- Essential reissues of the innovative US composer's first two albums.
- Earlier than most, Laurie Spiegel recognized that computers could offer "the complete freedom to define any kind of world you wanted and work within it." Her compositions from the '70s and '80s were coded instead of written, revealing new horizons for improvisation and experimentation while remaining accessible. In those decades, Philip Glass and Steve Reich were her contemporaries in the close-knit experimental scene of downtown New York. But Spiegel continues to set herself apart from the high-profile minimalist movement, preferring the term "slow change music." Her innovations to American and electronic music have by now gone down in history, but her rise to recognition has been as slow and subtle as her compositions.
Because it transcended known genres, her first album, The Expanding Universe, was picked up by the folk label Philo Records. (Spiegel recently said it "had the impact of a mere drop of rain falling into the ocean.") It wasn't until 2012, when the label Unseen Worlds reissued The Expanding Universe, that many were able to hear these pieces for the first time. (The label has now pressed the album again, and has also given Spiegel's second album, Unseen Worlds, a first vinyl pressing.) Recorded nearly a decade apart, these works reflect the changing role of the computer from a cumbersome machine kept behind institutional doors to its place in the home as a personal tool. The personality of the compositions shapeshifted as well, from primarily buoyant and melodic tendencies in The Expanding Universe to unsettling soundscape-driven scores in Unseen Worlds.
The Expanding Universe's cover art suggests a vivid sunset, setting the mood for what lies within. Sporting lush tones flying up and down scales, the opening track, "Patchwork," embraces the listener with optimistic energy. The timbre is surprisingly warm for a completely digital album. The ability to shift the timbre was fairly limited on the technology available, but the textures still ended up being intimate, humanizing the synthetic nature of digital tools. It suggested that a personal relationship to both computers and the cosmos were within our reach. "The Expanding Universe" is a 30-minute meditation of modulated droning that captures the album's ethos: to make music that Spiegel "could feel close to… which should have existed somewhere, but which [she] hadn't been able to find."
In contrast, "Kepler's Harmony Of The Worlds" was programmed with astronomical calculations, made by Johannes Kepler in 1619, to anxiously screeching ends, like a chorus of earthquake emergency alarms sounding at once. Carl Sagan caught wind of Spiegel's sonic experiments and, recognizing their mathematical beauty, asked that it be etched into two gold-plated records and sent into space with the 1977 Voyager mission. Meant to be found by intelligent extraterrestrials, these records are still hurtling through space, many billions of kilometers away from Earth.
Such experiments were only possible with the unique access to a new computing protocol named GROOVE. Spiegel saw an opportunity to streamline the composition process while retaining the potential to improvise. But once the GROOVE system became obsolete, Spiegel decided to make her own music software. She wrote one of the first widely-accessible music composition programs, Music Mouse, which could be downloaded on then-popular platforms such as Mac and Atari. If you grew up learning to use a mouse before you learned to read, you might take this innovation for granted. Accessible software cut away many gatekeepers of the music world and set the stage for the development of programs such as Ableton. Music Mouse was one of the programs Spiegel used on Unseen Worlds.
If The Expanding Universe is a gleaming astral body, then its follow-up, Unseen Worlds, is the dark matter of Spiegel's universe. It seems like a response to the limited timbre of its predecessor, offering a spindly architecture of atmosphere and texture that leaves one in nail-biting suspense. The Doppler effects on "Three Sonic Spaces" suggest three-dimensional space and a sense of falling. "Sound Zones" and "Riding The Storm" are straight-up frightening, as if the impending disaster hinted at in earlier tracks is reaching fever-pitch. The title of "Strand Of Life ('Viroid')" points to its short and simple form: viroids are the smallest discovered infectious pathogens, the menacing elegance of a single, circular strand of RNA.
Despite titular and sonic references to heavenly bodies and microorganisms, these albums also embrace the sublime moments found in everyday experience. "Picture the feeling of having stayed up all night on the Lower East Side… then looking out through the hazy dawn air at the river," read Spiegel's liner notes to "East River Dawn," and it's easy to feel the melodic tones accumulate and drip like morning dew on a window pane. The last line reads: "The day feels full of potential."
トラックリストThe Expanding Universe
01. Patchwork
02. Old Wave
03. Pentachrome
04. A Folk Study
05. The Expanding Universe
06. The Orient Express
07. Clockworks
08. Drums
09. Appalachian Grove I
10. Appalachian Grove II
11. Appalachian Grove III
12. The East River Dawn
13. The Unquestioned Answer
14. Wandering In Our Times
15. Kepler's Harmony Of The Worlds
Unseen Worlds
01. Three Sonic Spaces I
02. Three Sonic Spaces II
03. Three Sonic Spaces III
04. Finding Voice
05. The Hollows
06. Two Archetypes: Hall Of Mirrors - I
07. Two Archetypes: Hurricane's Eye – II
08. Sound Zones
09. Riding The Storm
10. Strand Of Life ("Viroid")
11. From A Harmonic Algorithm
12. Passage