Titolo azzeccatissimo per un CD i cui brani possono essere definiti giornalismo sonoro, o meglio fotografia sonora. Il processo messo in atto da Michi è infatti paragonabile a quello di un fotografo che piazza la macchina su un cavalletto e programma una serie di pose in loop andando così a sovraincidere più immagini su ogni singolo negativo. In pratica sono stati utilizzati da Michi un magnetofono privo della testina di cancellazione e una cassetta a ciclo continuo. Dalle varie registrazioni sono stati poi tagliate e rimontate le parti più confacenti al processo compositivo e alla sensibilità dell'autore (la paginetta allegata alla confezione spiega il tutto nei minimi dettagli). Prendono così corpo gli otto brani del CD che illustrano brevi lassi di tempo in altrettanti ambienti: un festival di musica sperimentale a Monaco di Baviera, il Teatro dei Pupi a Palermo e altre situazioni a Firenze, in Sardegna, in Grecia, in Sudtirolo e in una piccola stazione ferroviaria della Toscana Orientale. L'autore consiglia di chiudere il ciclo registrazione - elaborazione - fruizione ascoltando ogni brano come un loop (posso assicurarvi che la cosa funziona egregiamente) anche se non ritiene determinante il rispetto di tale indicazione. Il supporto contiene anche una traccia per computer attraverso la quale è possibile scaricare alcuni Sound Reportage che non sono stati inseriti in questa raccolta. Ad un così alto livello quantitativo corrisponde un livello qualitativo altrettanto valido. Michi riesce infatti ad affrontare in modo personale e originale un ambito, quello della musica concreta e dei field recordings, in cui è sempre più difficile dire qualcosa di interessante. Con "Sound Reportage" e con "Dave's Waves" di David First, recensito nel numero scorso, la Ants si conferma come una delle etichette italiane più interessanti per quanto riguarda il settore della sperimentazione sonora. 

(Etero Genio - Blow Up)

Many are the long and winding roads that one must sometimes travel in search of a rewarding aural experience, filled as they are with numerous blind alleys and elusive dead-ends. This only serves to make those rare occasions when you manage to navigate thè maze-like structure of record company publicity and hand-me-down knowledge somewhat akin to a revelation. After many hours listening to yet more of your standard computer dross, and countless sleepless nights wondering if I would ever be able to take pleasure in an album again I stumbled across this Iittle gem.
The gem in question is the work of Francesco Michi, an Italian stallion residing in Firenze, and is the product of many years labour. Much of its gem-like quality I suspect derives from the fact that before Michi embarked on a study of electroacoustic composition he paid his dues in the hallowed halls of philosophy. Michi has approached the sonic problem from many angles including performance, installation and sound sculpture. In 1982 he founded FORMAT, a group of like-minded Ginos and Ginas driven by the twin prongs of finding creative applications for the use of technology, especially the Io-fi variety, and the studying of the surrounding acoustic environment.
Much of the spirit of that investigation informs this album. You shouldn’t be put off at all by the clean, white-and-red Italian racing lines of the cover because what is contained within is dirty, sick and quietly beautiful. You should also take no notice of the fact that Michi studied electroacoustic composition because the sound here has little in common with that particular institutional science. With the aid of little more than a cassette recorder minus the erase head and a Commodore 64, Michi has fashioned a group of 'altered' field recordings that wonderfully capture the soundscape of certain environments and proves to be true the adage that it isn't the size of your tools that count, but how you use them.
The recordings here cover a period of five years, mostly made in Italy, but the opening track is from an experimental music festival in Munich, and the last track was recorded in Greece. Michi likes to think of these aptly named 'sound reportages' as reflections on memory, in which new experiences can magnify or erase memories of previous ones, as happens here to the environmental sounds courtesy of the cassette recorder's missing erase head. With all the overlapping of events I think they could equally be thought of as small musings on the notion of time and its apparently relentless march forward.
They also just happen to be fantastic snapshots of a time and piace. Indeed 'snapshots' seems to be the best available metaphor: the tracks are very much like a succession of audible pictures taken of a certain environment, which are then shuffled about and presented in a somewhat random order. They build up an image of the 'sound' of their respective environments amazingly well. Sounds overlap, merge, re-appear in the background, and generally bleed into each other in surprising ways. To add to this confusion Michi reports that for a truly faithful rendition of the sound reportage experience each track should be listened to as a loop.
The variety of sounds presented here is just too complex to begin to describe, everything imaginable of a particular environment seems to turn up, although the small snatches of music that squeeze through seem to be a linking factor of sorts. Everything is bathed in a glorious analogue hiss thanks to Michi's tape recorder that adds its own layer of filth to events, and makes no apologies for doing so. To think that Michi has conjured up an album of such richness with the simplest of tools is astounding. With these he has given us a document of more depth than is normali/ manifested in the entire careers of many of his lacklustre contemporaries.


(
Aron Robertson - The Sound Projector)

<<