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This disc is rooted deeply in Jon Iverson's
love of Balinese gamelan, but it's not a gamelan record. How could it be? It uses
traditional gamelan instruments (among others), and Jon has studied the music
and its performance techniques---he obviously respects them---but this music cannot
ever truly be considered Balinese as Jon hears gamelan as an outsider. However,
outsiders can hear things in new ways---and that is what Jon has done here. Using
the interlocking rhythms and polyphonic stratification of gamelan music, he has
produced a portal into a new sonic world. The disc opens with a subtly swelling
wash of gong overtones, as fat as pillows, before embarking on a pulsing, relentless
march through different percussive landscapes---think of Steve Reich's [Drumming]
without the phased decay element and you'll be in the very general neighborhood,
although Jon hearkens as much to Brian Eno's sonic explorations as to the rules
of either third world or classical music. Just as it melds cultural references,
[Alternesia] takes what it needs from different instrumental traditions. In addition
to the traditional drums and idiophones of the gamelan, Jon has added sampled
bass "in just a couple of tiny spots," some evocative flute (played by Robert
Rich, who mastered this recording), and a smattering of non-traditional instruments.
Think of [Alternesia] as a 46-minute vacation to an alternative world. The normal
rules don't apply (do they ever on a vacation?). I like traveling to [Alternesia].
I return there often---and I look forward to taking many more trips with Jon in
the future.
- Wes Phillips, Stereophile Magazine