Sunday, September 28, 2014

Martin Siewert 13 Questions



Martin Siewert,  guitars, lap- & pedal steel, electronics, was born in Saarbrücken, Gernmany in 1972. Actually he's living & working in Vienna. His improvisational and composing activity in both acoustic and/or electronic contexts; he works for theatre, film and dance as well as various remix and sound installation commissions.



His projects/bands include RADIAN (with Martin Brandlmayr and John Norman), FAKE THE FACTS (with dieb13 and Mats Gustafsson), TRAPIST (with Joe Williamson and Martin Brandlmayr), HEAVEN AND (with zeitblom, Tony Buck, Steve Heather), 4tet  BORIS HAUF / STEVE HEATHER / SIEWERT / CHRISTIAN WEBER (recording to be released in January 2015) and Duo DIEB13 / SIEWERT



 among others...



Martin has worked with musicwise 
as 
Otomo Yoshihide,Taku Sugimoto, Oren Ambarchi, Dieb13, Wayne Horvitz, Tony Buck, Toshimaru Nakamura, Wolfgang Mitterer, Elliott Sharp, Sun, Manuel Mota, Franz Koglmann, Thomas Lehn, Karlheinz Essl, Burkhard Stangl, Briggan Krauss, Ken Vandermark , Michael Sarin, Jamaaladeen Tacuma, Fuckhead, Klangforum Wien, Helge Hinteregger, Werner Dafeldecker, Christian Fennesz, Billy Roisz, Roger Turner, Steve Noble, Marceo Mattos, Franz Hautzinger, Christof Kurzmann, Sainkho Namtchylak, Max Nagl, Uchihashi Kazuhisa, Boris Hauf, John Norman, Kevin Drumm, Didi Bruckmayr, Kent Kessler, Gene Coleman, Stefan Nemeth, Dean Roberts, Siegrun Appelt, Bernhard Fleischmann, Hanno Leichtmann, Static, Patrick Pulsinger, Mattin, Philip Jeck, Andrea Neumann, Kammerflimmer Kollektief, Giuseppe Ielasi, Bernhard Lang, Alexander Hacke, Zeitblom, Steve Heather, Angelica Castello, Yannis Kyriakides, Georg Gräwe, Frank Gratkowski, Michael Vatcher, Howe Gelb, Uli Fussenegger, Ernesto Molinari, Mike Svoboda, Pure, Daniel Matej, Laokoongruppe, Luc Ex, Christian Weber, Hans Koch, Christian Wolfarth, Jorge Sanchez-Chiong, Mivos Quartet, Mats Gustafsson, Boris Hegenbart, Hercules & Love Affair...



And performance/dance/film/media-artwise as Robert Steijn & Frans Poelstra (United Sorry), Anat Stainberg, Milli Bitterli & Artificial Horizon, Annja Krautgasser (nja), Dariusz Kowalski, Gustav Deutsch, Lillevan, Michaela Grill, Billy Roisz, Siegrun Appelt, Yosi Wanunu & Toxic Dreams, Jan Machacek, Jack Hauser, Sabina Holzer, Alexandra Waierstall...


Boris Hauf - sax, synths, Billy Roisz - electronics, Burkhard Stangl & Martin Siewert - guitars, 
Steve Heather - drums

Which was the first musical sound do you remember?

...to be honest, I don't remember  ... I remember my 1st record (The Beatles' Ballads compilation), I remember my first concert experience (some terrible local metal band, had to leave cause I couldn't stand the volume) etc
but not the first musical sound ...



What do you expect from music?

I expect it to change (or at least influence) my perception / understanding of things  ...  this can happen on a physical, emotional, or intellectual level



So, why do you love the guitar?

it's an instrument which can be very powerful, even when played in a very basic / primitive way.



Which work of your own are you most proud of?

when it comes to my own stuff there's 2 tracks I am still quite happy with:

1.) Bring Back Those Happy Days by Heaven And (from the 1st album 'Sweeter As The Years Roll By')
2.) Walk These Hills Lightly by Trapist (from our 3rd album 'The Golden Years')



Tell me something you need from art and why? 


hm .... I think this varies with the disciplines / genres ... with contemporary or experimental art I sure want to be challenged, or surprised, and intellectually and/or emotionally I enjoy being taken into territory I would not have ended up in, or maybe wasn't even aware it exists ... and this does not neccessarily have to be a comfortable experience.


what I usually do nOT need from art is specific messages or truths / opinions ... I think that if you want to communicate those there's better and more efficient means .. I keep it with the great artist and art theorist Ad Reinhardt here: "In work or words what in hell, on earth, or in heaven, is an artist up to when he says he has something to say?"
(and btw, he continues: " Only a bad artist thinks he has a good idea.")


again, this is valid only for what I'd call experimental / contemporary art - there is also a good amount of 'classic' or even 'traditional' art I do appreciate a lot, and sometimes draw inspiration from.



What is your relationship with other disciplines such as painting, literature, dance, theater ...?

 I have worked a lot with performance / contemporary dance artists, and a lot with filmmakers - I have always enjoyed these collaborations, especially when the usual hierarchies (especially in film music) are broken up. many filmmakers I've been working with (like Gustav Deutsch, or Michaela Grill) did use music already when editing (or sometimes shooting), and in many instances based their edits on musical / sound structures, putting the visual and the sound level in a very inspiring and refreshing and equal relationship. in my work with performance artists like Robert Steijn and Frans Poelstra (United Sorry), or Anat Stainberg, or Jan Machacek I always found the different energy / input / approach when improvising most interesting, and inspiring.

 

What’s your main motivation to compose?

 to realize things I can not come up with in an improvised setting.

 
Trapist: Martin Brandlmayr, Martin Siewert, Joe Williamson

What are the challenges and benefits of today's digital music scene? 

on an aesthetic or artistic level I don't quite know what the digital music scene should be... I have hardly ever stumbled across things made from the dawn of the laptop era onwards that couldn't have been realized in earlier times. on a production / promotion / distribution level things have become easier and more accessible, which is great. so it's easier (cheaper) to realize your music and make it heard  ...  but this also has the side-effect that artists are expected to be their own promo-machine etc - the labels have outsourced a lot of what traditionally would have been their territory to the artists, which is not neccessarily a good thing.

 
Mats Gustafsson – saxophones, shaker, saxophone-generated ambient noise, Dieb13 – turntables, klopfer, Martin Siewert – guitar, ring stinger, electronics

Define the sound you're still looking for.

 I'm not so sure I'm looking for a certain sound  ... I am looking at (and for) a lot of parameters in music, and sound is often not on the very top of my list  .... if I could phrase a melody somewhat in a way Sam Cooke did I'd be very happy  ..  or if I could reach a level of intensity in a group performance I witnessed when seeing Ground Zero play 'Consume Red' live in the late 90's I'd be very happy as well. Sure in order to achieve these things it requires certain sounds (and techniques), but to me sound is more a neccessary tool to realize a certain bigger picture than a mean by itself.


Mats Gustafsson – saxophones, shaker, saxophone-generated ambient noise, Dieb13 – turntables, klopfer, Martin Siewert – guitar, ring stinger, electronics

Why and how do you use extended techniques in guitar?

 essentially to create noises the guitar doesn't make by itself. many of my 'extended technique' sounds derive more from misuse / re-interpretation of phenomena further down the line of a electric guitar setup, like certain behaviours (or missbehaviours) of distortion devices or feedback generators, or the highly rewarding colorful feedback worlds generated between a loud amp and a semi-acoustic guitar with microphonic pickups etc  ....

 

Which living artist would you like to collaborate with?

 Richard Thompson

 
listen to: Track 1, Track 4, Track 7


What dead artist would you like to have collaborated with?

 Angus MacLise

 

What’s your latest project about?

 actually there's two: the recently released record by the trio Fake The Facts (with Mats Gustafsson and dieb13), called 'Soundtrack' - this is about improvisation, and about broadening the material and sounds / approaches / strategies beyond what's usually being used in typical improv settings. and then we just finished a major work, the collaboration of Radian with (Giant Sand mastermind) Howe Gelb (Radian Verses Howe Gelb, RadianReleases 001, in collaboration with Trost Records, to be released Nov 25th 2014) . this is about songs - and poetry - and still about abstraction  ....  and the fusing (or rather co-existence) of the two rather diverse musical worlds of instrumental electronic music band Radian, and Singer-Songwriter Howe Gelb.


united sorry & friends - the forest project, music Martin Siewert and Steve Heather 
Selected discography:  


RADIAN and HOWE GELB - Radian Verses Howe Gelb (Radian / Trost, to be released Nov 2014)
FAKE THE FACTS - Soundtrack (Trost records, 2014)
FAKE THE FACTS - The Fake / The Fact 7" (Substance, 2013)
 




TRAPIST - The Golden Years (Staubgold, 2012)
DIEB13/ GUSTAFSSON / SIEWERT - (Fake the) Fact (editions Mego, 2011)
HEAVEN ANDBye and Bye I’m Going to See the King (Staubgold, 2010)
 





PULIDO / FENNESZ / SIEWERT / STANGLA Girl and a Gun (Interstellar, 2009)
HEAVEN AND Sweeter As the Years Roll By (Staubgold, 2008)
CHRISTIAN WEBER, MICHAEL MOSER, HANS KOCH, CHRISTIAN WOLFARTH, 

MARTIN SIEWERT 3 suits and a violin (HatHut, 2006)
 




EFZEG - Krom (Hathut / Hatology, 2006
)
THE YEAR OF - Slow Days (Morr Music, 2006)
 


MARTIN SIEWERT - No Need to be Lonesome (Mosz, 2004)
TRAPIST - Ballroom (Thrill Jockey, 2004)


EFZEG - Wuerm (Charhizma, 2003)
 

 
BRANDLMAYR/ DAFELDECKER/ NEMETH/ SIEWERT - Die Instabilitaet der Symmetrie (Grob / dOc, 2003)
SIEWERT/ BRANDLMAYR - Too Beautiful to Burn (Erstwhile, 2003)


DIEB13/PURE/SIEWERT - Just In Case You Are Bored. So Are We (dOc, 2002)
 

 

TRAPIST : Highway My Friend (HatHut, 2002)
EFZEG : Boogie (Grob, 2002)
SSSD : Home (Grob, 2002)

DAFELDECKER/FENNESZ/SIEWERT/STANGL : Phonographics; soundtrack excerpts from the Gustav Deutsch movie Film.Ist 7-12 (Durian records, 2002)




SIEWERT/ HORVITZ/ DAFELDECKER/ HINTEREGGER/ BUCK : Komfort 2000 (Charhizma, 2000)
EFZEG : grain (Durian, 2000)
 

DAFELDECKER/ KURZMANN/ FENNESZ/ O&ROURKE/ DRUMM/ SIEWERT (Charhizma, 1999)

THE COMFORTS OF MADNESS : röhren (Charhizma, 1999)

for a more complete list of recording and studio activities please see:








Selected list of soundtracks for film and video 
(most of these distributed by Sixpackfilm, www.sixpackfilm.com):
 

 

FILM.IST A Girl and a Gun, by Gustav Deutsch (2009), music by Fennesz, Siewert, Stangl

VOID.SEQZ 5, n:ja / Annja Krautgasser (2007), music by Siewert




ERASE REMAKE, Jan Machacek (2006), Martin Siewert 
CITYSCAPES, Michaela Grill (2006), music by Siewert

  

HELLO AGAIN, Michaela Grill (2006), music by Trapist
ONIBUS, Augusto Contento (2006), music by Trapist, Kapital Band 1, David Grubbs, Loren Mazzacane Connors, The Loop Orchestra

VEGAS, Annja Krautgasser, (2005) music by Siewert 


 
MONROC, Michaela Grill (2005), music by Siewert

SEQZ3, Void (=n:ja aka Annja Krautgasser & Darius Kowalski) (2005), music by Siewert
MY KINGDOM FOR A LULLABY#2, Michaela Grill & Billy Roisz (2004)




SOURCES, Billy Roisz (2004), music by Andrea Neumann, Annette Krebs,Axel Dörner, Martin Siewert, Martin Brandlmayr, Otomo Yoshihide, Rossi, Sachiko M.





360, Dariusz Krzeczek (2004), music by Siewert

SPECTRUM, Gustav Deutsch (2003), music by Siewert



 

FILM.IST 7-12, Gustav Deutsch (2002), music by Dafeldecker/Fennesz/Siewert/Stangl

TRANS, Michaela Grill (2002), music by Siewert

MY KINGDOM FOR A LULLABY#4, Michaela Grill & Billy Roisz (2002), 
music by Nakamura/Kurzmann/Siewert




KATAPILA, Billy Roisz (2002), music by Efzeg

PRAM, Billy Roisz (2002), music by Efzeg
BLINQ, Billy Roisz (2002), music by Burkhard Stangl, Akoasma, Boris Hauf, Sachiko M., Martin Siewert,Christof Kurzmann, Toshimaru Nakamura, Dieb13, Werner Dafeldecker