What a wonderful world
Label: Erstwhile Records 
Format: CD
Genre: Experimental
In stock
 Despite the title of the album and several of the selections, listeners who  approach this disc expecting something in the vein of Louis Armstrong will  likely be disappointed. Then again maybe not, if it's originality that's prized.  Jérôme Noetinger and Erik M had, by the late '90s, established themselves as  driving forces in contemporary electronic improvisation, performing and  recording with virtually anyone of note in the field. For this album, they at least  partially venture out into different, though adjacent, territory: that of  musique concréte. Additionally, there is a large amount of post-processing, making  it difficult to call the music contained herein "free improvisation" in, at  least, the original sense of the term. Some of the tracks, such as the opening  "Trees of Green" and the closing "Pretty in the Sky," will not strike the  experienced listener as unfamiliar. Both are superb electro-acoustic integrations of  abstract and found sounds, leavened into a full and satisfying whole and  recorded with wonderful clarity. The surprise sets in on the fourth track where  one is suddenly buffeted by the playful and sarcastic screams of what appears to  be a handful of ten-year-olds. Suddenly, it feels as though you've wandered  into a Luc Ferrari piece as the treated, real-world sounds mingle with  electronics. These sounds may be deemed intriguing or banal depending on the  listener's frame of reference, but by and large they meld solidly with their  accompaniment. There's a wonderful moment in "Dark Sacred Night" where a French  chanteuse has her torch song utterly obliterated by a storm of ultra-harsh static and  white noise. What a Wonderful World is a fine example of the restless pursuit  of new sonic combinations; as well as furthering the idea, in this genre, of wh at is possible after the "performance" has ended. Recommended.
Cat. number: erstwhile 028
Year: 2005