CARSTEN VOLLMER – ARBEIT.23 ICH ARBEITE MIT FREQUENZEN: TEIL 3 2600 HERTZ PHREAKING – CDR

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Description

The last part of the trilogy Ich arbeite mit Frequenzen forms a trilogy in itself: it is made up of three tracks while its two predecessors only contain one long track each. And while parts 1 and 2 work through a frequency grid of apparently mathematical rigour, this one focuses on the particularly distortion-rich frequency band around 2600 hertz. The two 2600 Hertz tracks are live recordings of a performance by Carsten Vollmer. Here, and on the opening track Phreaking, the first non-electronic sounds of the whole trilogy can be heard: the performer’s screams put into relief the expressive quality of noise that was consciously underexposed on the ‘antihumanist’ parts 1 and 2.

The fact that all of Carsten Vollmer’s releases come as numbered Arbeiten (works), but in particular the verb arbeiten (to work) in the title of this release, emphasise the (physical) labour of building up his walls of sound. Thus, part 3 of Ich arbeite mit Frequenzen once more enacts the drama of ‘man vs machine’ or ‘body vs bodily harmful frequencies and volumes’ through which the noise genre time and again confronts existential and social alienation with an ecstatic, but ‘parole-less protest’ against it (to borrow a phrase from Carsten Vollmer’s fellow noisician Anton Kaun aka Rumpeln).

The first track of the album, Phreaking, also features a list, but not one of frequencies, but a list of textual references to Ron Rosenbaum’s classic 1971 feature story The Secrets of the Little Blue Box about the hardware-hacking network of the Phone Phreaks, who built a counter-network within the official telephone network of the U.S.A. From the vantage point of the officially sanctioned telephone signals, these subversive actions were undoubtedly noise, and it is plain to see that Carsten Vollmer’s Phreaking is a sympathetic homage. In a ‘communication guerilla’ practice such as this, Michel Foucault’s basic tenet ‘Where there’s power, there’s also resistance’ meets the axiom of information theory: ‘Where there’s a signal, there’s also noise’. The fact that this third and final album comes not as one monolithic track, but as an object fragmented within itself, is programmatic for ways in which noise can stand for the freeing of spaces in political contexts: instead of the monologue of an author(itarian) voice – ‘I, and only I, work with frequencies’ –, this album signals within itself the clamourous debate of different, dissenting voices, which in the political field is always preferable to the undisputed monologue of an absolute power. At the end of the live recordings, one eventually hears the voices of the audience; the author is no longer alone within his work, and someone says: ‘It continues here, in the next room.’ Thus the album ends with an invitation to claim new spaces of possibility.

Additional information

Weight 0,2 kg