Tag: Stefan Goldmann

Popperola Presents: Dr. Poppers’ 9th Birthday Party. Stefan Goldmann (DL.) interview

After having interviewed Raoul Belmans, guest of the Popperola Party this Wednesday, I also wanted to hear out the other dj of that particular night. That is, as you know by now, Stefan Goldmann! Here’s the result…

Okay Stefan, 2011 seemed to be a busy and decisive year for you. You played more often, did a performance at the German Time Warp festival and played in Ibiza for the first time. Moreover, your output of last year already proved its importance. Lastly, the label Macro that you’re running with Finn Johannsen turned five; it released several very interesting records and found its place on the map of the industry and in the hearts of the fans. Now, I know you’ve always tried to manage your agenda, schedule and so on very conscientiously, so was this change of pace intended?

Stefan Goldmann: “Last year brought some quite exciting DJ gigs, which I’m really happy about. Besides that I changed a lot of things in terms of how I work. 2011 was the first year I didn’t want to release another single, but focus on new ideas and concepts instead. What seems to make sense now for my own music as well as for Macro is that we try to cut the time span between idea and implementation to the shortest possible. You know, in the past I’d often hesitate, like anyone probably, and be like “I’ll never get away with this” or “I’ll have to figure this out for a longer time”. Now it’s really just doing it. Some ideas seem so clear and simple when they come to mind that I’m astonished no one has implemented them so far. Sometimes it’s ‘in the air’ and you just have to do it and release it before others do, like planting a flag on a little South Pole. Being first is important and part of the fun in a way. I’ve tried to do this constantly and there’s a dynamic going with it that also brings up really interesting opportunities.”

An important event in 2011 was the release on Macro Recordings of unpublished work by your father Friedrich Goldmann, who was a composer of contemporary classical music. I thought of this as a courageous and difficult enterprise. I’m interested firstly in the preparatory stage: how did the idea evolve and how hard was the selection process? Did you for instance need to build in a certain distance because of the aspect that it was your dad’s music you were working with? And can you explain your choice to put the result out on Macro – because it is indeed partly your own label, but it doesn’t seem an obvious decision?

SG: “For me music is a fairly subjective thing anyway. I’m as biased towards Elektro Guzzi’s as to Friedrich’s music. Then, the selection of works was fairly easy – Friedrich himself felt that the compositions he wrote in the last couple of years opened a new chapter and were strongly going to areas that the usual avant-garde contemporary stuff simply doesn’t cover. I too felt it is really important music that just wasn’t documented on any of the releases he had. Since one of the key problems of this kind of music is reaching people outside their core audience (and trust me, I know the CD sales numbers of some of the most sought-after and most often performed composers), releasing with a New Music label was not an option for these works. It would have stayed within professional circles and the outside world wouldn’t have noticed much.”

“With Macro and especially the distribution of this CD as a subscribers’ special for The Wire magazine we reached a wider, more diversified and yet, as it turned out, pretty interested audience. You also don’t just get the usual musicologist’s feedback in the vein of “the pizzicati add up really nicely around bar 72”, but anything from drug associations to synaesthetic descriptions to whatever really. It was good to see this music is not just for analytics. Ex post it looks like a quite obvious decision to me. I’m quite happy how this one worked out.”

Also last year, you profiled yourself as a sharp music sociologist with several remarkable writings about the current state of affairs in the dance music scene. In some of your music there is a conceptual element in play where you also seem to tackle some of the typical tropes in dance, like for instance edits or beat patterns. This type of ‘institutional critique’ was and still is quite common in the field of visual arts but is rarer in music, though it exists – like in punk, most obviously. In effect, you are able to make a good dance track while bringing across meaning on a higher level, a remarkable quality. But tell me, what is the bigger idea or purpose of all this; can you elaborate a bit on that? And do you feel that your message is coming across so far?

SG: “The writing was aimed at addressing a few assumptions on how music works socially, how it gets noticed and what economy stands behind it. There is so much fog around this and it needed a voice saying something different from “spam as many mp3s as possible around and you will succeed”. Because people do just that and it never worked or it worked out differently from what they expected. I guess most musicians feel like being in a Kafka novel where things happen and you just can’t figure out why and how. That is a pretty intriguing situation that has not been discussed much in the context of music, so I wanted to investigate this a bit. Is that in the tradition of ‘institutional critique’? I never thought of anyone’s behavioural patterns as institutions, because it’s really just the sum of individual human reactions affecting a certain result. But certainly these adopt functions that institutions fulfil elsewhere.”

“Then again, the conceptual element seems like an anchor to me in an ocean of endless abundance of music. It adds a seemingly objective side to it, like adding some new coastline to the map. If I can’t show the difference of one piece of music over what we already have, I’d better scrap it because otherwise it’s just redundant. If there’s a conceptual difference on the other hand, that’s exciting – it shines. It radiates that energy you don’t get out of just another beat. Spotting a good concept is like finding that one gem in the middle of an enormous waste disposal site. With dance tracks, what I’d ideally like to hear is stuff that anyone in the room notices as being different, almost with an alien side to it – you and I don’t need to like it, just feel something is there.

As said, Macro Recordings celebrated its fifth birthday a while ago. To put one of its basic premises simply: it is about quality over quantity. The output has always been deliberately modest. But as five years have culminated in a double mix compilation (“Macrospective”) and as some of your artists have grown during that period along with the label, most notably Elektro Guzzi, is that moderateness at this point still a sustainable strategy? In what direction do you and Finn want the label to go in the future?

SG: “To be honest, we wouldn’t be able to handle more output. It is really a matter of time, and quantity just costs time without adding anything significant. Of course we try to do what is right for the artists we work with and there is not really a time limit in this regard. Some labels plan their schedule in a way where they allocate certain months to certain artists. Like: “now it’s time for a new single by dj A”. We don’t do that. If one of our artists comes up with a project, we try to release it for the shortest time possible and in the moment when it makes most sense, not when it keeps the label catalogue looking smooth. Therefore we try to avoid planning ahead too much or cluttering our schedule with too many releases. Circumstances, artists, everything is changing – too much strategy doesn’t really help there.”

To finish: at this moment you are preparing a new album which will be the follow-up of your debut “The Transitory State/ Voices Of The Dead” (2008). How is that going so far? Since you received a lot of positive reviews and appreciation for that double debut, where have you put your standards now?

SG: “It is almost ready. Since it won’t be much like “The Transitory State”, it is hard to compare. It sounds different, and it comes with an idea, a limitation even, that bonds all the tracks together in it. The obvious thing is that the first one was kind of a compilation since all tracks on “The Transitory State” were also out as vinyl singles and EPs. So this is the first real dance and club album I’m doing.”

Thanks a lot, Stefan!

Popperola Presents: Dr. Poppers’ 9th Birthday Party with Raoul Belmans (B.) and Stefan Goldmann (DL.)

Word is out!

Two djs will comprise the line-up of the coming Popperola Party, which will be held to celebrate my first, true rebellious – as well as arrogant – gesture in life, namely waiting until leap day 1976 to pop into this world. These two admirable persons are Raoul Belmans and Stefan Goldmann. The venue is Club Montreal in Leuven, Belgium.

If you’d like to attend or inform your friends, you’ll find an event page on Facebook and Resident Advisor:
www.facebook.com/events/273112082752445
www.residentadvisor.net/event.aspx?328904

Popperola Presents: Dr. Poppers’ 9th Birthday Party

Admission: 5,00 EUR or free for those celebrating their birthday on Feb. 29th (ID card as proof)
Start: 23h00
Venue: Club Montreal, Naamsestraat 34, 3000 Leuven (B.)
Parking: Hogeschoolplein or subterranean parking H. Hart (Naamsestraat 101-109)
Camping: Oude Markt, Leuven (just kidding!)

Raoul Belmans is without doubt a familiar name to house aficionados. After all, his career as a disc jockey, producer and label owner goes back more than two decades. He earned his name as a resident of the influential Belgian party provider Food, as a part of the producer’s duo Swirl People and as head of the label Aroma Records. He has released numerous 12inches and albums on labels such as Wally’s Groove World, Sole Music, Panhandle, Seasons, Music For Freaks, Lowdown Music, Oomph, Amenti, Odds & Ends and We Play House. Nowadays, Raoul is also running his own digital imprint Swirled Music. Regularly he travels to parties worldwide to enthuse people with his impeccable technique and his funky, deep but also broad selection of music. Lovable, warm-hearted, open-minded and witty: that’s Raoul Belmans, like that is his music.

From Berlin, Stefan Goldmann will give his first Belgian performance on this extraordinary occasion. Stefan is a prolific producer, who has pleasured us with a rather unusual kind of house music such as the tracks ‘Lunatic Fringe’, ‘Sleepy Hollow’ and ‘The Maze’. It appeared on labels such as Classic Music Company, Perlon, Victoriaville, Cocoon, Mule and of course Macro Records which he runs together with Finn Johannsen. Macro is a label with a well-defined identity and was responsible for important releases by Raudive, Elektro Guzzi, Peter Kruder and Namlook. It has its own monthly Friday night at Berlin’s Panorama Bar. As Goldmann has a strong musical background, his material is often highly conceptual and thought-provoking but he invariably succeeds in making it sound as simply good music. Last year, the man did not go unnoticed at the German Time Warp festival and even in Ibiza, he produced ground-breaking work such as the double 12inch ‘The Grand Hemiola’, he mixed a compilation for Macro, he wrote texts on music sociology for Little White Earbuds as well as for the flyers of the club Berghain and he offered the world unreleased music by his late dad, a composer of contemporary classical music. At this moment, Stefan is preparing a new album.

More info:

www.raoulbelmans.com
www.facebook.com/djraoulbelmans
www.twitter.com/raoulbelmans
www.residentadvisor.net/dj/raoulbelmans
www.discogs.com/artist/3361-Swirl-People

www.stefangoldmann.com
www.macro-rec.com
www.discogs.com/artist/7518-Stefan-Goldmann
www.facebook.com/stgmn
www.residentadvisor.net/dj/stefangoldmann

In the next weeks I’ll supply you with additional info, words and other stuff about the Popperola party. And of course I hope to see you there!

Review: Stefan Goldmann – “The Grand Hemiola” – Macro Records

Is musical geniality and musicality in general genetically conditioned? I’m not going into this scientific discussion here, how interesting it may seem. But when considering the evolution of Stefan Goldmann’s output, the question inevitably comes up. Son of composer of modern classical music and of electroacoustic pieces Friedrich Goldmann, who was revered in the DDR and taught at the university of Berlin, Stefan was immersed in classical music and later went on to study music himself. Next to the great dance tracks he has released on labels such as Perlon, Classic Music Company and Macro – which he runs himself together with Finn Johannsen -, he also published electroacoustic experiments as well as highly conceptual outings.

Take for instance his seemingly absurd reworking of Igor Stravinsky‘s “Le Sacre Du Printemps”. With this tour-de-force, Goldmann paid homage to one of his musical heroes. Moreover, “Le Sacre…” is a wonderful piece of dance music, one might even say techno avant-la-lettre since it was written for a ballet play and strongly emphasised the rhythmical elements in a manner that hardly anyone did around 1913. But apart from that, Goldmann also tackled some issues concerning the mindless editing of already existing tracks in today’s dance scene with his edit of “Le Sacre…”. Furthermore it is a small lesson in hearing the differences in the recordings of classical music which are for instance related to the available technology at the time of each version, to background noises in the studio or to interpretations of the conductor. Lastly, one might also view Goldmann’s effort as a way to put his finger on the matter of musical copyright: Stravinski’s heirs forbid anyone to make variations on the piece, but Goldmann cleverly avoided doing just that with his edit.

The thing that is so admirable with this sort of conceptually heavy tracks, is the fact that Goldmann invariably succeeds in making them sound as, well, simply good music. The same goes for this new double 12inch “The Grand Hemiola” which consists of six tracks and 144 loops; 66 in 4/4 at 33 RPM and 78 in 3/4 at 45 RPM. “Now what is that all about?” I hear you wonder. The whole package is just an exercise in polyrhythm: two (or more) independent rhythms played simultaneously. This idea has been used for ages in the most diverse styles of music, for instance in lots of African music, in medieval and baroque European music (Des Prez, Brahms, Händel, …) and so on.

In contemporary dance the 4/4 rhythm is predominant for obvious reasons, but Goldmann thought – correctly – that there are so many other possibilities which are explored too little. So the Berlin-based producer gave it a try, even to the extent that the piece “Double Hendecagon” is built on an 11/8 beat. All six tracks on this ‘album’ contain a percussion pattern that is rather awkward but they never fail. Goldmann fills up the music with eery sounds that come into play marvellously. Truly haunting at some instances!

Moreover, for the title track Goldmann used fragments of music of his father. Later this year, he will bring out some unpublished pieces from his dad on Macro and the respectful use of it in his own material really is a beautiful tribute. In the aforementioned “The Grand Hemiola”, Goldmann has put a hemiola underneath a concerto piece that is almost Mahleresque in its drama and grandeur. A hemiola, by the way, is a shift of the accent in a metrical system, most often in triple time, articulated as if it were dupal time. This is why it is often said to be antimetrical. If this reads as something very abstract, just listen to this wonderful track which illustrates it perfectly.

Apart from these tracks, you’ll also get the loops. With those, you can start building your own polyrhythms by playing them together on two decks. Once you get into it, you can make a large amount of variations. It’s a most enjoyable way to break out of the 4/4 beat pattern and perhaps to learn more about music and rhythms. I totally recommend every (future) dj to try it out! And obviously I totally recommend this double 12inch to everyone else too.

Stefan Goldmann – “The Grand Hemiola” will be out on March 28th

Track list:
1. Mining The Vein
2. The Grand Hemiola
3. Double Hendecagon
66 Loops in 4/4 @ 33rpm
4. Goat’s Guts
5. Megi’s Waltz
6. Away From The Flock
78 Loops in 3/4 @ 45 rpm

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