Advertisement
Advertisement

de tian: Transcriptome

In brief:
"It doesn’t swing. It doesn’t have regular beats that you can count on your fingers. But it has LIFE, and in these days, that seems a lot more important"

Elsewhere in these pages, you might find the assertion that Martin Archer is a very good thing, or words to that effect. He’s involved here, as a member of an improvising ensemble that has existed in various forms since the late 70s, when the Sheffield scene was an exhilarating mixture of post-punk, new wave, avant-garde and undefined musical practices.

1978 was the year Pulp started out in Sheffield, but also the year when Paul Shaft, apparently disillusioned with the rock scene, started experimenting with former roadie Paul Hague. de tian gigs were events, with visuals, sometimes a conjuror and an aesthetic that seemed to come from the darker habits of Stockhausen’s children.

Advertisement

The new de tian includes Archer on his usual range of horns and electronics and is inspired (and indeed scored) by a series of transcriptomes, a term that refers to the integral of RNA transcripts within a particular population of cells at a given moment. It’s a usefully elegant metaphor for a certain kind of improvisation and however the musicians individually reacted to the illustrations that serve as track titles, one can see as well as hear directions through the music.

All this will seem like stuff and nonsense to anyone who wants familiar tunes and no messing about with high-flown scientific ideas. But of course the ideas in question are as basic as sand and aggregate and all music has some kind of cellular reality.

The best response to a doubter is simply to put the music on. It doesn’t swing. It doesn’t have regular beats that you can count on your fingers. But it has LIFE, and in these days, that seems a lot more important. The band may have a trendily lower-case name, but the vitality is written in block caps.

Buy de tian: Transcriptome at discus-music.co.uk

Discography
[these aren’t the real titles, which are little blobs of colour; good for Rorschach self-testing . . .] Dick Fosbury Invents the Fosbury Flop; Steatopygous Girl Walks Poodle While Reading Newspaper; Bouffant Typist; Goodness Knows; One Of Miles Davis’s Less Successful Drawings; Extremely Thin Dancer Breaks Whiffy Wind; Irish Tourist Board; Japanese Swallow; I Don’t Remember Eating That (49.05)
Discus 93

Latest audio reviews

Advertisement

More from this author

Advertisement

Jazz Journal articles by month

Advertisement

Majid Bekkas: Magic Spirit Quartet

Scandinavia meets North Africa in this truly stunning album. The origins of Gnawa music have never been fully explained, but it is claimed that...
Advertisement

Still Clinging to the Wreckage 05/19

The original mule Major “Mule” Holley was a most original bass player, who readers will perhaps remember, along with his sterling work as an accompanist,...
Advertisement

The peace of Pipedream

Keith Tippett's recent passing sent me scurrying back to the percentage of his discography that I have on record; the exercise disclosed facets of...
Advertisement

Bangkok After Dark

Have you ever heard of Maurice Rocco? Probably not, and I certainly hadn’t before receiving this book for review. But, look him up in...
Advertisement

Sloane: A Jazz Singer

Songbook devotee Sloane was acclaimed at Newport in 1961 but then faced the onset of 60s pop, which she defied with typical tenacity
Advertisement

JJ 12/95: Steps Ahead – Vibe / Live In Tokyo 1986

Thirty years ago Mark Gilbert compared Steps Ahead stadium rockers and Steps Ahead reinvented fusioneers unplugged
"It doesn’t swing. It doesn’t have regular beats that you can count on your fingers. But it has LIFE, and in these days, that seems a lot more important"de tian: Transcriptome