Still, it was a distinct pleasure when I started listening to this fine album to find it a truly wonderful, meditative slice of challenging avant-garde in the finest tradition of mid-twentieth century “indeterminate music”. This music popular with smartypants on the New York scene in the fifties has been described as “pitch shadings that seem softly unfocused; a generally quiet and slowly evolving music”, and Pastel fits the bill perfectly.
Ivan Čkonjević is a guitarist from Subotica, Serbia, and this recording is on the Brlog label. His credits include being a member of post-rock band Ana Never and the collective Belgrade Noise Society. Neither of which, naturally, have I ever heard of. But maybe I should check them out!
Pastel is comprised of six lengthy tracks based on Čkonjević’s guitar tones, which often sound very much like an Ebow was employed, as on the first and fifth tracks. These long, drawn-out tones conjure spartan mental visions of Abstract Expressionist paintings in the same way the music of Morton Feldman (my personal fave) does, and are also a little redolent of Frippertronics at their most abstract. These sounds alternate on other tracks with tones more like a piano, glockenspiel or celesta than a guitar, but I’m assuming guitar was the source.
Čkonjević has collaborated here with Filip Đurović, who handles “sound editing”, which in this case is significant, because accompanying the guitar is some pretty neat sound art, for example on the second track, “Imp. Hrom žuta”, which is grounded in extremely abstract and subtle sounds, like a manipulated cymbal — organically generated sound waves, you might say. A delightful sequence of celestial bell-like tones (made with a guitar?) enters about halfway through the piece. Đurović also incorporates field recording-type (indoor) environmental sounds to add mystery, as on the third track, “Imp. Kvarc siva”.
The album concludes with a twenty-two-minute piece of echoing piano-like notes, eventually accompanied by the longer guitar tones and also featuring those weird real-life room noises going on simultaneously. The effect is quite eerie. Then the album concludes with a mysterious crying baby!
So, you can mix experimental sound art with music in a very effective way; there may be a lot of amateurish “guy and a computer” albums out there these days, but Čkonjević’s album is not one of them. This is expert avant-garde music that produces a contemplative, hypnotic mood from the first note and holds it for the entire 80 minutes of this recording. Clearly this is music made by imaginative men who understand the rudiments of composition.
For lovers of abstract sounds such as the music of Feldman, Cage, Christian Wolff, and others of that ilk, this will be a treat. It’s one of the finest recent releases I’ve heard. And it’s a free download.