Put together by Mo H. Zareei (aka mHz), "Material Prosody" brings together a number of artists whose work concerns materiality of sound and sonority of matter. The series presents six new works composed for different editions of his sound-sculpture "Material Sequencer": a custom-designed 8-step electromechanical sequencer aimed at emphasising the physical materiality of sound and sound production.
In "Material Prosody," mHz invites Nicolas Bernier, Loscil, Matmos, Zimoun, and Alba Triana to develop new works for different editions of "Material Sequencer." This series showcases each artist's unique approach to utilizing the sound-sculpture and the concepts behind its development. While Loscil and Matmos apply their distinct compositional styles and signature sound processing techniques to the sequencer's output, Nicolas Bernier and Zimoun embrace its instrumental nature in almost improvised pieces—an approach pushed to its extremity in Alba Triana's radically stripped-back contribution, both in form and material. Referencing Rayner Banham's principles of Brutalist architecture, mHz's own contribution leverages sound-based brutalism as the conceptual underpinning for the project as a whole.
A simple USB-powered sound-sculpture, "Material Sequencer" re-investigates one of the most elemental tools of electronic music production –– an 8-step rhythmic sequence, by taking the sequencing process outside the black box and into the acoustic realm, flaunting its materiality and physicality. All the interface components are presented on a custom-designed circuit board that is fully exposed, and the sound-generating mechanism is reduced to solenoid percussion in its most basic form. Different rhythmic patterns can be entered using a small 8-position DIP switch and an on-board dial can be used to change the tempo. Using a microcontroller, the patterns are converted into a series of electrical impulses that are then used to actuate the solenoid, which in turn strikes a block of solid matter, generating sound.
This project stems from Zareei's ongoing body of work with the aim of realizing principles of brutalist architecture through sound art. Zareei's interest in brutalism – an often misunderstood movement which originated in a drive for material honesty, structural clarity, and a sculptural approach to architecture – dates back to his upbringing in Ekbatan: an apartment complex in Tehran. During his PhD research, he employed brutalism as a frame of reference for sound-based art practices that embrace the materiality of their "anti-beautiful" raw materials through a highly organized mode of expression.
A bare-bones realization of this sound-based brutalism, "Material Sequencer" presents an upfront celebration of its austere sonic and physical material. The project is a response to the over-philosophized discourse on sonic materialism which almost ironically overleaps the very essence of what it is concerned with, i.e. matter. To counter this, the work underscores the very physicality and tactility of the sound object and the technological medium that enables it.
credits
released October 4, 2024
Compositions and productions by Nicolas Bernier, Loscil, mHz, Matmos, Zimoun, Alba Triana
Artwork + physical edition design by Mo H. Zareei
Photography by Ted Whittaker
Mo H. Zareei / mHz is an Iranian sound artist based in Wellington, New Zealand.
His work focuses
on highlighting the beauty in basic sound and audiovisual objects through reductionist structures.
He was the recipient of 1st prize in the last iteration of the Sonic Arts Award in 2015, and has published his work on Important Records (US), Room40 (AU) LINE (US), and leerraum(CH)....more
supported by 26 fans who also own “Material Prosody”
mHz's typically spartan use of sound for maximum effect. The three tracks stand up entirely on their own, but also work really well as an album listened through end-to-end. Michael Upton (Jet Jaguar)
supported by 23 fans who also own “Material Prosody”
as an expression of the poetics of this moment, the unease in this work is comfortable and welcoming to me. it gives breathing room.
I'd love to read the limpet in any form it comes forward.
grateful 🙏 alexzito
supported by 21 fans who also own “Material Prosody”
I can't pick just one favorite track. This album feels like a single, continuous experience. It unfolds like an immersive story, guiding through impossibly massive structures and vast, bleached-empty layers of carefully crafted ambience. The piano pieces act as brief reminders of familiar spaces before you drift back into the expanse. 0x7b1
Described as “a soundtrack for wandering,” the latest from Stavroz is full of searching, jazz-inspired dance music. Bandcamp New & Notable Jun 25, 2022