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Kwashiorkor

Kwashiorkor Presents... (2Tape Boxset)

Label: Infinite Expanse

Format: 2Tape Boxset

Genre: Experimental

In process of stocking

€34.00
VAT exempt
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*41 copies limited edition* Emerging from the dense web of the 1980s mail-art underground, 'Kwashiorkor Presents…' gathers two rare cassettes from the elusive American collective known as Kwashiorkor (or K+), whose radical DIY ethos blurred the borders between music, collage, and correspondence. 'Kwashiorkor Presents…' collects 'We Are Numberless' (1988) and 'Reliving The Past' (1986) in a deluxe double-cassette edition that maps the outer edges of the 1980s home-taping underground. Kwashiorkor (often abbreviated as K+) was less a group than a living network - a cooperative of correspondents trading cassettes, newsletters, and fragments of sound through the postal system. Describing itself as 'a process to encourage creative self-expression inherent to all individuals,' K+ rejected the conventions of the music industry in favour of open-ended participation. Its medium was exchange itself, shaped through tapes, letters, and shared intent. 

'We Are Numberless' unfolds as a sprawling audio collage assembled from recordings made between 1975-1988 by a constellation of contributors including Rev Mart, Steve Jewett, Tree Saw, Bill Quinn, and many others. From surreal spoken word to raw industrial cut-ups and lo-fi environmental captures, the compilation embodies the anarchic sprawl of the network - each contribution a node in an invisible web of creative exchange. Released two years earlier, 'Reliving The Past' distils the network’s ethos into two long sides of overlapping sound, eroded tape, and slow, deliberate drift. In the words of the members, it resembles a wall of layered posters – recordings pasted over one another until new forms emerge through chance and decay. Voices fade, reappear, and collapse into abstraction, forming a dense collage where authorship dissolves and collective intent takes over. The result is a blurred yet purposeful flow of anonymous contributions, capturing the network’s instinct to create through accumulation rather than authorship.

Together they trace the outlines of an idea more than an institution: music as correspondence, collaboration as resistance. 'Kwashiorkor Presents…' documents a fleeting utopia of tape-trading idealists who, in their own words, shirked passive consumption in favour of active creation.
 

Details
Cat. number: IE16
Year: 2025

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