Jean-Claude Eloy - Chants Pour L'Autre Moitié Du Ciel : III - Erkos / IV - Galaxies (... Kono Yo No Hoka ...)
The name synonymous with longform epic, bottomless drone, ritual percussion, bells, chants, all the good stuff, layered into spiraling infinities. Mix in sporadic spikes of metal-on-metal thwack, smack, crack. Forget not the ubiquitous interludes of head-scratching WTF.
As far as the longform is concerned, this one cheats a bit, each disc repping a self-enclosed piece with no direct correlation to the other. Save a singular muse in the name of Junko Ueda.
Ms. Ueda brings a musicianship and a voice, undeniable as it is indomitable. Strident tenor intonations soar over steely Biwa'd slaps, lovingly laced Ligeti-an atmospheres congealing amongst coruscating thwacks, drawn out through deeply pitched shifts in perspective, taut amplified biwas, plural, whipped and lashing, scarring the cosmos. A throw-back, centuries, to unadorned vocal insistence, emerging dead center of the Erkos mini-epic, a-capella reigning supreme, going on far longer, and better, wtfer, than expectation might prescribe. So to the inevitable electro-acoustic dissolution, densely overlapping elements bringing the swirling spirals to climax after climax. Searing slaps of steel upon steel, strident Ueda'd tenors, bottomless infinities of orgiastic drone, coming in wave after wave after
One thing I'd like to add, which does not appear in my original post, above (and elsewhere). Erkos might very well occupy the very pinnacle of the man's achievement. What it may lack in the way of visionary epic-ness is counterbalanced by the sheer crushing weight of compositional brilliance.
Listening to this I'm put in mind of the fairly recent Endo collab with Kaori Komura, the main achievement of which is to bring through just how heavy traditional Korean percussion can sound when set off against more traditional harsh noise. I mean, Endo's harshwork on the collab is solid but mostly serves to set off the jaggedly harsh liquescent spikiness of centuries old metals-thwacking-upon-metals.
Jean-Claude Eloy's work in this collaborative project is stellar, but in the layering and re-arrangement of the traditional Japanese instrumentation lends the source material just that much more power, without- and here's the trick- without doing anything that alters the source in any noticeable way. Again, per Endo-cum-Komura, it's more in the spaces between the sounds, in the taut and precisely poised counterpoint, the composition proper, that the brilliant furies, ancient and otherwise, come so indelibly home.
At least, for me.