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Jason Kahn
"Voice and Sky"
(2018)
Editions 007
book+cd

15x14 cm
74 pages
CD, Duration 67.36
ISBN 978-3-033-06656-4


Excerpts from the accompanying CD:


Physical copies of this release are sold out.

Digital copies can be purchased through Bandcamp:
https://jasonkahn.bandcamp.com/album/voice-and-sky




Echo over
Fählensee
a short return
like ping pong
across the water
luscious green
gentle ripple
as big dark
clouds shift
by slowly
casting their
shadows from
shore to shore
the valley lit
up ahead
in a blast
of sunshine.

--------------------------

Fields of grass
verdant
waving in
the sun
vibrations glowing
in the light
wind near
silent
my mind
imagines all
this sound
down below
my feet
my eyes catch
the landscape
smoke rising
on the
horizon
blotting
the blue
sky black.

--------------------------


Reviews:

Published by Kahn’s own imprint, Edition, Voice and Sky is a dazzling, shiny new collection of recordings of Kahn in varying locations expressing himself through the medium of the lungs. As an intriguing bonus, this cd is packaged together with a generous volume of texts. These texts are not just about locations that are familiar or local to Kahn – he has written about places like that before, for example in his book In Place published by Errant Bodies Press in 2015 – they are actually about a specific intensive period of time spent working in the mountains east of Zurich.

As you might expect if you are familiar with his work, Kahn operates more as an artist than a musician, saying of these documents, “…but one of the points of this whole journey was less about my actual presence in these individual places than my awareness of them…” and, “They have no meaning other than serving as a reflection of my place in a certain space at a certain point in time.” These quotes are taken from the self-penned introduction to the book. As well as putting the work into a context, this introduction also allows Kahn to reference some specific concerns in his work, in particular “…erosion of awareness…” In addition, there are ten colour photographic plates illustrating the artist’s rambles in the mountains, and one of his art installations in a mountain schopfe, or small barn, which go some way to put the work in context.

Kahn tells us that Voice and Sky is a development of a piece of work called On The Breeze – a series of “public space interventions” and a sound and text-based installation – which was created from “…material gathered hiking extensively through the Swiss canton of Appenzell Innerrhoden…” The text itself is presented as free verse almost, or short prose poems. Kahn’s practice takes in painting, installations and writing as well as music and sound. There’s a really nice steady pace about his writing which leads you through his experiences and theory in a very natural way. Like a sonic travelogue; each new publication – in whatever media – simply and effortlessly adding the next building block to his body of work. Kahn has a wealth of experience simply listening – an activity he clearly relishes – and he is keen to share his world with us. Here’s an example:

In the distance / cowbells like / hollow echoes / until the bird / cries again / filling the forest / with an ancient / melody.

Turning our attention to the accompanying disc of twenty-seven fairly short and to the point recordings, it is apparent that Kahn makes these pieces in a variety of locations; on a train, next to a fountain, in a cemetary, inside a chapel, and even under a cable-car station. “Fountain in Town of Appenzell” is intriguing in that Kahn has managed to close-mic both the cascading water of the fountain and his own larynx. “Cemetary Outside Pfarrkirche St. Mauritius, Town of Appenzell” details Kahn’s trudge along a gravel path to seat himself on a bench accompanied by his own self-modulated expelled-breath grunts. Conversely, “Between Hoher Kasten and Staubern” is a vocal wail interspersed with the sounds of nearby insects and the distant noises from the town from one direction and possibly livestock from another, carried by the summer breeze. In a beautiful, unplanned moment, “Near Sämtisersee” features an almost gamelan orchestra-like collusion of cow and/or goat bells. This is the kind of thing Kahn interested in: happenstance, serendipity and happy accidents. Me too. As with all of Jason Kahn’s output; this comes highly recommended from me.

>Paul Khimasia Morgan, The Sound Projector, 2019


Today I’m looking at the latest book/cd project by Jason Kahn, all the way from Switzerland. Here is Voice and Sky on Kahn’s Editions label. The 70pp book (5.5″ x 6″) includes color images of the artist’s installation, and on location, as well as short stylized prose set like concrete poetry. The disc includes 27 tracks with a 67 minute running time, consisting of taped field recordings and intriguing voice contortions, all created by Kahn. Each track is named for the in-situ location in which it was made. At times the voice seems to awkwardly mimic the action, gasping for breath (In Train To Ürnäsch) and elsewhere the voice dominates with little background noise (Town Of Appenzell Train Station) like a sweet sing-song lullaby. The effect, at first, hits you as humorous, that is until you raise the volume to experience every single subtlety in the running water, the slurping, gurgling swine-like creature, the complete oddities of the human voice (Fountain In Town Of Appenzell).

The vocal contortions continue to range from snoring to deep throat chortle, with lots of unusual experiments on breathing, blowing outwardly, and other various explorations of the body as an instrument. I’ve rarely heard someone take such physical interjections, so purely, outside Jaap Blonk and Meredith Monk, to create such elusive non-conversational new narratives. Voice and Sky encapsulates and extends upon an earlier public installation work, On the Breeze. Most of these recordings were made while he was hiking the Swiss canton of Appenzell Innerrhoden (which looks truly awe-inspiring) and for anyone who has done a lengthy jaunt knows, our bodies use different types of energy depending on the exertion/demand. He’s managed to capture this tactically in real time. It’s as if he’s contact mic’d himself during trying moments where he was inadvertently expressing himself in a natural setting, though at times it seems innately improvised, out-of-body. This is illustrated when he cries out with an almost tribal wail on Between Hoher Kasten And Staubern as tiny bird chirp back and likely get quieter because they are listening as well. The peculiar voice continues in chants, whispers, even shushes (Near Staubern), as distant sheep baa, perhaps in response. The interplay is quite interesting, not unlike the way in which we communicate with pets for attention, response and affection. Kahn has created a gutteral collection that comes off really real, at times a bit emotional with glimpses of hope and sadness (Rainhütte).

Elsewhere we are engaged in some intriguing running water and other natural elements, sticks cracking as the body moves freely, chimes jangling on the wind, streams flowing gently – all the while while the voices rises and falls from the fore to the background. I’m reminded of an ancient man humming along to himself here, and of a solo monk chanting in solace elsewhere, almost flute-like in tone. The short blurts on Fählensee are attention getting, like a ethnological greeting. This is furthered by the cries on On The Way To Altmann Summit which, if you think about it, before language, may have, in some form, been the way people historically communicated without language. And sometimes here he only embraces simple exhalation, and circular breathing. It’s truly astonishing to hear the rich variations of inhale/exhale, literally bated breath if you will. A standout brief track on the album is Passage Beneath Sämtis Cablecar Station which uses a cavernous space to create an echo chamber. My ears are most intrigued when the voice and ‘scape are completely woven together, however certain front-facing vocal moments here are (no pun) breathtaking, and quite visceral. The book reads like a topographical poem to the places journeyed through in passages that read like extended haikus. Kahn shares: “It is my feeling that the text and recordings on the CD impart something universal and untethered from the context of the original installation.” This open air record certainly attests as he chronicles his experiences for us, becoming one in and of itself. More by the artist can be found here.

>TJ Norris, Toneshift, 2018

 

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