Nunatak cover

Nunatak

Released

Köner, a German multimedia artist, uses gongs — brushed, mostly, but sometimes struck underwater, with the sounds then subject to radical electronic manipulation — to create infinitely patient pieces that evoke the sensation of wandering through an endless frozen wasteland, or sitting inside a ship trapped in the ice. Creaks, groans, hisses and drones, some high-pitched and others so low you can feel your sternum rattle, rise and fall in waves, or as if generated far away and carried to you on the wind. Nunatak is the first volume in a trilogy, followed by Teimo and Permafrost, all originally released separately between 1990 and 1993, and all of which are landmarks in dark ambient music. This is wintry music in multiple senses: it evokes cold and isolation, and it has the implacability of extreme weather; it is indifferent to your suffering. So if you’re inexorably drawn to its beauty, what does that say about you?

Phil Freeman

Suggestions
Raw Materials and Residuals cover

Raw Materials and Residuals

Famoudou Don Moye, Julius Hemphill, Abdul Wadud
The Milwaukee Tapes, Vol. 2 cover

The Milwaukee Tapes, Vol. 2

Fred Anderson Quartet
Song For cover

Song For

Joseph Jarman
Ubique cover

Ubique

Claire Chase, Cory Smythe, Katinka Kleijn, Seth Parker Woods
Touchin' on Trane cover

Touchin' on Trane

Rashied Ali, Charles Gayle, William Parker
Richter 858 cover

Richter 858

Bill Frisell
EarthSeed cover

EarthSeed

Lisa E. Harris, Nicole Mitchell
Woodcuts cover

Woodcuts

Paal Nilssen-Love, Peter Brötzmann