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"When I’m not being an internationally famous composer of beloved music that continues to inspire generations of listeners and influence popular culture on every continent, I teach middle school math. In the education biz, we often invite other teachers into our classrooms to observe us at work. Teachers create their own little world within four walls; we build our routines, establish patterns of behavior, create a specific culture for our students and ourselves. When another teacher visits our classroom/world, that person might notice details that we may not have. We spend so much time inside our classroom/world that sometimes it takes a fresh set of eyes and ears to point out things about it that we might have glossed over, or that might have eluded our attention. Or we may have our own subconscious biases and assumptions that someone coming from outside might be able to helpfully point out to us. Teachers who observe their colleagues and who welcome observers into their classrooms facilitate a culture of reflection. We’re open to new ideas, actively seeking out honest feedback for the sake of becoming a better teacher and, as a result, improving our students’ education.
The “Suburban Observances” project grew out of a related idea. As those of you who’ve read the best-selling, critically-acclaimed first volume of my autobiography already know, I am a reflective sort of guy. I’m wary of falling into habits, of becoming insular and making hermetic music. My desire, after all, is to communicate. I don’t want to make impenetrable music that doesn’t speak to anybody, but if I’m holed up in my studio all the time, I might not recognize if that’s what I’m making. The aim of this project is to force myself out of patterns, to allow observers to offer their own reflections on and responses to whatever it is I do… and, as a result, to help me write (hopefully) better music.
It started with a group of sounds that I’d collected over many years. These were sounds that I knew very well. I had my own thoughts about them, but recognized the limitations of that familiarity. I sent the sounds to people all over the world… to some old friends, to several artists that I don’t know personally but whose work I admire, to people I’d met and to others I haven’t yet… and I asked each person to render them unrecognizable. Everyone’s instruction was to process, manipulate, rearrange and change them, to take them as far as they wished, and then send them back to me. Finally, I’d take a year or two to compose new music using my one-familiar sounds that had been filtered through other people’s perspectives. Each volume of the “Suburban Observances” series is related, of course. If you listen to all six volumes (and I hope you do), you’ll be able to hear elements shift sideways across songs…how an idea initiated on volume one is re-examined and completed on volume three (and so on)… how songs complement, comment on and reflect off of one another… and how there is sonic sympathy from one album to the next and throughout the series… but each volume is also distinct and discreet.
Volume two incorporates processing by Andrea Pensado, Theo Gowans (Territorial Gobbing), Andrew Zukerman (Fleshtone Aura), Theresa Smith (DeTrop), France Jobin, Ross Scott-Buccleuch (Diurnal Burdens), Frans de Waard (Modelbau), Roel Meelkop, Joe Murray (Posset), Melanie O’Dubslaine (Ashtray Navigations), Phil Todd (Ashtray Navigations), Rudolf Eb.er, Chris Donaldson and Stuart Chalmers. There’s some vocals by Tori Kudo, Andrea Pensado, Yan Jun, Stefan Neville and Giblet Gusset. I used my usual arsenal of cassette tapes etc and composed everything between 2019 and 2021 here in rural Massachusetts."
-H. Stelzer, 2021
credits
released September 25, 2021
All songs composed/recorded by HS at The Hotel Amnesia (Lowell, MA) & The Sun Room (Ashburnham, MA) 2020-2021.
Tori Kudo - voice on Sayonara Baby
Andrea Pensado - voice on Choose This Planet or Not!
Giblet Gusset - voice on Choose This Planet or Not!
Yan Jun - voice on There Are Always Hands
Stefan Neville - voice on There Are Always Hands
Processing: Theresa Smith, Theo Gowans, Roel Meelkop, Andrew Zukerman, Ross Scott-Buccleuch, Fraser Burnett, Frans de Waard, Stuart Chalmers, Joe Murray, France Jobin, Andrea Pensado, Melanie O’Dubhslaine, Chris Donaldson, Rudolf Eb.er
supported by 49 fans who also own “I've Told You Once (Suburban Observances Volume Two)”
I cannot praise this album enough. This album is absolutely terrifying! The many starts and stops creates this very h settling tension. Each start expands on the stopper idea previously. It’s like the music equivalent of walking through thick fog while passing out multiple times throughout trying to find a place to orientate yourself. There may or may not be something sinister in that fog, but you don’t want to stick around to find out. Bought the vinyl so I summon the fog demons through spe showhornwithteeth
An introspective record that fuses post-rock, shoegaze and ambient synth patches into a seamless array of shimmering soundscapes. Bandcamp New & Notable Jan 26, 2023