Biota (band)

Biota
Also known as Biota-Mnemonists, Mnemonists, Mnemonist Orchestra
Origin Fort Collins, Colorado, USA
Genres Avant-rock, Electronic music, Electroacoustic music
Years active 1979present
Labels Recommended Records (RēR) (1986-present), Dys (1979-1985), Bad Alchemy, Anomalous Records, No Man's Land
Website biotamusic.com
Members William Sharp
Tom Katsimpalis
Randy Yeates
Larry Wilson
Mark Piersel
Gordon Whitlow
Randy Miotke
David Zekman
James Gardner
Charles O'Meara
Kristianne Gale
Steve Scholbe
Past members Mark Derbyshire
Amy Derbyshire
Chris Cutler
Susanne Lewis
Andy Kredt
Genevieve Heistek
Rolf Goranson
Steve Emmons

Biota is an American avant-rock musical collective. They have released numerous albums since their beginnings in the late 1970s, including their latest, Funnel to a Thread, which was released in 2014. Biota is known for its highly detailed and often radical compositional approach, which involves extensive electronic processing of varied acoustic sound sources. In a review of their 1995 album, Object Holder, David Newgarden wrote "Biota is not even remotely like any other group I can think of." [1]

Musical career

Founded in Colorado in the late 1970s, Biota's first recordings were released under the name Mnemonist Orchestra (a.k.a. Mnemonists). Produced and engineered by Mark Derbyshire and William (Bill) Sharp, Mnemonists released five albums between 1980 and 1984 on its self-produced label, Dys. Horde (1981), a seminal album of electronically processed music, garnered critical attention (including from the Recommended Records/RēR label) for its use of unconventional sound manipulation and musique concrète techniques. Shortly after the release of Gyromancy in 1984, the group split into two factions: a visual arts collective, which retained the name Mnemonists, and the musical group, Biota.[2]

Since the mid-1980s, Biota has released numerous albums, mostly on RēR. These include Rackabones (1985, Dys), Bellowing Room (1987), Tinct (1988), the Awry 10" (1988, Bad Alchemy), and Tumble (1989), a commissioned work for RēR. Almost Never (1992, RēR) features three voluminous suites for winds, strings, and processed acoustic/ethnic/antique instrumentation.

On Object Holder (1995, RēR), Biota expanded to include drummer Chris Cutler (Henry Cow, News From Babel), vocalist Susanne Lewis (Hail), electric guitarist Andy Kredt, and pianist Charles O'Meara (a.k.a. C.W. Vrtacek of Forever Einstein), who later joined the group full-time. As with Biota's other releases, artwork for Object Holder was provided by Mnemonists (featuring Larry Wilson, Ken DeVries, Tom Katsimpalis, Bill Ellsworth, Dana Sharp, Heidi Eversley, Dirk Vallons, Randy Yeates, Ann Stretton, E.M. Thomas, Stan Starbuck et al.). Object Holder was the first Biota album to include sung lyrics, written by Katsimpalis and Cutler.

For Invisible Map (2001, RēR), the group was joined by Genevieve Heistek (Set Fire to Flames, HṚṢṬA) on vocals and violin. In his review of Invisible Map, François Couture of AllMusic.com writes "With its wide range covering delicate post-folkish pop songs to ambient soundscapes, Invisible Map may be the collective's most accomplished and accessible release to date. All music styles (folk, jazz, blues, rock, musique concrète, free improv, etc.) coalesce to be filtered through the dreamer's ears — background vocals are slightly treated, soloing instruments are heard from a distance, rhythm tracks are deliberately just a bit out of sync. This way, the simple tunes never really come into focus, giving the whole album an aura of mystery."[3]

More than half a decade after the release of Invisible Map, the group re-emerged with its next offering — Half a True Day (2007, RēR), an album that welcomed folk musician Kristianne Gale on vocals and acoustic guitar.

On Cape Flyaway (2012, RēR), traditional folk ballads are interspersed amid the group's compositional/processing work, featuring Gale's vocal work in full song form.

Biota's latest album, Funnel to a Thread (2014, RēR), is newly released and features the group's current lineup of Mark Piersel, Tom Katsimpalis, Bill Sharp, Larry Wilson, Gordon Whitlow, Randy Miotke, Dave Zekman, Randy Yeates, James Gardner, Kristianne Gale, and Charles O'Meara.

"BIOTA: Funnel to a Thread—Since the late 1970s, Biota has ploughed its own furrow, producing a body of work that resembles nothing anyone else has done or is yet doing. Their compositions evolve in long, constantly shifting timbral blocks filled with fragments and echoes of quasi-familiar musical languages and sounds – or none - and use instrumental resources that span half a millennium and two thirds of the planet to create unique combinations of timbral colour in constant motion; this is a music in which everything is in flux, constantly dissolving and reforming and mutating while, from a distance, there is calm. It’s a music in which movement and stasis share a single endless moment. And although we arrive nowhere, the path beguiles, both familiar and strange and – on this record – strangely comforting. As always, it’s meticulously recorded, with layer on layer of subtle processing and mixing. Like all their earlier releases, Funnel has been some five years in the making. You can hear why. Comes in a lavish package with copious artwork by the Biota/Mnemonists collective."[4]

Performance

The Biota-Mnemonists ensemble has performed onstage only twice: at the Colorado State University art school in 1981 and at the 1990 New Music America festival in Montreal, a performance that included projected animated video footage by Mnemonists artist Heidi Eversley. The entire musical program of the New Music America performance was eventually released as Musique Actuelle 1990 (2004) on Anomalous.

Discography

As Mnemonist Orchestra

As Mnemonists

As Biota

As Biota-Mnemonists

Guest appearances

Related projects

References

  1. Newgarden, David. "review of Object Holder CD". Biota homepage. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
  2. Colli, Giuseppe. "Openness, Density, Mystery and Wonder... The Strange Case of Biota". Biota homepage. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
  3. Couture, François. "review of Invisible Map CD". AllMusic.com. Retrieved 2013-11-01.
  4. http://www.rermegacorp.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Category_Code=&Product_Code=RERBCD8&Store_Code=RM

External links