Alles over kunst

21 Tracks for the 21st Century

21 Tracks for the 21st Century: Maria Komarova

HART magazine and Q-O2, a Brussels-based space for experimental music and sound art, join forces with 21 Tracks for the 21st Century, a series of playlists in which we ask our guests: what music does this century need? Each time, we invite one artist, thinker or musician to prepare a playlist of those sounds, songs and pieces of music that will best arm their listeners with the tools to approach what is left of this young century. Working on the borders of performing arts, scenography, sound and installation art, Maria Komarova realized this month's playlist.

Maria Komarova performing 555 bugs at the Performance Crossings festival 2021, photo Svetlana Lopato

Maria Komarova is a Belarusian sound artist living in Prague who makes sound and theatre work from everyday objects in her surroundings. In her 2020 performance 555 bugs, for instance, various pieces of consumer debris—bean cans, mint boxes, soft drink containers, etc—are laid out directly of the floor, connected by webs of wires and hand-soldered electronics that cause them to buzz and squeal as Komavora switches small motors on an off. Each in turn is made to sound, with these sounds overlapping to form something like an undergrowth of post-industrial refuse. These are lo-fi sounds (produced, for the most part from literal garbage) but they are treated with a care and fastidious that invests the objects with a strange dignity and sense of personality.Its fitting to note that she had studied faculty of Alternative and Puppet Theatre at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague, drawing on techniques of post-dramatic theatre, puppetry and expanded scenography. Though her wound work is not narrative, its debt to theatre is clear, and a work like 555 bugs plays out like a set of character studies, stitched together into something like music.

Her playlist too is a stitching together of many small things. Lo-fi recordings, instrument builders, outsiders, no-wavers, and romantics map out a constellation of listening that takes place across many cities and times. In the way she writes about them, it is clear that this a music of and for the everyday; people making sounds with what they have and what is at hand.


  1. Polje – Eco Renaissance
    Kombinezon, система | system, 2022

One of my favourite albums from the past year is “Kombinezon” by Polje; a solo project from Viktor Konstantinov, a talented self-taught musician from Odessa and founder of Liky Pid Nohamy music label. Polje’s music has simple and playful motifs that drift on the waves of different genres without attempting to fit into any of music boxes. In his previous release “Seemed”, Konstantinov describes his music as “(anti-)soviet Jazz type Beats, tropical-Brutalist and raw-synth/New Wave”.

It has been more than a year since the beginning of the full-scale war and invasion in Ukraine. Many musicians and cultural workers are fighting at the frontline. Many keep making arts and music which we have a chance to listen to from calm, blooming places far away, imagining Odessa as it was when the waves of the Black sea drifted without Russian warships (that would better go f--k themselves).


  1. WIDT x Christoph de Babalon – Jamauba
    TEYAS, Bocian, 2018

According to Japanese folklore tales, there seems to exist a creature whose name is Yamauba. As it goes, different people claim different things about its appearance. Some say it looks like a woman with long white hair, while others describe it as a monster with no eyes or nose but with a big mouth in the middle of its head. The voice of the creature lead many of those who followed it astray and they have never been found. I imagine them ending up in TEYAS's environment; an abstract opera developed by Warsaw-based audiovisual duo WIDT (Antonina Nowacká – voice; Bogumila Piotrowska – visuals) in collaboration with Berlin-based producer Christoph de Babalon.


  1. Radian – R4
    TG11, mego/rhiz, 2000

Listening to TG11 is like being inside a machine and not being stressed about it. Every track is another machine with its own texture. In R4, you may get an acupuncture massage laying down on the motherboard or get a cup of ginger tea sitting on the leg of the F-transistor. With the use of bass, vibraphone, percussion and synths, the trio of Radian carefully layer both sonic and haptic-like experiences.

  1. Mokh – Billion Yellow Birds
    Billion Yellow Birds, self-released, 2010

Mokh was a solo project of Anton Kryvulia—a musician and conceptual artist from Belarus who has been active in the local underground music scene since the '90s. The album Billion Yellow Birds was created over almost two decades and contains its own poetic imaginarium of symbols of a sort of “distant three-leaf country” with pearls, frogs, dreaming coals and rain as a chief of dandelion. An original master tape was found and (re)released recently by Aliens Institution – a duo of Kryvulia and Marika Krasina that is currently residing in Děčin (for more info see: www.aliensinstitution.com/cassette)

  1. Still House Plants – September
    Fast Edit, Blank Forms Editions, 2014

I discovered the trio of Still House Plants during the time I was living in Utrecht. It was raining for weeks and I was learning to ride a bicycle. Somehow, the environment of the city made me a bit dumb and bored and I started thinking in some sort of square-wave mode. So, I liked to listen to something that would make me a bit more emotional and would break this precise rhythm. The music of SHP seemed to be perfectly appropriate for that purpose.


  1. Robotic Folk – Sienpjoviai
    Volume One. Artefacts Of Human Civilisation in Robotic Folklore, LOM, 2022

One of my favourite labels—LOM, from Bratislava—recently released the debut record of Lithuanian composer and musician Jonas Jurkūnas. “Jonas imagines a dystopian future, long after the end of our time, where robots reinvent and reuse the leftovers of human musical heritage left in the remains (and their RAM). New robotic folk spontaneously emerges from the ruins, sung by synthetic indigenous programs that evoke the history of our music-making ancestors.“ (description of the album from LOM’s bandcamp)

  1. Veronika Svobodová – RORBU
    Radiocustica, 2019

I like to think of music in relation to specific places and sometimes it is other way round: a place makes me think of certain music. Traveling to Norway recently brought me back to Svobodová’s piece RORBU that she composed of the field recordings from “the very edge of the shore of the Norwegian island of Senja behind the polar circle.” A collage of “knitting machines from a string museum, the ship Polaris, a walk on the beach, howling wind, frozen rain, hail, creaking stairs, a recording of an old piano the journey’s composition” in combination with contact sound of artist’s self-made instruments gives me a possibility to travel far while sitting at my desk. (Citations from the webpage of radiocustica)

Link


  1. Non Band – Wild Child (Can't Stand It)
    Non Band, Telegraph Records, 1983

This and other pieces from the self-titled album by Japanese project Non Band presents an eclectic mix of folk, punk and no wave motifs. I love no wave music, in general, but especially the many projects of female musicians that show the melodic and somehow gentler side of the movement.


  1. Petr Válek – xxx
    Pink Album, Korobushka Records, 2021

Videos of Valek's lo-fi mechanical objects and instrument’s reviews and tutorials shot at his house and nature of north-western Moravia blew up the internet and developed a worldwide fan base for the artist during past few years (see the VAPE YouTube channel). Indeed, Válek is a unique figure in the context of the Czech experimental art scene, but also a person with a great sense of humour and an incredible creative capacity for manual labour. He doesn't see the need to travel far to play a concert. For him, it is enough to play concerts for his neighbours, who (fortunately, says Petr) have not yet noticed he's doing so. Not many people knew about Valek’s passion for Italo disco before Pink Album revealed it to the world. All its songs are improvised and enthusiastically sung in a language invented by the artist.


  1. Umarell & Zdaura – Umarell
    Aux Morts A l'Aise, Dada ! , KRUT 2022

I like this song because I like to go and watch construction sites. Sometimes I prefer it to a gallery or a theatre visit.

  1. 231 + Foresteppe – Dal'nie kraya
    \|​/​|​/​\\|​/​|​/​\ spina!rec, 2015

“This song is called the Distant Land”, sings the girl at the beginning of the song. 231 was founded in 2012 by a family of architects – Konstantin Samolovov and Alexandra Samolovova. Together with their two daughters, they created lo-fi music, videos and drawings. The idea of the project was to consider a creation process equally to its outcome, emphasizing equality of all the participants regardless of their age and skills. The album \|​/​|​/​\\|​/​|​/​\ was produced as collaboration between 231 and Foresteppe, a talented musician Egor Klochikhin who was recording ambient albums in his room in Siberia at that time.
“In this album, two extreme conditions of home music merge into a bright soundscape, unpredictable and structurally precise at the same time, sometimes they conjure beautiful compositions or even songs, sometimes they scatter into the sounds and voices from the children’s room.” (description of the album at spina!rec’s bandcamp)

https://231happy.tumblr.com/
https://foresteppe.ru/


  1. Ellen Fullman & Theresa Wong – Harbors Part 3
    Harbors, Room40, 2020

Viscous overtones produced by Fullman’s Long String Instruments and Wong’s fragmentary cello textures remind me of the performative side of the relationship between musicians and instruments behind compositions. I find it interesting to know the context around music, its technical aspect, actors involved in its creation (whether they are human or nonhuman). For me, knowing that may change an angle of perceiving the work.


  1. Max Eilbacher – Tone​+​Snare 5
    A Crude Explanation of Russell's Paradox, Purely Physical, 2017

Max Eilbacher is one of my favourite generative music producers. I love his solo project as well Horse Lords, the math rock band he plays in. Both are rich in polyrhythmic structures and diversity of sound. This album is a great example of interdisciplinary work on the intersection between music and mathematics.


  1. James Ferraro – SUKI GIRLZ 5
    SUKI GIRLZ,

Released on soundcloud under the name “user703918785” with tags #Louie Vuitton #wHotel.

I like shopping for groceries while listening to Ferraro’s music: choosing pasta, weighing mandarins and sticking labels on them, observing people choosing fish, kiwis rolling with a wine bottle on the conveyer belt. Vaporwave made me enjoy passing through shopping malls in the evening when the buildings get empty; to slow down in glittery places I usually try to avoid.


  1. Cindy Lee – Prayer of Baphomet
    Malenkost, Isolated Now Waves, 2015

Cindy Lee is like frayed sequins with dried ladybug wing in between; like strings of a curtain that hang on the terrace of an abandoned house, made of plastic diamonds. "When people ask what kind of drag I do, I’m like, 60’s closet queen.” I love Patrick Flegel’s music since they played in the Canadian indie rock band Women. Cindy Lee is a different dimension of hypnagogic pop melodies with distorted stories about identity, love, trauma and “archetypes of gender”; honest and beautiful. (citations from https://www.chmafm.com/welcome/cindy-lees-confrontation-pop/)

  1. Podchody / Foot chase – Kurws
    Powi​ę​ź / Fascia, Korobushka records, 2022

Last year, I had time when I started to feel bored during many concerts I was visiting. Then, I was playing at one festival and heard Kurws playing live there. So, it made me feel happy.


  1. Brutalismus 3000 – Keine Tr​ä​nen
    Amore Hardcore, self-released, 2020

More than a cool party mood, Brutalismus 3000 triggers in me a mood of bizarre performative situations such as driving on the Czech Highway in an old car stuffed with plastic fruit containers that are full of objects that don’t look cool. Many things and music can be considered in a different way than we expect. Empty plastic bottles can be used for building a fence, cassette tapes for a house, green rubber gloves for a foot of a crocodile, techno as background music in a dentist's cabinet.


  1. Palais Schaumburg – Telefon
    Palais Schaumburg, 1981

“Ich glaube ich bin ein Telefon, romantisches kleines Telefon” (lyrics of the song)
Perhaps, in a few years our smart phones will be singing similar songs about how they imagine to be humans.

  1. Jonáš Gruska – Vidina
    Žaburina, LOM, 2018

In this piece, Gruska takes us to a journey to “non-traditional, alien societies living mostly underwater”. Vidina is a perfect music for a pair dance, which shifting rhythms remind of listening sessions we used to have with my friends in Minsk. Back then, we were going to one lake located in the area of sleeping quarters to listen to frog raves (as we used to call chorus of frogs). Frog raves were among best sonic experiences that I had at those times.


  1. Oleg Karavaichuk – Butterfly in China
    Waltzes and Intermissions, 2016

It happened twice in my life that I shared my room with a piano, an instrument I did not use to play. The last one was so big that I always imagined it to be one of the first objects in the house around which the walls must have been built. And the first was a piano of my family that ended up in the room I spent most of my teenage years. When I visited my parents the last time, I was surprised to realize how small the room is and how strange that I never learned piano that was just near my bed. At least I was listening to Karavaichuk and enjoying the fact that he used to wear a pillowcase on his head during the concerts.

  1. Laurie Spiegel – Harmony of the Worlds
    Composed in 1977, released in 2003 by Table of the Elements

"I was sitting with some friends in Woodstock when a telephone call was forwarded to me from someone who claimed to be from NASA, and who wanted to use a piece of my music to contact extraterrestrial life”. (Laurie Spiegel’s citation from Pitchfork’s article: Resident Visitor: Laurie Spiegel's Machine Music).
Spiegel’s composition inspired by the work Harmonices Mundi of mathematician Johannes Kepler became part of the compilation for Voyager Golden Record – the first “time capsule” that travelled outside the solar system in order to potentially provide an overview of life on Earth. This fact makes me wonder about which kind of music humanity would want to show to the universe now.


Maria Komarova will perform her new work Krajïna in Brussels Saturday 29.04 as part of Q-O2’s annual festival Oscillation (April 27-30, 2023).

Full lineup and tickets here: www.oscillation-festival.be