Via App - Sixth Stitch

Tiny Mix Tapes 80

Via App
Sixth Stitch

[Break World; 2016]

Rating: 4/5

“[A] series of uncanny disturbances stitched together towards an encrypted noir.”
– Via App in an email to The FADER, describing Sixth Stitch

“In return, female subjectivity as it gives itself up to intuition becomes a problem with respect to a certain conception of time: time as project, teleology, linear and prospective unfolding; time as departure, progression, and arrival - in other words, the time of history.”
– Julia Kristeva, Women’s Time, p. 17

Via App’s first full-length album is a slippery beast. Its textures are disorienting, its sonics haunted. It leaks into the listener’s ears from another dimension — strange and liquid, unsettling and defamiliarizing. It operates against rigidity and linearity; “to hell with techno!” it cries, grabbing the listener by the throat, pumping them full of sticky, viscous matter, their jaw locking, their stomach bulging. It’s an ecstatic overload, a play of gesture, tone, and mood. It ain’t your daddy’s techno long-player.

Sixth Stitch is possessed by heat. Its tracks are in constant thermal flux, charting paths between the blistering and the freezing, warm envelopment and icy suspension. These shifts occur both within and across tracks, infusing the album with an unearthly momentum that stretches far beyond the 4/4. As they heat up and cool down, the tracks’ edges distort, releasing rhythmic and tonal residues, which are captured and repurposed — grist to Sixth Stitch’s compositional mill. This sonic auto-cannibalism is evident from the first track, “Far She,” which begins with a heavy, languid pulse before finding its groove — kicks piling on top of each other, synths whirring away in the background. As it unfurls, the track becomes entangled in its own rhythmic gears, its melodies shifting as it reconstructs itself in a new form, simultaneously consuming and producing itself.

In interviews, Via App has mentioned the influence of Total Freedom on her approach to composition, and Sixth Stitch stands as a conceptual interpolation of his DJing style. Her use of abrasion and atonality, and the ways in which her tracks shift tempos and textures speaks to the potency of Total Freedom’s digital approach to dance music. Via App extends his tactic by burrowing into the core of that most functional genre — techno. By locating herself within its aesthetic and formal frameworks, she explodes its reliance on teleology, its phallic attachment to History as progression, rearticulating it within a schema of flux and intensity. She creates new possibilities, spaces, and affects for the genre, environments in which juxtaposition and contradiction are made constructive and destructive in equal measure.

Her tracks flow into these new generic non-places, taking up residence within their maelstroms, nesting in their constant oscillation between collapse and emergence. It’s a place of pure immanence, all-encompassing and total: these tracks have no outside. They’re moored precariously to the phenomenal world, their textures hazy and lambent, their rhythms tactile, their kicks rich and forceful. They sprout strange new limbs in real time, heaving and panting as they transform, like Space Jam’s villainous, basketball-playing aliens. On the roiling “Con Artist,” a lurid, industrial snare drum and a hypertreated snare are bisected by swathes of noise, leaving the listener flailing, any attempt to grab hold of something futile, the whole construction melting away.

This sense of dislocation is heightened by the writerly moments threaded through the album, appearing both within other tracks and as standalone works. These pieces are less concerned with the club than with the construction of liminal spaces, enlisting the listener in mapping their physics and geometries. So we have the ambient, molecular sonics of “Dissapearances,” “Visabel’s” satellite lounge-pop, and “Fevered Proviso’s” monastic drones. These excursions divide the album into a series of interconnected suites, with tonally similar tracks drifting together in loose whorls of intensity. By piecing in these soundscapes, Via App imbues her tracks with an uncertain potentiality, the sense that they could just as easily shed their skin and reveal their beating techno heart as remain in a state of perpetual energy, vibing off intensity and momentum ad infinitum.

Fittingly for an album concerned with heat and motion, Sixth Stitch draws to a close with “Airborne Shuffle,” a soundtrack to the launch sequence of some fantastic aircraft. Spectral strings rush back and forth, insistent synths and plosive kicks dovetail gently, and a hardware melody rises and falls with the smoothness of a sleeping body. The album takes its leave here, remaining in a state of constant flux, always and forever “render[ing] explicit a rupture, an expectation, or an anguish which other temporalities work to conceal.”

Mon Nov 14 04:52:29 GMT 2016

Pitchfork 74

In the constellation of small clubs, one-off dancefloors, disused industrial structures, abandoned basements, strange apartments, and wonderfully forlorn spaces that compose and incubate the New York dance scene in the last half-decade, Dylan Scheer, who DJs and produces as Via App, has emerged as one of the city’s most prodigious talents. If you’ve seen her behind the ones and twos at, say, Bossa Nova Civic Club in Brooklyn or Trans-Pecos in Queens, you’ll notice immediately that she prefers caustic and uncomfortable music, and her style is defined by a jitter and mercurial mixing that delightfully defies the streamlined logic of by-the-book techno. It’s the kind of DJing that befits the protean and defiant nature of New York’s dance scene. On her third studio album, Sixth Stitch, Scheer presents an ominous and decidedly gothic vision of club music.

Sixth Stitch is composed of 16 tracks, divided between a series of short interstitial instrumental sketches and more “traditional” dance songs. On her past releases, Scheer made tunes that existed outside of genre, tracks that could be playful and angry, filled with crunching noises and slippery bass lines. Her production was as unexpected as it was seemingly unfocused. Now, she shows a tighter vision, a sharpened sense of what she wants her music to do. Across the music on Sixth Stitch, she creates a creeping tactile sensation that generates a sordid sense of time and place. It is music that imagines the parts of a club that reside behind closed doors and shadowy corners.

In the album’s opening track “Far She,” Scheer lays out the newfound physicality of her music. The piece is haunted by a churning drone that sounds like a malfunctioning white noise machine or a broken appliance. After the noise has become somewhat hypnotizing, Scheer inverts the mood and introduces a percussive element that mimics the sound and feeling of someone banging on a closed door. Seconds later, there is more banging, as if a crowd is forming outside your bedroom. If you’re listening to this on headphones, alone in your apartment, her mix of sounds generates a distinct feeling of horror.

It’s not as if her music is totally predicated on discomfort, but she deploys a series of anxious and claustrophobic moments to make this album’s joyful moments even more pronounced and triumphant. In tracks like “Get in Line” she uses a gurgling collection of noise that’s drippy, wet, and muffled. When percussion starts to stabilize and she adds in a loop of sharp synths, it’s a pure relief, as if you’ve climbed out of a manhole to see the rest of the world. After minutes of nervousness tracks can become downright goofy, and the release of energy is potent.

Elsewhere, Scheer experiments with more cinematic sounds that seem to borrow from Flying Lotus or John Carpenter. In “Viasabel,” she loops a glittering array of keyboard flicks into something that could easily soundtrack a scene in a galactic cantina on a backwater planet. “Con Artist” presents a back-breaking version of jungle that would be appropriate for the rave scene in the second Matrix movie. As daring as Scheer’s selection of sounds are, the sheer length of the album leads to long sections that seem shapeless or mired by wasted space. In songs like “Phantom Dictation,” about two minutes are spent playing around with all the different ways you could pass a simple drumline through a helium filter, and the momentum disappears.

Still, Sixth Stitch is a bit of a daredevil feat for this young producer. Few have her ability to turn bedlam into such an organized and effective music. Scheer has said in the past that she looks to DJs like Ashland Mines (aka Total Freedom) as aesthetic forebears. Arca once said that Mines was the “king of painting through chaos.” Scheer seems to be angling for a title of her own.

Mon Nov 28 06:00:00 GMT 2016