Emptyset - Blossoms

A Closer Listen

Art is a mediation between the material world and the intellect. Artists dream up ideas, but then must constrain them in available forms – sonnets, sculptures, watercolours, concertos. In the exegesis to his “Trillion Byte MP3 Harsh Noise Work” (2011–12), British experimentalist JLIAT notes: “there are always actual physical limits which the artist as practitioner has to deal with. An exception might be (true) conceptual art”. As half the patrons at a modern art museum could tell you, the value of conceptual art remains in the intellect. The visible, material form is not the art, only a rendering of it. The remaining 50% of punters will ask who cares about self-referential posturing, unless something looks, sounds, tastes, or feels good.

Emptyset is a partnership of James Ginzburg and Paul Purgas, two musicians active in the production, release, and celebration of contemporary electronic music. Their musical output has centred on installations, and other site-specific sounds. Blossoms is partly a reimagining of that work, a selection of which is fed into a custom machine learning system, along with 10 hours of improvised recordings. Fans of Star Trek will recall Lieutenant Data, who could play the violin by mimicking hundreds of human performers, but struggled to invent his own style. In the era of machine learning, we are better equipped to imagine artificial intelligence that not only organises and explores available information, but also creatively learns from and adapts it.

As the conceptual work of Blossoms is rendered in sound, listeners may seek out the joins between the original artistic vision and the impulses of the autonomous machine. The pay-off is in realising how fruitless and arbitrary that search becomes. As the name Blossoms suggests, the album sees the organic and the mechanical coming together. At first glance, there’s a jokey irony in naming tracks “Petal”, “Bloom”, or “Stem”, when the sonic pallet is anything but floral. Abrasive, metallicized ambience comes and goes; percussive throbs stop short of becoming beats; crashing waves of bass continue to crunch, throb, and oscillate.

Parts of the album resemble the experimental fringes of bass music. This is where grime might arrive, were it left to evolve in a laboratory, redefining itself away from the beat-driven rave. As the concepts give way to good feelings, the irony of the title evaporates. These are truly the sounds of a blossoming emergence – of an ersatz flower, opening for the first time under stark, fluorescent light. (Samuel Rogers)

Thu Oct 10 00:01:00 GMT 2019

Tiny Mix Tapes 70

Emptyset
Blossoms

[Thrill Jockey; 2019]

Rating: 3.5/5

Static’s always just around the corner. What reliably comes clear is that humans are deeply faulty organisms. Even the most seemingly balanced among us are subject to all manner of destabilizing existential menace. In this light, there is a sort of relief that the machine-learning software that has formed this release didn’t improve upon Emptyset’s superb discography (plus 10 hrs of wood, metal, and drum skins that this reviewer can’t speak to). Seems our massive advances are dwarfed by our inherent ability to get in our way. Stands to reason that we’d pass this on to even our most sophisticated of technology. Blossoms can come across like a series of calloused provocations, full of spell-breaking rests that seem to say “Like that?” in a mocking way. Like the program doesn’t know what the hell Emptyset wants with it. This is a victory for us, of course. It has otherized the duo’s spartan sound to an extent, but it’s also given listeners an intriguing detour rather than something more or less significant.

While fascinating, the conceptual approach to Blossoms naggingly skirts the obligatory or novel. Yet there is a disheveled acclimation that occurs with the music produced by this experiment. Perhaps around the third track (a decidedly rubbery post-nasal drib, oddly titled “Bloom”), there’s a sour and smudgy trance that settles around the head, like watching a sordid b-movie in slow blinks. In a way, this is the darkest Emptyset release, in that it raises goosebumps with macro insectoid emissions but doesn’t quite pound and swell in the trademark fashion that might make the project more palatable for some. But this listen should be rewarding to all blessed with a compulsive temerity to de-settle through its rude gradient rub. What’s the reward? I don’t know. The sense that the messy human hand is never too far from whatever ostensibly autonomous structure may spring from it? The experience is a striking glimpse, however elusive. Sometimes a work looks at you cockeyed and it holds your gaze anyway.

Blossoms by Emptyset

The sophistication of the process is immaterial to the enjoyment of Blossoms, especially when vastness of variables seems the main point of intrigue. And to exist is, often enough, to be a sputtering engine of hyper-stimulated grasping. The album’s less a reverse Frankenstein’s monster situation than an extended collaboration with chance — not unlike Ben Chasny’s Hexadic card system of songwriting with Six Organs. The 10 selections are less a swirling cacophonous summation of Purgas and Ginzburg’s documents thus far than a series of muted, disorganized footnotes. They step out and freeze like models on a runway at a pace both deliberate and seemingly tentative. With “Blade,” there is a pastoral, Loscil-esque thing happening, but it’s surrounded by remoteness and rote, ragged machinations. Still, it’s plain that humans made this stuff, even (or especially) if it’s out of a desire to make their self-expression less so. It’s not alien or cold or even emotionless. It belies a familiarly human sort of stoicism, with the physical plane playing less of a role than usual. Like unlearning the object permanence of acquainted sound in its own tall, tinny greyed-out shadow. Most vitally, Blossoms is Emptyset continuing to do uncompromising, restless Emptyset, with no sign of stagnation (even if this very phenomenon continues to be a crucial aspect of their sound).

Fri Oct 11 04:06:30 GMT 2019