Friday, July 22, 2022

“‘Animals Figure 427’ is revelatory,” says Buzz Bands of re-recorded “mangled” version of GANGI tune; Track appears on duo’s first release in a decade.

 “Imagine if 2008 visitors from a distant galaxy got just close enough to Earth to pick up warped snippets of the song.” Hear “Animals Figure 427” now.

+++


GANGI (L-R): Mahadev, Eric Chramosta. Photo credit: Jeanette Getrost.
 
+++
 
GANGI | In The Press
 
“Dark and rich.” — Los Angeles Times
 
“Aural collage that seems aimed at warping any expectations.” — LA Weekly
 
“A soundtrack to cognitive dissonance.” — Under the Radar
 
GANGI’s electro-psych evolution has been years in the making.” — SPIN
 
+++
 
PLAY, POST & SHARE
 
GANGI | “Animals Figure 427”




+++

Stream “Animals Figure 427” by GANGI at Buzz Bands or at the links above.

‘Animals Figure 427’ is revelatory — imagine if 2008 visitors from a distant galaxy got just close enough to Earth to pick up warped snippets of the song ‘Animals,’ says Buzz Bands in its premiere coverage of the track from the upcoming three-track, 12-minute GANGI EP “As Fake Estates,” the duo’s first official release in about a decade.

Buzz Bands continues, “The song is an eye into their creative process, which incorporates feeding the music through hand-built circuits and using noise from revived reel-to-reel tape machines.”

‘Animals Figure 427’ is a re-recorded and then ‘mangled’ version of the song ‘Animals’ from our debut album A. We sampled our own re-recordings to deconstruct it,” Mahadev (fka Matt Gangi) of GANGI explains. “The only sample that we didn’t record on instruments is from the band POWERSOLO, friends of ours from Denmark who found A through Seb Doubinsky, an amazing sci-fi writer.

“We thought ‘Animals Figure 427’ was a fun title, as in ‘See figure 427’ in a book, i.e. ‘See this map to tell you how to understand the previous iteration of animals here. See figure 427.’ I thought I chose the number at random, but I was born on the 27th and 27 has always been my favorite number, but I don’t understand 427.

“(Bandmate) Eric (Chramosta) and I played the original ‘Animals’ live at many shows. It’s a song where we would go really ‘out’ sometimes. I remember a show where Eric was playing synth during ‘Animals’ and I went out into the audience and started reading out interesting things that I found in the local paper for quite a long time.”

+++

GANGI
“As Fake Estates” EP
(Office of Analogue and Digital)
Aug. 5, 2022
  
 
Track Listing:
 
01. Animals Figure 427 (YOUTUBE | SOUNDCLOUD)
02. Toshiba Maxwell (STREAM | SOUNDCLOUD)
03. Subject Positions Redux

+++

PLAY, POST & SHARE
 
GANGI | “Toshiba Maxwell”
  

[YOUTUBE]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o5_XWCqTURE
 
[SOUNDCLOUD]: https://soundcloud.com/fanaticpro/gangi-toshiba-maxwell
 
+++
 
Stream the sound collage “Toshiba Maxwell” by GANGI at the links above.
 
“Animals” and “Subject Positions” are mangled re-recordings of songs from the debut GANGI album A, released in 2007.
 
“Toshiba Maxwell” is different. Mahadev (f/k/a Matt Gangi) of GANGI explains, "Many years ago, I was 18-years-old and hanging out with (bandmate) Eric (Chramosta) who had a laptop and a broken violin. We somehow started recording using some free software, with me playing the broken violin and saying ‘Na na na na na’ over it. When Eric and I re-connected to start making music again as GANGI, we started there. We made some other noise music, too, but we remembered this one.
 
“We vowed to start a noise project called Toshiba Maxwell, a riff on the audio tape company Maxell. Eric was going to be Toshiba and I was going to Maxwell.  “As it turns out, instead of a band name, it became a song, landing on the ‘As Fake Estates’ EP right in-between the two mangled re-recordings of the A songs ‘Animals’ and ‘Subject Positions.’
 
+++
 
GANGI | About
 

“Two men’s trash can be the same men’s treasure.”
 
Previously praised as “dark and rich” (Los Angeles Times) for its “aural collage that seems aimed at warping any expectations” (LA Weekly) or more esoterically, “a soundtrack to cognitive dissonance” (Under the Radar), GANGI’s “electro-psych evolution has been years in the making” according to SPIN, writing in the summer of 2012 about the Los Angeles-based duo’s second album.
 
Now, “making” is made as GANGI (Matt Gangi and Eric Chramosta) lands in the future with a three-song suite of sonic disturbance from the past. “As Fake Estates” arrives Aug 5 on the artist’s Office of Analogue and Digital label.
 
The material on “As Fake Estates” was recorded around the same time as the 2012 GANGI album gesture is, and is mostly comprised of what Matt Gangi describes as “mangled” versions of songs that date back to the debut GANGI album A, released in 2007. “We sampled and re-constructed our own re-recordings to make most of it,” he explains.
 
Chramosta terms the new release “a multiple-decade long lineage of assembly, disassembly and reassembly” or the re-examination of “that which had been left to collect digital dust. Two men’s trash can be the same men’s treasure.”
 
The elements that call back GANGI’s psych-pop past are heavily spliced and fed through myriad electronic components, channeling the anarchy of The Pop Group and melting warble of DJ Screw. Other influences include Black Dice and Salem.
 
A collaborative brotherhood that began when Gangi and Chramosta were only 12-years-old, “As Fake Estates” represents the first official release in this decade for GANGI, a project that will go forward with the name Fake Estates from this point on.
 
Just as this long-overdue release is transitional, Matt Gangi himself is traveling a new path with a new name.  “I found Sanatana Dharma and the traditional yoga since I last released music,” he explains. “My main Guru gave me the name Mahadev.”
 
“After GANGI as Fake Estates, GANGI will BE Fake Estates,” Mahadev says.
 
Just as Gangi the man is now Mahadev, the band’s moniker represents a permanent change for the pair after recording and touring throughout the world for years as GANGI. The decidedly more experimental sounds of “As Fake Estates” are heavily colored by hand-built circuits and the noise of revived reel-to-reel tape machines.
 
“I was building circuits when we were recording this material and we passed sounds through all kinds of things,” Mahadev explains. “Eric grew up around Otari reel-to-reel tape decks. In middle school, he recorded a mangled symphony to his dad’s Otari deck.”
 
“We were inspired by all the glitch music that was happening in LA at the time that we recorded this material,” Mahadev continues. “GANGI performed at (weekly experimental hip hop and electronic music club) Low End Theory during those days. The experimental electronics that were happening there influenced these sounds.”
 
“As Fake Estates” by GANGI arrives on Aug. 5, streaming on all digital services, and as a vinyl release with etched B-side. These very limited vinyl copies are artifacts, having been pressed and stored at the time that the original recordings were made a decade ago, only to be released now.
 
Their trash, our treasure.
 
“As Fake Estates” by GANGI arrives Aug. 5, 2022 via the band’s Office of Analogue and Digital label. Members of GANGI are available for interviews. Contact Josh Bloom at Fanatic for more information.
 
+++
 
GANGI | Links
 
ASSETS : WEBSITE : FACEBOOK : FACEBOOK : INSTAGRAM : INSTAGRAM : TWITTER : BANDCAMP
 
+++
 
Josh Bloom at Fanatic Promotion | Contact
 
WEBSITE : FACEBOOK : TWITTER : INSTAGRAM : YOUTUBE : SOUNDCLOUD : SPOTIFY : BLOG : E-MAIL

No comments: