional instrumentation with digital technology to generate patterns, pulses and noise. Samples are used throughout, accompanied by horns, sporadic percussion and wordless vocals. The album is a mix of musique concrète, folk music and improvisation.
All Music Guide describes the Technology of Tears suite as "... unrelenting slices of hard-edged sounds over a pulse ...", Jigsaw as "... patterns with constantly shifting accents and sub-divisions ...", and Propaganda as "... a series of brilliantly evocative soundpieces with electronics, guitar, and sound effects ...". [1]
[edit] Track listing
Side A: The Technology of Tears
Side B: The Technology of Tears (continued)
- "You Are What You Eat (continued)" (Frith) – 11:39
- "The Palace of Laughter, The Technology of Tears" (Frith) – 10:08
Side C: Jigsaw
Side D: Propaganda
- "Shelter For Them All" (Frith) – 1:36
- "A Deeper Understanding of Conflict" (Frith) – 0:54
- "The Turning of an Hourglass" (Frith) – 2:04
- "Birth of a Rebel" (Frith) – 1:51
- "Your Beautiful Corpse" (Frith) – 1:17
- "The Excellent Hyena" (Frith) – 1:25
- "The Old Man Moves a Mountain" (Frith) – 1:06
- "The Wolf Demon (part 1)" (Frith) – 1:07
- "Meditation Upon Propaganda" (Frith) – 3:06
- "Liberty" (Frith) – 1:59
- "The Relentless Landscape" (Frith) – 0:59
- "The Gaze That Sings" (Frith) – 1:03
- "The Wolf Demon (part 2)" (Frith) – 1:05
- "Rashomon" (Frith) – 3:30
[edit] Personnel
- Fred Frith – guitars, violin, percussion, keyboards, synclavier, voice
- John Zorn – alto saxophone (The Technology of Tears)
- Tenko – voice (The Technology of Tears)
- Christian Marclay – turntables (The Technology of Tears)
- Jim Staley – trombone (Jigsaw)
[edit] Production
- The Technology of Tears – recorded BC Studios, June 1986; Noise New York, November 1986 to January 1987; Synclavier recorded in California, June 1986 with programming
- Jigsaw – recorded Noise New York, October 1986
- Propaganda – recorded Noise New York, April 1987
- Digitally remastered at New York Digital, August 1987
- Cover images and photos – Pierre Hébert
- Cover design – Peter Bäder
[edit] References
- ^ Tyranny, "Blue" Gene. Technology of Tears. AllMusic.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-07.
[edit] External links
- Technology of Tears at All Music Guide
- Fred Frith discography
- Dance: Rosalind Newman. The New York Times Archives, February 25, 1987 (The Technology of Tears premiere).