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Tummaa [CD]

Vladislav Delay Audio CD

Price: £7.84 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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BBC Review

Tummaa marks ten years of Vladislav Delay, aka Finnish electronic musician Sasu Ripatti. Although he’s recorded under other pseudonyms, including the vocal house project Luomo, Ripatti’s eight Vladislav Delay albums feature his most original music. Tummaa continues to explore oceanic dub-scapes but with a significant new twist: it’s an acoustic album with Ripatti playing drums, Lucio Capece on clarinet and sax and Craig Armstrong on piano.

Armstrong’s orchestrations for the likes of Madonna and Massive Attack might make his the highest profile of the trio, but it’s Ripatti’s percussion that underpins and directs the music throughout. Although the leader’s early background as a jazz drummer is often noted, his arrhythmic playing is more akin to that of free improvisers such as Han Bennink or Tony Oxley than the likes of Max Roach. The result is a radical music that’s impossible to dance to, but tremendously immersive if surrendered to.

Most of Tummaa continues this approach. Rhythms stop and start in a matter of moments as crashes and echoing whooshes reverberate in cavernous sonic spaces. Two tracks, however, feature heavy-footed rhythms that sound as though the music has dragged itself onto dry land and is suffering from the effects of gravity. Mustelmia features a swing that would make Tom Waits blush, such is its swamp-like disposition. Elsewhere, Toive could initially be mistaken for an early electronic work by Karlheinz Stockhausen, but after a few minutes resolves itself into a leaden stomp.

Capece’s contributions are subsumed into Delay’s sonic miasma and are consequently difficult to discern. On the other hand Craig Armstrong’s keyboards, particularly the Fender Rhodes, are both atmospheric and often obliquely melodic. Considered alongside Ripatti’s drumming for the Moritz Von Oswald Trio, Tummaa represents a significant change in approach. It’ll be very interesting to hear where Vladislav Delay develops from here. --Colin Buttimer

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Amazon.com:  1 review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Headphone Commute Review 22 Nov 2009
By Headphone Commute - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
Listening to Tummaa requires preparation. At least, it requires knowledge of the intent behind this album. Let me set the stage. The intent is 'darkness'. And this is its music. Tummaa reflects the mood recreated by Sasu Ripatti, composing under the moniker Vladislav Delay, while living on a remote island in the Baltic Sea during the time of year known as 'kaamos' (polar night). This is precisely the time from December to February, where there is only a few hours of light per day. This overall feeling of darkness made an enormous impression on Ripatti. The track titles alone construct the following message: Kuula (Kiitos) means Bullet (Thank You); Mustelmia means Bruises; Musta Planeetta - Black Planet; Toive - Wish; and finally Tunnelivisio (ok, can you guess that one?) - Tunnel Vision. Ripatti last made a sizable impression on me with his previous album, Whistleblower, released on his own label, Huume, in 2007. Now, back in Finland after seven years of living in Berlin, Ripatti returns with a few elements from his roots as a percussionist. The album may take more than a few listens for the followers of Vladislav Delay's to get into the groove. There is no dub on here. Instead, gentle piano riffs and Rhodes licks are interrupted with clicks, chirps and musique concrète snippets of sounds snatched from a variety of metallic and industrial sources. Even a deep rumbling sigh becomes a bass here. This is Ripatti's return to the source of acoustic and organic. "I wanted to take a new direction with Vladislav Delay, with more acoustic sound sources," he explains. "I avoided as much electronics as possible, wanting to bring myself closer to my background as a drummer and percussionist. [...] I just love hitting things... making sounds physically without needing a power plug." The album incorporates some abstract and jazzy improvisation featuring a live trio - Lucio Capece on saxophone and clarinet, Craig Armstrong on the keys, and Ripatti on percussion. After intensive sample manipulation, some modulations remind me of descending spaceships from the 70s. Some sound a lot like circuit bending emissions. Some sounds are like nothing I've ever heard before (from an organic source). All of this is blended with the swirls of abstract effects, sporadic glitches and scattered ambiance, floating in a three dimensional stereo field. Through this dark and somber concoction, full of dread and isolation, we descend into Tummaa. I can imagine the overall recording to be a flashback to a bad psychedelic trip. At times groovy, hypnotic, and rough around the edges. The entire experience will keep your ears prickled up, and your eyes wide open. A serious juxtaposition of sounds even for a seasoned listener. Be sure to check out Ripatti's percussion work as a member of Moritz Von Oswald Trio (with Max Loderbauer and of course, Morritz von Oswald) on their latest release, Vertical Ascent (Honest Jon's Records, 2009), as well as his other works under aliases like Conoco, Luomo, Sistol, and Uusitalo. Oh, and don't forget his collaboration with Antye Greie as AGF/Delay and their 2009 release, Symptoms out on BPitch Control.

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