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.
play
Out of stock

** 2026 Stock. Original 1977 Copies that may show some signs of long storage wear. ** Composed between 1972 and 1976, Clouds marks one of Lars-Gunnar Bodin’s most fully realized attempts to fuse electronic music, vocal writing, and visual dramaturgy into a single, inseparable organism. Often described as a pioneer of Nordic electronic and text-sound art, Bodin approaches this piece less as a “work for tape” and more as an advanced form of musical drama: three women singers, three dancers, eight-channel electronics, and slide and film projections all occupy the same conceptual plane. Rather than illustrating the music, the visual elements function like additional voices, while the live performers weave in and out of the electroacoustic field, blurring the distinction between human presence and mediated sound.

At its core, Clouds is composed for an unusual ensemble: three female voices, three dancers, ten loudspeakers, and multiple image sources configured around the audience. The text draws on Bodin’s own poetic material, later echoed in works such as “Nästan and Plus,” establishing a language where single words, fragments, and phonemes are stretched, layered, and spatialised rather than delivered as linear narrative. In performance, the singers’ lines may be doubled, distorted, or answered by the electronics, so that a syllable can trigger a surge of sound from another part of the room, or a whispered consonant becomes the seed of an enveloping cloud of noise. The dancers extend this fragmentation into the body, translating the broken syntax of voice and tape into gesture and movement, with projections adding yet another drifting layer of semantic suggestion.

The electronic component, realised in the 1970s studio environment associated with Fylkingen and the broader Swedish electroacoustic scene, exploits the possibilities of multichannel diffusion long before “immersive audio” became a catchphrase. Bodin distributes sounds across eight channels and ten loudspeakers, treating space as a compositional parameter on par with pitch or rhythm: events spiral around the audience, evaporate overhead, or condense suddenly at a single point, much like clouds forming and dispersing in the sky. This spatial dramaturgy supports a music that is less about climax than about changing states - condensation, suspension, and dissolution - with the electronics oscillating between dense, noisy masses and delicate filigrees that leave the singers exposed.

Released in LP form in the late 1970s, Clouds also functions as a crucial document of Bodin’s intermedia thinking in compact, repeatable form. Heard purely on record, the work foregrounds its electroacoustic craft and vocal writing, yet traces of the absent visual layer remain audible: sudden cuts feel like edits in an unseen film, while long-held tones resemble sustained light or slow camera pans. Within Bodin’s catalogue - which ranges from early text-sound pieces to instrumental theatre and later electroacoustic works - Clouds stands as a hinge, a moment where his roles as composer, graphic artist, and intermedia creator converge. It captures a specific historical moment in Scandinavian experimental culture, but its preoccupation with voice, space, and the instability of meaning keeps it startlingly alive, a drifting, ever-shifting structure that still resists being pinned down or neatly explained.

 

Details
Cat. number: FYLP1023 LP
Year: 1977
Notes:
Electronic music realised at Musikhögskolan in Stockholm.
Vocals recorded and final mix made at Studio 7, Sveriges Riksradio.
The version on this record is a shortened version of Clouds, specially created for this medium.
Composed 1972-76.