LBJ-125-1
LP PACKAGING NOTES:
Dynamic pairings are not always obvious. Or logical. Danger Mouse and Cee-Lo. Felix and Oscar. Apples and peanut butter. Yet logic need not be a precursor for a union. In fact, what may seem as unusual at first can quickly become the obvious.
So what was the binding element for O+S, the musical collaboration between Orenda Fink (Azure Ray, Art in Manila) and Scalpelist (aka Cedric LeMoyne of Remy Zero)? Location? Friendship? Or perhaps, a mirrored love of music, sprinkled with some good ol' fashioned timing?
Fink's stint in Azure Ray and their Omaha-based record company Saddle Creek, led her to the "Gateway to the West," which has since become her adopted home. The local esteemed Bemis Center of Contemporary Arts, widely reputed for its strong conviction to support and encourage art, invited Fink to partake in an art residency: one of the aural nature. She quickly accepted the challenge and with no guidelines in place, Fink discerned exactly how she wanted to tackle this project. Her inquisitive and spiritual nature led her on a series of excursions to collect sounds, ranging from homebase Omaha to a church in Alabama and ultimately Haiti.
Fink invited her old friend LeMoyne to participate in the art project and he soon found himself taking residence at the Center in Omaha, where their early meetings took place in the basement. Fink opened her Pandora's Box of sounds and Lemoyne began to mold them into structures. LeMoyne explains: "We'd take samples of sounds of Haitian rituals, street noises or whatever, then cut them into loops. We'd arrange them into forms and write songs with them, or she might have started a song and I would take some of these sound materials to create bodies of music around it."
As the "experiment" began to take shape, both recognized the potential beyond the Bemis residency and decided to graduate from the art project to a true musical entity. "We didn't know what would happen and that was afforded by the fact that it was an art residency- we had freedom," Fink says. "Ultimately, it ended up working really well. We created a cohesive work."
The result is a beautifully haunting collection that would make Angelo Badalamenti proud. "We listened to a lot of David Lynch soundtracks, 10cc and old 4AD records," confesses Fink. "I was looking for this balance of light and dark. You don't know why it is dark because it is actually very light sounding. That is what I was going for," she adds.
Release Date: March 24th, 2009
TRACK LIST