STILL UND DUNKEL - Abandoned (2019)
released by Hallow Ground in October (Standard Edition) and December (Limited Edition) 2019
Standard Edition:
- 2LP, 180 grams, gatefold cover with double inlay
- 64-page cahier with the essay ‘I hear the ruin of all space’ by writer and curator Brian Dillon
- 180 grams double vinyl
- Digital (download code)
- Catalogue nr. HG1906, EAN: 0617957552577
Limited Edition (100pcs):
- 2LP, 180 grams, gatefold cover with double inlay
- Additional LP with field recordings
- 64-page cahier with the essay ‘I hear the ruin of all space’ by writer and curator Brian Dillon
- Film Stills 2011–2019 (304-pages book)
- Digital (download code)
- Catalogue nr. HG1906, EAN: 0617957552577
Separate releases
- CD
- Film Stills 2011–2019, 304-pages book (100pcs), ISBN 978-3-033-07612-9
- 64-page cahier with the essay ‘I hear the ruin of all space’ by writer and curator Brian Dillon (700pcs), ISBN 978-3-033-07507-8
Bandcamp
www.hallowground.bandcamp.com/album/still-und-dunkel-abandoned
Project site
www.stillunddunkel.com
Press text
STILL UND DUNKEL is the project of musician and visual artist Christoph Brünggel, film maker Benny Jaberg and media artist Pascal Arnold. Their debut album »Abandoned« comprises ten compositions created for their audiovisual art live performances which draw on an ever-growing archive of moving images and sound recordings. The three artists started working together in 2011 and visited abandoned and hidden places at night or underground throughout the world to collect images and sounds. The trio documents and archives the transformative processes that these former symbols of civilisation have been undergoing since they had been deserted or forgotten – that is, if they had ever before been accessible to the public in the first place.
»Abandoned« contains additional information on STILL UND DUNKEL as well as artwork by Arnold and Jaberg, including a 64-page booklet with images from the project and its creation as well as an essay by writer Brian Dillon. All that easily makes it one of the most ambitious releases on the Swiss-based Hallow Ground imprint to date. As the culmination point of eight years of archiving and performing the project, »Abandoned« is a monumental piece of art that over almost 80 minutes negotiates the historical implications of what it means when the achievements of the so called human progress are being left behind or remain hidden from the public consciousness. While Brünggel’s musical approach at first may appear to favour abstraction over the naturalism that dominates most projects based on field recordings, the artwork already clearly hints at a more complicated relationship between nature and human interference. Drawing explicitly on field recordings from man-made environments, »Abandoned« queries our very notion of authenticity, naturalness and how they can be (re-)constructed in artistic practice: have those reservoirs, bunkers, infirmaries or clinics and other sites become part of the natural world that slowly conquers them again? And if so, how can those specific sonic environments – beyond their visual representation through moving pictures – be adequately documented, interpreted and turned into art? The answers to these questions are not simple, and STILL UND DUNKEL accordingly does not provide easy listening. Already the 18-minute long opener »Lure« with its thundering swathes of noise that are punctuated by subtle bass thumps and nervously ticking sounds is an overwhelming piece of music. Its sheer loudness is far from the only thing that makes this piece as unnerving as it is. There also looms the uncertainty of where the surroundings – field recordings taken from inside the pillar of a bridge in Baden, Switzerland and from a subterranean, empty water reservoir in Zurich, Switzerland – can actually be heard in unmediated ways and where the artistic interpretation of the source sounds begins.
This specific use of field recordings and its manipulations continue throughout »Abandoned,« dovetailed with an alienating undertone evoked by the electronic soundscapes. The musical abstractions are constantly confronting the tangible sound recordings of the so-called reality – often melting together, but not without creating intense friction. »Flicker« for example is enriched with recordings of feedback that have been generated by emitting filtered noises of shortwave radio searches; all of which was set into a dialogue with the space itself, transforming the former sound source into a literal echo chamber for artistic experimentation. Even when on »Hallway« a human voice surprisingly enters the sonic picture, »Abandoned« only makes its inherent ambiguity even more palpable, adding to the already raised challenging questions of transformation of lost places and time itself. Every attempt at documentation is always already doomed to be only a temporary evidence of something that, in the meanwhile, has changed again. Well aware of that inherent contradiction, STILL UND DUNKEL – engl. quiet and dark – offer a glimpse into the ephemeral essence of things. As monolithic as it may look, feel and especially sound at first, »Abandoned« is a vivid work of transformation itself.