At one point, in the depths of the aforementioned great Kells ouija board craze of 1991, I was afraid even to go to school, because every day played out like an episode of most haunted. Week in and week out, we'd hear about some wacked-out older out kid from over the town doing something nuts, like pulling clumps from their hair out after spending half the night being whispered to by an eyeless nun.
Later on, it dawned on me that the early 90s were Acid-House time. There was a lot of LSD doing the rounds (not to mention those tiny mushrooms on the pitch and putt course), and this might goes go some way towards explaining all those shades going billy-o about the town. You might ask what sort of mental kids mix psychotropic drugs with games for communicating with the dead? But I guess that was Kells at the start of the 90s. Regular children were wearing heat sensitive orange tie-dye and watching the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air; we, on the other hand, were snaffling magic mushrooms in graveyards and getting exorcised by the local priest (true story: a certain priest did one or two things along these lines at the time).
Where was I? Forests, and the grip they exerted over my imagination. That acrid smell of bruised elderflower leaves. The soft leaf mulch under my doc martins. Half-submerged orange frisbees of fungus on tree barks. Rooks picked out against a corroded silver sky. It was one easy skip from this heady mix of sensory stimulants to creepy flights of fancy. Grasping woody hands, witchy cackles, and puppety demons flitting through the gaps ahead. All this, from a tiny forest. Imagine what it would have been like to grow up on the edge of a proper forest? Like the German Black Forest, Die Schwarzwald? It's a great word, Schwarzwald, weighty, ominous and expressive of the how the forest must have seemed in long-gone times. A mossy mystery as big as a small country. An impenetrable place, full of thick shadows as alive as the moss they fall on, toadstools, tangled briars, pagan secrets...

I'm thinking of the Schwarzwald a lot at the moment, because it's a key reference point for a collection of
music I've gotten into recently. It's called 'Nah und Fern' by Gas, a collection of four albums re-released as a box set. Gas was the ambient electronic side project of Wolfgang Voigt who co-founded Cologne's renowned Kompakt label. The minimal aesthetic of many of the acts on that label owe a debt to his production work and his various early releases under different monikers. The Gas records, however, were his collective masterwork, and were, until now, a sort of holy grail for techno lovers prepared to trade silly bucks on Ebay.
The music made by Gas is ridiculously hard to convey in prose, which is why a sample MP3 is provided below. It's techno in the barest sense, in that you will often hear 4/4 beats, sometimes close, but mostly far, far away in the thick mix. They beat dully like faint signals through a soupy fog, either anchoring you or tricking you into following them ever deeper into and over Voigt's horizon-less sonic terrain.
Voigt was inspired both by Germany's forests (the 3rd record Konigsforst translates as King's Forest) and German composers whose music he sampled from old vinyl recordings. He layered, treated, and distended these samples into billowing drones and textures which, on headphones, convey the largest sense of 'space' I've experienced in music. Voigt called the project Gas because he wanted the sounds to be vaporous,airy and everywhere at once, and throughout the records, the timeless life of the forest is tangible; its mulchy darkness, its gnarled depths, and from time to time its clearings full of light and heat. The record works almost as a prayer to the forest, or a communion with its spirit. Nothing less than that level of spiritual depth.
What you are reading here is easily about as excited as I can possibly get about a new musical discovery. I want to share it. Even if you are into music with more conventional structure, give it a go and with a little patience you may find yourself drawn into these albums' great depths. If you live near a forest, why not take them with you on headphones? Just don't stop to talk to the cloven hoofed fisherman. He's bad news.
MP3: Gas-Konigsforst 1
If this blog post seems familiar, it is because most of it is taken from a blog post I wrote a few years ago.

18 comments:
Can't think of the Schwarzwald without thinking of Schwarzwälderkirschtorte.
Favourite German word plus favourite German dessert!
This is really evocative stuff dar. You've sold me on the music and i haven't even listened to it yet!.
Ditto. A really great piece of writing, I've downloaded the tracks and will listen to them later. Thanks!
'chruch sanctioned exorcisms in kells'??????
errr, dont think so D, maybe a priest blessed the odd house or that.
Can't think of the Schwarzwald without thinking of Schwarzwälderkirschtorte.
Favourite German word plus favourite German dessert!
I favour "durchfall", the literal translation means "fall through", a rather evocative name for an unpleasant stomach complaint.
Re: The above.
I mean as a word, not as a desert.
Stork-we all thought they were exorcisms at the time, but i've changed the story above, although the particular priest who blessed the houses (if thats what he did) was into exorcisms and all that, because he did similar things in other parts of Ireland.
Frank Lauern hope the music doesn't disappoint. Its fairly amorphous stuff in terms of structure.
ian durchfall is what you get from too much Schwarzwalderkirschtorte.
Becs how do you make an umlaut with a qwerty keyboard? I'm beat.
I was gonna put up 'durchfall' too but have been beaten to the punch. I'll say 'schildkrote' is my favourite German word. And doesn't Ballack look like Matt Damon? Mein Gott.
My favourite German word is "Wellensittich"
which means Budgie.
In my Leaving Cert German class one of my friends always went to the toilet, and when we learned that the German for Joe Bloggs is Dieter Durchschnitt, we immediately gave him the nickname Dieter Durchfall.
This post was really good though. I have trouble with techno not being human enough. This kind of thing helps a lot.
Darragh I've said it before and I say it shamefully again, you are a ludicrously fantastic writer. It makes me jibber with jealousy on reading your stuff.
I'm glad you guys liked the post karl and gareth. Adam, what does Schildkrote mean? I never heard that word.
You have a great music blog here! I've added you to my mp3blog list and custom search, check it out.
I've collected over 5,000 mp3blog links, accessible from the alpha menu at page top. You can open frames on these blogs to view them directly on my site, and you can also view the feeds in a frame.
You can search your blog and all the others in my custom google search:
Rickdog's MP3blog search
http://chewbone.blogspot.com/2008/03/mp3-blog-search-results.html
Can't think of the Schwarzwald without thinking of The Katzenjammer Kids.
The Katzenjammer Kids - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Must get more of this Wolfgang Voigt stuff, really loving those Gas tracks! Included them on a mixtape recently and I can't stop listening to it.
Gareth I can burn you the box set! Woops that sounds illegal. Oh well.
Perhaps you could lend me a copy for evaluation :)
I will do.
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