kortkritik

On the other side of the words 

Alexander Tillegreen: »In Words«
© PR
© PR
9. february

One of the most mysterious, and at times transgressive, interviews ever captured on tape is Meatball Fulton's 1967 interview with Pink Floyd's Syd Barrett. Filled with broken sentences, incongruous phrasing, questions and answers that don't seem to have no connection, and pauses that feel endless, the interview pushes the boundaries of what can even be called communication. »Your impression of me… which you must have… would you care to tell me? And be like absolutely honest… Do you have one?« asks the interviewer at one point. »In words?« Barrett replies.

In Words is also the title of multi-artist Alexander Tillegreen's debut album, whose final composition samples a full seven minutes of the interview. It is not difficult to understand what Tillegreen hears in the strange conversation. For someone who, in his artistic studies of psychoacoustics and phantom words, has consistently explored the possibilities and limitations of sound as a meaning-bearing phenomenon, the interview must be a rather sensational example of the illusory nature of language.

Of course, none of this would be interesting if the music wasn't as good as it is: moody, detailed, textually varied, emotionally potent and filled with pleasant, warm synth tones that remind me of 70s German Kosmische Musik. The fact that a large part of the compositions originate from previous installation works means that I often have a strange feeling that there is a dimension or a context that I do not understand. Which of course is completely in the spirit of Tillegreen.