Read Aphex Twin's Selected Ambient Works Volume II Online
Authors: Marc Weidenbaum
SELECTED AMBIENT WORKS VOLUME II
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For a complete list of books in this series, see the back of this book
Forthcoming in the series:
Smile
by Luis Sanchez
Biophilia
by Nicola Dibben
Ode to Billie Joe
by Tara Murtha
The Grey Album
by Charles Fairchild
Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables
by Mike Foley
Freedom of Choice
by Evie Nagy
Entertainment!
by Kevin Dettmar
Live Through This
by Anwyn Crawford
Donuts
by Jordan Ferguson
My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy
by Kirk Walker Graves
Dangerous
by Susan Fast
Definitely Maybe
by Alex Niven
Blank Generation
by Pete Astor
Sigur Ros: ( )
by Ethan Hayden
and many more …
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Notes
1
This is the track listing for the vinyl version of Aphex Twin’s album
Selected Ambient Works Volume II
as it was released in the United Kingdom in 1994. There are various versions of the album’s track count, depending on region and format, some with as few as 23 tracks. Track titles can vary as well—more on that in the chapters ahead.
To Melinda and Clementine
“Mute, because overheard”
—Fernando Pessoa
“I am sitting in a room, different from the one you are in now.”
—Alvin Lucier
“Release the tension and the result is a flow of sound—an ebbing stream of energy-surges, waves of compression alternating with rarefaction which beat against our eardrums; taking a definite period of time before dying away to nothing.”
—Daphne Oram
Selected Ambient Works Volume III
There is no previous book to this book. There is no
Selected Ambient Works Volume I
book, just as there is no record by the musician Aphex Twin bearing the title
Selected Ambient Works Volume I
. There is, however, a
Selected Ambient Works Volume II
album, released by the British record label Warp in 1994, and this is a book about that album.
The closest there is to a
Selected Ambient Works Volume I
is
Selected Ambient Works 85–92
, released two years prior on R&S, a Belgian label with which Aphex Twin eventually parted ways in favor of focusing on his own enterprise, a small label named Rephlex, and signing with the more established but then still-emerging Warp.
So, in the form of a reverse caveat, no, you have not inadvertently obtained a sequel without having first consumed the initial volume. This book is a standalone object about a record album that stands as a milestone of ambient music.
The disorientation provided by that “
Volume II
” in the album’s title—along with this book’s title for that matter—provides a useful starting point for getting situated with the music, because the music on
Selected Ambient Works Volume II
is a purposeful, willful engine of disorientation. The hope is that this book will offer a modicum of orientation, not just that it will provide a fixed map to a fluid landscape, but that the dynamic physics of that fluidity will also be explored.
At the near midpoint of
Selected Ambient Works Volume II
, a wind chime peeks through the album’s lush and pervasive haze and makes itself heard. The chime appears as a sequence of routinized figments in the final track on the first of the album’s two sides. That’s track 11 of 23, for those listening along at home to one of the US editions of the recording, and it is track 12 of the editions of the album that contain 24 or 25 tracks. A chart on page 126 of this book is available to help collate the different editions of the album. With just one exception, the tracks that constitute
Selected Ambient Works Volume II
are officially untitled, in that they lack proper names, and this wind chime track is not the exception.
We hear the wind chime, but we do not hear any actual wind. There is a brief, passing moment of whizzy, slipstream, sci-fi ether. It is like something that might accompany the jettisoning of waste—or of a fallen colleague—in deep space by an anonymous starship. This ether noise is synthesized, fleeting, “false.” The wind chime, by contrast, sounds “real,” even in the absence of wind. It is a wind chime resounding in a closed chamber, a specimen on clinical display.
The chime introduces its characteristic rhythm. The device itself is nothing special. It is standard issue. It is the same wind chime that dangles from a neighbor’s porch, situated fittingly right between a dreamcatcher and a flycatcher: between the mystic and the functional.
The chime introduces rhythm, but the rhythm is loose at best. It is a rhythm-less rhythm, in that it lacks a discernible downbeat. The chime cycles through, its pattern a marvel of a unique phenomenon: the very pattern-less-ness reveals itself as pattern. There is no beat in the traditional sense of a beat. What there is is a series of beat-like segments that collectively suggest a kind of whole: in the place of meter we have a metric temperament. The track depends on a droning, slowly developing tonal center for any sense of compositional undergirding. Yet in its seeming beatless-ness, its harmonic drift, its largely synthetic raw material, the track still feels like a song. And like most any proper song, it has a vocal, but such as it is the vocal is merely snippets of voices in plausible conversation (“plausible” because the voices are garbled, as if heard through the wall from a neighboring room). Even when this strange music agrees to speak, it muffles its message. Such is the nature of the remote pleasure—and an often delirious pleasure it is—of Aphex Twin’s
Selected Ambient Works Volume II
.
The wind chime originates from a distant time, a time even further back than 1994. It relates to an object known to the ancient Greeks as an aeolian harp, named in honor of Aeolus, the god of the wind. The wind chime is, by most accounts, the original “generative” instrument: it is the original device that serves dual essential purposes, as composition and as tool. To create a wind chime is to create a musical composition in physical form; it is to set down rules (the number, timbre, and relative proximity of notes) that when enacted by a player—by the wind or, if you tend toward the spiritual, perhaps by Aeolus himself—result in something sonorous, something melodic, something song-like. The remoteness of this something is, to borrow a term provided by another Greek myth, tantalizing.