- Digital
Heitor Alvelos
Faith
Touch
- Cat No: TO97
- Release: 2015-06-01
- updated:
Track List
-
1. Heitor Alvelos - Errant
01:01 -
2. Heitor Alvelos - Exodus
01:42 -
3. Heitor Alvelos - Edict
00:54 -
4. Heitor Alvelos - Alluvion
04:09 -
5. Heitor Alvelos - Pseudoself
08:05 -
6. Heitor Alvelos - Vicarious Solace
00:54 -
7. Heitor Alvelos - The Way of Malamat
10:06 -
8. Heitor Alvelos - Peirasmos
02:37 -
9. Heitor Alvelos - The Other
05:52 -
10. Heitor Alvelos - Home, Elicited
00:28 -
11. Heitor Alvelos - The Hopeful Night
04:08 -
12. Heitor Alvelos - Dedication
00:17
16bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
Faith is the first full-length sound release by media researcher and curator Heitor Alvelos under his own name. Heitor Alvelos has been a long-time on/off collaborator of Touch, having on occasion provided photography and stage visuals for Biosphere, Fennesz, BJNilsen, Rafael Toral and Philip Jeck, as well as releasing sound pieces under the aliases Autodigest, Antifluffy and Before Surgery, on Ash International, TouchRadio and The Tapeworm.
“The essence of the present piece is autobiographical: therefore the use of my own name”, the author clarifies. “And yet it aims at being resonant to others”: in this context, resonance may be regarded as both semantic and visceral, as the sound frequencies on Faith are often of the kind that “rearrange one’s organs”, to quote the recently departed Bernadette Martou. A necessity in order to carry the gravitas inherent to the subject, a confessional confrontation with the zeitgeist.
All sources have been gathered, recorded and produced throughout five decades, all the way back to a recording by Francisco Alvelos in 1972 that closes the release. Elsewhere, sounds have been processed to various degrees, the bookends retaining their original contexts, others mutating into deep abstraction. Overall, they flow as one single composition, evocative and foreboding in equal measures.
“The essence of the present piece is autobiographical: therefore the use of my own name”, the author clarifies. “And yet it aims at being resonant to others”: in this context, resonance may be regarded as both semantic and visceral, as the sound frequencies on Faith are often of the kind that “rearrange one’s organs”, to quote the recently departed Bernadette Martou. A necessity in order to carry the gravitas inherent to the subject, a confessional confrontation with the zeitgeist.
All sources have been gathered, recorded and produced throughout five decades, all the way back to a recording by Francisco Alvelos in 1972 that closes the release. Elsewhere, sounds have been processed to various degrees, the bookends retaining their original contexts, others mutating into deep abstraction. Overall, they flow as one single composition, evocative and foreboding in equal measures.
