In truth, the Remote Orchestra – an idea originally developed last
year for the European Culture Congress in Poland, which took up the
first 45 minutes of the performance – was the least enjoyable part of
the night. Simply put, the Heritage Orchestra were split into four
sections, lit by different coloured lights, accompanied by a 12-person
choir lit in light blue. Aphex dictated the notes each section were
playing, and the volume at which they were playing them, through a desk
at the back of the room – this was then broadcast on the big screen, by
means of a blocky, Teletext-esque graphic that, from a punter’s point of
view, was actually more distracting than anything else. Most
importantly, the music just wasn’t that interesting: held chords and
droning strings for 45 minutes, creating an ominous mood but not really
doing much other than getting louder and quieter.
After a short interval, the second half of the show was dedicated to
Aphex’s ‘Interactive Tuned Feedback Pendulum Array’, a piece which aimed
to “expand” on Steve Reich’s Pendulum Music. This opened, in fact, with
the best part of the entire show, a piano suspended from the Barbican’s
ceiling, swinging back and forth and becoming the pendulum itself – its
amplified creaks, as it swung, becoming part of the music, in time with
the piano’s notes. It was very simple, but brilliant.
The longer part of the Pendulum section of the show featured a
succession of mic’ed-up disco balls, swinging back and forth like
pendulums, with Aphex taking the sounds and gradually manipulating them
into 35-40 minutes of scraping ambient music that slowly became quite
bassy. Visually, this didn’t have the romantic simplicity of the
suspended piano, but it was bloody impressive, with well over 100 lasers
projected from the disco balls, transforming the Barbican into
something more akin to the London Planetarium. Musically, it was more
enjoyable than the first half, but again it’s hard to shake the feeling
that both concepts could have been taken much further – bar the moment
in the show’s first half where every volume slider was pushed to the
max, there was no real climax to either performance, nothing to really
take your breath away; to make you feel exhilarated - or even merely
excited – rather than simply interested.
FACT


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