We use cookies on our website to provide you with the best experience.Most of these are essential and already present. We do require your explicit consent to save your cart and browsing history between visits.Read about cookies we use here.
Your cart and preferences will not be saved if you leave the site.
Michele Mercure often dreams of music, and in her waking life, reclaims
fragments of these fleeting, floating melodies in her compositions and
sound art. Beside Herself, an anthology of Mercure’s self-produced and
distributed cassettes released between 1983 and 1990, collects these
dreamlike passages and lo-fi nocturnes, preserving the qualities of
discovery and intimacy surrounding their genesis. Mercure’s sound is a porous electronic art that overlaps ambient,
abstract, and industrial sensibilities – its spaciousness reveals an
artist attuned cinematically rather than for radio play or public
performance. She approached the latter theatrically, and rarely,
disdaining most live shows as too serious, and bringing her music to
bare on her audiences in playful, immersive contexts. On recordings,
Mercure’s night lit synth music evokes non-confined environments, at
once expressionistic and minimal and always aware of its surroundings.
Mercure was a busy collaborator during the years surveyed by Beside
Herself, making music for theater, performance, film, and TV animation,
yet it was through her self-released cassettes that she established her
music among like-minded artists abroad. Circulated through tape-trading
networks assisted by insightful reviews in Eurock, a seminal music
magazine covering progressive rock and electronic music scenes, these
album-length releases included Rogue and Mint (1983), A Cast of Shadows
(1984), Dreams Without Dreamers (1985), and Dreamplay (1990). Though
unvarnished in fidelity (and now scarcely seen), these tapes showcased
Mercure’s transportive aptitude within and beyond the limited sound
recording medium.
Mercure’s artistic path never ran through creative meccas New York, San
Francisco or Los Angeles. Raised in Springfield, Massachusetts, and then
moving to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, in her twenties, Mercure was
already an adept musician when she encountered a local and lively
theater scene, and was asked to score an unorthodox performance of
Waiting for Godot. The experience was pivotal in marrying music and
image for Mercure, and so she began making music for film, television,
dance, and theater. It wasn’t until a long sojourn in Eindhoven,
however, that she became transfixed by electronic music (ala Conrad
Schnitzler, whom she would correspond with for years) that would inform
her music to come.
Acoustic elements such as voice and stringed instruments add a haunting
lyricism to the non-tonal space unoccupied by electronic presence in
Mercure’s music. The graduality of phrasing and measured sequence of
tones also distinguish her music from the repetition and
improvisation-heavy hallmarks of the Kosmische genre, a stylistic
antecedent for the artist. Mercure’s fascination, or obsession, with
new, consumer conscious music technology is demonstrated in her
inventive sequencing and sampling, adding a mechanical, sometimes
menacing, feel to Beside Herself. Mercure’s contemporaries became the kindred minds of the Eurock “scene”
such as The Nightcrawlers, Lauri Paisley, and Don Slepian. It was in
association with Paisley and Pauline Anna Strom that Eurock featured
Mercure in an article titled “Women Synthesists” in 1986. The three
artists all shared a bravura for homespun, self-produced electronic
music that looked beyond pop conventions for a higher plane of
avant-gardism or musical spirituality. Not long after the article went
to print, Mercure offered Eye Chant, her standalone vinyl album
self-released in 1987.
Beside Herself extends RVNG Intl.’s preservation efforts to sister label
Freedom To Spend who reissued Eye Chant in 2017, an occasion marking
just over twenty years since its original release on Mercure’s own Quick
Shower Music. (Eye Chant, and the cassettes surveyed on Beside Herself,
were originally credited to Michelle Musser, the name which the artist
used until a divorce in 1987).
The anthological scope of Beside Herself joins Eye Chant to restore the
canon of Mercure’s arresting dream-music, revisiting this anomalous
creator’s breakthrough material. Beside Herself will be released on
double LP, CD, and digital formats on November 9, 2018. The set features
liner notes by Emily Pothast and an incredible array of unseen
photography and ephemera of the era.