Product Details
94 Diskont

94 Diskont
Oval

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Track Listing

  1. Do While
  2. Store Check
  3. Line Extension
  4. Cross Selling
  5. Commerce Server
  6. Shop in Store
  7. Do While

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1338870 in Music
  • Released on: 1996-10-22
  • Number of discs: 2

Editorial Reviews

Album Details
Oval are a unique techno group who are sponsored by the Gothe Institute, and use their own digital programs, as well as physical manipulations of disc to expose the process, and the equipment. Their previous record Systemisch was featured in Spin as


Customer Reviews

94 Diskont5
94 Diskont arguably did for music what Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon did for art: contributed to artist evolution using the established traditions of the medium and smashing it all to pieces. In an era when most musicians reach decades back to rummage through the classics vaults for inspiration, 94 Diskont comes off as a refreshingly forward-thinking album that doesn't quite abandon the electronic music of yesteryear, but rather turns it on its head in previously unimaginable ways. Oval's method of making music involves manually marring compact discs (with paint, magic marker, nails...) and piecing the damaged sounds together so that the resultant outcome is a dizzying sonic stew of clicks, scratches, and fragmented melodies. His previous album, Systemisch, was a fine work of electronic minimalism, but on 94 Diskont those shards have coalesced into actual songs with increased depth and complexity.

What's so remarkable about 94 Diskont is that pure technical and theoretical innovation is here used to create something that's both intriguing and beautiful (as opposed to the pop culture-driven skipping frenzies of John Oswald). "Do While" is the album's centerpiece track: a thick, meditative piece that doesn't grow weary over its ambitious 24 minutes. Shimmering bells crackle over a hazy, four-note organ drone-the musical equivalent of sleepless exhaustion or swimming through tranquil water. Other standout tracks include the bottom-heavy, menacing "Commerce Server" and "Shop in Store," whose manic, stuttering wails bring to mind a warped superhero theme.

Uncompromising though it may be, 94 Diskont reveals itself to be more accessible with subsequent listens; the warm, gooey textures of "Do While" and "Cross Selling" effortlessly pull the listener in, and even the colder songs are stunningly provocative. If the album is difficult in its scope and methodology, it's also one that reveals no influences and takes many risks, augmented by a keen sense of melody and songcraft. If ever a case had to be made that an odd musical approach can be aesthetically enjoyable, or that an album can transform into something far greater than the sum of its parts, 94 Diskont may be all the proof you need.

Beauty with jitter...5
Oval's music is often the result of extreme deconstruction of other musical works. And on this release, the 24-minute showpiece "Do While" is no exception, taking a snippet of Steve Reich's "The Four Sections" and subjecting it to a bewildering computer/sampler-based de-and-reconstructive effort which renders the original source into a swirling, almost Balinese tapestry of bell fragments. This one track is definitely the draw here, but the shorter tracks also offer a good view into Oval's herky-jerky 'damaged CD' sound, with frequent dissonances in evidence. This is probably the best introduction to Oval for the casual listener, and it's an amazing straddling act, balanced on the corner of three fences between ambient, techno, and New Music. Strongly recommended for anyone who likes any of those styles, and especially for someone who can wrap their head around two or all three.

looping electric minimalist beautiful stuff5
When I heard the track "commerce server" on KCMU, I knew I had to own it. Diskont reminds me of Eno's ambient works, updated to 90s electronica, after a quad espresso, made of metal. Part Cage, part Reich. Ive come to expect that only 1 in 5 CDs I buy will be truly interesting and wonderful. For me, this is that 5th CD. It resonates in my head well after I take the headphones off.