Tim Hecker Marcus Boon (First published in The Wire, 237) The life of a Honduran shrimp fisherman is not an obvious theme for a piece of cutting edge post-glitch, beatless, wordless electronica, but thatÕs what Montreal-based Tim HeckerÕs new Mille Plateaux release, Radio Amor is about. ÒI was totally obsessed with the idea of fishermen in the Caribbean,Ó recalls Hecker. ÒFucked up, crapped out transmissions that werenÕt receiving totally. Disjunctures in every form. Just the loneliness of being at sea - the idea of the heat, the shitty radios they have on their boats, the sea.Ó If thatÕs the case, this is probably the most un-tropical piece of music about the Caribbean ever made Ð no beats, just surging drones and distorted tone clusters, laced with static and noise. Although Hecker did make a trip to Central America in the mid-1990s, the piece seems built more around the pathos of remembering what sunshine is like, while sitting in his home studio in the middle of a long Canadian winter. ÒThe bitter irony is that when I was recording it,Ó Hecker says ruefully, ÒI was in this confined space. Maybe no windows. ItÕs ironic because in my own mind, the musicÕs totally referential when IÕm making it. But IÕm not there at all. IÕm in this hot room and itÕs snowing outside, minus thirty probably.Ó Unusually for an electronic musician, Hecker is fascinated by the possibility of giving his ambient, abstract music a thematic shape. ÒItÕs easy to put together nine tracks on your hard disk, press burn and send it off to the label. The fruit really comes when you stop that burn button and think more about what youÕre doing. I spend a lot of time putting things together and assembling a narrative. You create some sort of fiction out of it. You could say all that stuff about Caribbean fisherman is total fiction Ð itÕs a practice of writing in a way.Ó While a song with lyrics is readily understood to be ÒaboutÓ something, HeckerÕs work instead creates a fascinating tension between the formless beauty made possible by electronic sound and the listener and musicianÕs desire for music to tell a story, even if its just the ÒambientÓ story of machines, isolation, absence etc. On 2000Õs Haunt Me, Haunt Me, Do It Again, released on MontrealÕs Alien8, the narrative appears to be about Canada, and the ambient paradise of the Great Frozen North. ÒThatÕs a currency that I exploited as a joke Ð the Canadian clichŽs of the tundra and all the fucking snow and shit. That sounds good. In the same way, I exploited the idea of this Caribbean shrimp fisherman on the last one. ItÕs so easily adaptable to any context. You can say this is about Japanese sado-masochism. It might work. It might also work with penguins on an iceberg thatÕs about to disintegrate.Ó Hecker grew up in a suburb of Vancouver, listening to indie rock. He relocated to Montreal in the 1990s where he studied political philosophy and paramilitary policing with cyber-theorist Arthur Kroker, and inspired by KrokerÕs homages to the posthuman joys of the machine, bought some gear and began putting out Autechre-inspired minimalist techno tracks on Force Inc. subsidiary Pitch Cadet under the name of Jetone. By the time of his second CD, 2001Õs Ultramarin, Hecker already shows signs of getting tired of the minimalist techno paradigm. Beats drop in and out, clouds of noise and ambient sound hover in the mix. ItÕs a beautiful work, but one that Hecker is eager to distance himself from: ÒI had a huge reaction against electronic music because it became so self-referential. I just felt nothing. Beats add a completely arbitrary, artificial structure to things. It seems so much more constricting. ItÕs all this Ÿber-associations: people hear the beat and then determine where it fits into in electronic music where thereÕs now 500 different micro genres.Ó HeckerÕs first venture into beatlessness, Haunt Me, Haunt Me, Do It Again owes as much to Sonic Youth and My Bloody Valentine as minimalist electronica. ÒWhat they did was amazingÓ, says Hecker, Òwhite noise and walls of sound: I still donÕt think people have realized the potential of pure melodic dissonance - overwhelming tones, tectonic tone plates of sound.Ó His follow-up My Love is Rotten To the Core, a commissioned set of performance pieces, was based around the history and sound of 1980s pop metal giants, Van Halen. Although the bombastic noise-laced samples initially sound like Kid 606-style deconstructions, thereÕs greater subtlety and purpose to HeckerÕs effort. HeckerÕs sampling and manipulations feel like theyÕre exposing Hagar, Eddie Van Halen et al. to the void, by creating an enormous ÒambientÓ arena, into which their pronouncements, solos and the like, echo and fade. ÒThe more I got into it, the more I got into David Lee Roth and I found he was quite a sage guru. The things he said were totally fucked and totally intelligent. He seemed like a sad clown, a tragic-comic character.Ó Hecker is skeptical of electronicaÕs tendency to run through the available iterations of any piece of software or hardware and then move on to the next one. In a recent piece published in Canadian Ôzine Parachute, Hecker writes, ÒPerhaps a form of electronic music will come which will leave the technology it uses as only a trace - so that the aesthetic field opens up again to allow for spaces which are free from the suffocation of medium-based discourses; an electronic music which leaves its technology as just a murmur.Ó HeckerÕs recent music is certainly heading in that direction. Radio Amor, like OvalÕs Diskont 94 or FenneszÕs Endless Summer, succeeds because Hecker finds a way to produce a fluid, living sound that can no longer be said to be ÒelectronicÓ according to all the cold, machine stereotypes, or ÒorganicÓ in the sense that itÕs the result of a live performance on traditional musical instruments. Hecker sets up vast drifting rhizomes of sound in which live guitar and piano merge with samples and are fed through multiple pathways of sound processing until everything blurs in an intermeshing sonic field. In a sense, all sound sources are finally being sampled and sonically processed. ÒWhen you sample something,Ó says Hecker, Òif you have good source material with a certain chord progression or an emotive quality, you canÕt go wrong with what you make from that. The essence remains. When you have a beautiful chord and youÕre fucking with it, you canÕt do too much wrong with it because youÕre gonna have a fucked up, beautiful chord at the end!Ó |