MUTEK 2008 mini-review

[Murcof & xx+xy visuals at A/Visions 1 / photo: basic_sounds]
For me, the end of May is always marked by a road trip to Montreal for the MUTEK festival. I haven't taken in the entire festival since 2006 as that year I realized that I have a tolerance for about ten shows in a week, after which point I start to run up a dangerous bar tab and foam at the mouth. As luck would have it, this year's schedule condensed most of the programming I was interested in into a 48 hour window. I opted to arrive in Montreal on Thursday evening and skip the Saturday night and Sunday events and more or less saw and heard what I needed to. I'm not going to provide that much of a qualitative assessment of the artists and performances I saw and heard but what follows may provide some useful observations and links for the interested.
First and foremost, it is really great to see the scope and quality of the A/V programming improving and diversifying. This year's lineup featured three dedicated A/V showcases and the majority of the SAT shows also featured prominent visuals. I missed several collaborations I'd like to have checked out on the first two nights, which included Murcof & xx+xy visuals, Sans Soleil & Nokami and Martin Tétrault's artificiel.process. I was fortunate enough to check the final A/Visions showcase for the much anticipated Christian Fennesz and Lillevan collaboration. Lillevan chose to marry the shimmering textures and trademark warm Fennesz fuzz with an assortment of composites which overlaid shots panning across masonry with a variety of slow-motion swirling water vortices. The entire performance was quite dreamy and it was great to see the immaculately controlled distortion of Fennesz visualized in an appropriately loose and moody manner. As solid as this collaboration was, it felt a little restrained, especially after the cascading celestial mood conjured during Tim Hecker's incredible pitch dark performance.

[Chic Miniature at Experience 2 / photo: basic_sounds]
The SAT is always an essential component of the MUTEK experience and this year was no different. Over the course of the Friday evening warm up party and the (rained out) Saturday piknic I was able to hear Barem, Chic Miniature, Komodo and Flying Lotus. Flying Lotus didn't do that much for me, but his set outlined enough of a middle ground between shufflin' J Dilla percussion and top shelf dubstep that I plan on keeping an eye out for his debut album, which drops next week on Warp. Barem was quite excellent - he's definitely one of the more interesting cats in the minimal game at the moment. My great regret of the festival is having to miss Marcello Marandola perform his Des Cailloux et du Carbone project in order to scoot over to the Tim Hecker/Fennesz show.

[Sans Soleil & Nokami at A/Visions 2 / photo: basic_sounds]
Friday's Nocturne event was a pretty good indicator that MUTEK finally seems to have pulled together its programming for the larger events. The last few years' larger events have been quite erratic and sullied with some outright bad programming and performances. To see a lineup of Kid Koala, Megasoid and Modeselektor shadowed by a mini-minimal room featuring Dave Aju, Half Hawaii and Jeremy P. Caufield is proof positive that MUTEK has really figured out how to balance mass-appeal with more left-of-centre performances. Beyond this, Megasoid and Kid Koala's inclusion suggests the festival has conducted some much-needed musical outreach into the broader Montreal music scene. As for the performances, Modeselektor seems to have kicked their rave nostalgia up another few notches and as much as I appreciate their energy and sound design I'm really not a fan (although their 2006 MUTEK performance was the stuff of legends). I rolled into Metropolis quite late, just as Half Hawaii was tearing down and Jeremy P. Caufield was hitting the decks. Jeremy is an old friend, and I haven't heard him DJ for several years. To hear him bump out a totally fresh extended set of bleepy minimal was fantastic. I've been over saturated with minimal-mediocrity over the last few years so any opportunity to hear the sound DJ'd well is welcomed with open arms.
Over the past couple years my reviews of MUTEK have been quite mixed, but the five shows I attended this year gave me a little more optimism about the direction of the festival. Watching the Montreal community slowly drift away from their experimental origins (see the original MUTEK lineup) has been a little distressing but I suppose the nature of scenes and movements is that they fade away or become institutionalized. I think MUTEK appears to finally be striking the right balance between adventurous programming and larger events without ghettoizing the experimental content - no small feat. I can only really comment on the shows I was at, but this year things felt quite positive, rather than tentative.
If you're on the prowl for more scuttlebutt about MUTEK 08 the events pages at Create Digital Music/Noise are quite comprehensive and worth visiting. Ken Taylor of XLR8R has also been posting about his experiences on the XLR8R blog and no doubt our friend at basic_sounds (thanks for the images) will be posting on the festival soon as well.
addendum: A review and lots of photographs were posted on basic_sounds today.
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08.06.08 | Mutek 2008 Reviews
from Minimal.ca on Wed, 2008-06-11 23:01Another Mutek has passed and since we were unable to attend this years festivities, I thought it might be a good idea to feature a couple of recommend blogs since their reviews are better than ours could be anyway.
...
second opinions
If you were at the festival please feel free to provide your own opinion, or point us towards one. I'm curious what other folks thought about this year's do.
I wholly agree
I wholly agree with your assessments of the shows you attended, particularly Barem and the total showcase he performed at. I was also enthralled by many of the A/V performances and venue as well.
Unfortunately, I feel that you caught the best of this year's Mutek. Having attended the entire festival the impact of the performances I enjoyed was quite diluted. I'll likely scale back my attendance and be much more selective next year.
nice to hear your outlook
You definitely did the right thing. The rain sullied most of the rest of the weekend. I'm glad I left early Sunday morning broke and tired.
My highlights were
Seth Troxler- Seth brought the dimension of deepness and sexuality that sometimes gets missed at mutek. This one had the girls having a blast.
Barem- I walked into barem's set never having heard of him. people were going off at this fairly early event. Def will be checking this guy out again.
Sleeparchive- he looked german to the bone, and like he doesnt get much sleep at all.. no wonder he has to archive it. He was a maestro in his own wunderkind manner. His focus was palpable.
Ben Shemie- Middle Clouds: Family A, B, C”. (Shemie + his laptop and his band of 4 violinists put on a moving musical film score esque performance.
Jeremy Caulfield- Drop Kick in the face set. The guy blew me away. I was so up for this set and actually expected to be torn a new one. Every few months I try to check what this canuck is up to, always impressed. I kept looking back at my friend who is an old techno soul and we were vibing off jpc like kids watching star wars for the first time. You are very lucky to have a friend like this! After I found out that mike huckaby sold him his first collection of techno it all started to make sense- throw in a childhood in hong kong and this futurist has the underpinnings of a great.
Deadbeat- my first time seeing him live outside of the digi sections. Seems like a very nice fellow. I wasn't expecting much as the nocturne 4 second room was pretty sub stellar. This guy obviously loves audio and paints gorgeous pictures with it.
--- I missed murcof and most of the AV sets. This starts me on a rant actually. Everyone I spoke with whom attended all of the A/Visions listed the Murcof/Hecker/C Fennesz events as the highlights of the weekend.
Last year I paid for the full mutek ticket at 180$... not only that but I had to pay full price for the A/V sessions. This year I bought my tickets singly. I meant to talk to the ticket people to try to get some comps to the A/V sessions as last year I felt I was screwed having to pay double. Good for mutek organizers for getting it right this time and giving people a true full access ticket this time.
Roblog
Hi Robert, thanks for sharing your review from your blog - which I have now bookmarked. :)
Jeremy holds the dubious distinction as being one of the first people to encourage my writing and he introduced me to Detroit and the Packard plant in 1995.
actually..
Many might not realise this, but most of this year's line-up were repeat performances (even from last year!), and though the Friday broke new ground with attendance (from what I hear -- don't quote me on that) almost everyone on that bill had played MUTEK before, including Megasoid in various guises. This year MUTEK had nothing huge or special to offer (no Narod Niki, no surprise this-or-that, no Plastikman Live, or Richie-n-Ricardo at the Piknik, or experimental line-ups of the calibre John Duncan + Pomassl etc), but it was the 9th year, and methinks they are gearing up for the 10th.
We'll see if this makes the XLR8R vid(s) which I shot, but Alain Mongeau basically said that MUTEK has switched to having a line-up consisting of a headliner with a supporting act (I think it's been this way for awhile, but I remember nights where the opening act was something like BOLA -- !! -- at the old SAT). This is OK, but some of their opening acts are questionable, such as the ironic or disastrously sincere performance by Heart 'n Soul, white guys doing a bad out-of-sync mid'90s house/techno impersonation, *wearing bandanas* (WTF?), right before Underground Resistance. Upon reflection, I think it was insulting. Perhaps one of them (as they are local indie musicians whom I otherwise respect) would like to explain what the hell they were trying to achieve. And perhaps MUTEK can explain why they didn't book artist(s) who have been supporting Detroit sounds in MTL all these years or someone from the Detroit underground (Kero! Detroit Techno Militia!). There was certainly some terrible programming that revealed a real lack of understanding of certain scenes (Kode 9 again? and without involving the local dubstep DJs/crew who make the scene happen in MTL?).
I'd like to see MUTEK return to label showcases. This has been lacking since 2005, and since then the focus of the festival has become scattered...
I also saw very little experimental performance this year beyond the A/V shows, which was disappointing. MUTEK as a festival of *experimental* (electronic) music has all but come to pass into the dustbin of history. But that's OK. Take it for what it is, which is a big party of the hip, but not necessarily something that's going to blow your mind sonically.
mutekstep
Hi Tobias,
One can always count on a layered response from you! :)
I think it is great to see (and hear) that Mutek has opened up to Dubstep. Granted I'd rather hear DJ Pinch than Kode 9, but the latter is the anointed ambassador for that sound right? As far as I'm concerned, any top-shelf dubstep artist is better than *another* minimal artist. I really regret not being able to check out the small room jam at Metropolis for the Saturday night event. I would really have liked to have heard Scott.
What I was really trying to communicate with my perspective is just how "thought-through" the lineup felt on a whole. Granted, there is less and less experimental content but what is presented seems to gel better with the rest of the festival. Also, one thing I've noticed over the last two years is that people that were strictly part of the piknic crowd, seem to be open to the AV showcases - which is encouraging. One of the things that really bothered me about the festival two years ago was that there seemed to be a bi-polar audience for the various streams of programming with little to no cross over. People seemed more open this year.. but perhaps I was wearing rose-coloured glasses.
This elaboration aside, I'd love to hear more opinions on Mutek 2008. :)