Severin Black and Owen Pratt explore the rhythms within earth-borne sounds on their debut LP, following on from their Untitled cassette that birthed the Archaic Vaults label in 2020. These seven tracks exist both as duets and as momentary respite from the isolation both musicians faced during the pandemic. Ritual routine visits across two years of solitude. Long nights spent in dim lighting as negronis gradually dilute in the heat. Much of this album was recorded amidst a backdrop of townships with murky histories of sectarian religious conflict, labour shortages and abandoned properties, against the common notion of southern France solely as a tourist destination.
A duet can imply certain rules of engagement. Not all recordings on this album, however, are a duet between two people. VII (Black Metal) consists of two microphones left to surveil the streets below a third floor window, feeding directly into magnetic tape deeper in the recesses. IX (Snares) is an improvised dance between a bass amplifier’s sub frequencies and an activated snare drum. II (Subterranean River) captures limbs as they shift the gravel terrain below a weary cavernous stream. The recordist turns performer, the environment becomes performer too. Either could and often does serve as a duelling partner amongst these documentations.
one-over-f is a collaboration between Severin Black and Owen Pratt. Starting with rhythms taken from field recordings they had been making, they construct audio landscapes routed in the natural world. Bamboo creaking in the wind, bats communicating at dusk, the sound of electric pylons and magnetic fields are combined with snatches of Taiko drums culled from an old VHS. By combining sounds with specific connotations and textural properties, they aim to construct rich, hyperreal sonic environments.
Severin Black is a sound artist and plays under the solo moniker Nape.
Owen Pratt works as a sound artist. He plays in Uncanny Valley whose debut album ‘Ugashia’ was released in 2019 and runs NTS’s 'Flesh and Bone Sessions'.