Matmos

left to right: M.C. Schmidt, Dr. Drew Daniel
Background information
Origin San Francisco, U.S.
Genres Electronic, glitch, ambient techno, post-rock, post-industrial
Years active 1995 - present
Labels Matador
Associated acts Björk
The Soft Pink Truth
Disc
Website Official Site
Members
M.C. Schmidt
Drew Daniel

Matmos is an experimental electronic music duo originally from San Francisco but now residing in Baltimore signed to the Matador Records label. M. C. (Martin) Schmidt and Drew Daniel are the core members, but they frequently include other artists on their records and in their performances, including notably J Lesser. Much of their work could be classified as a pop version of the musique concrète genre[citation needed]. The name Matmos refers to the seething lake of evil slime beneath the city Sogo in the 1968 film Barbarella.[citation needed] The name might also originate from Swedish, literally meaning "mashed food".

Contents

Notable work [link]

In 1998, Matmos remixed the Björk single Alarm Call. Subsequently, Matmos worked with Björk on her albums Vespertine (2001) and Medúlla (2004), as well as her Vespertine and Greatest Hits tours. In November 2004, Matmos spent 97 hours in the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts as artists in residence, performing music with friends, musical guests and onlookers. The live album Work, Work, Work, essentially a "best of" collection of the session, was released as a free download from their website.

Matmos gained notoriety for their use of samples including "freshly cut hair" and "the amplified neural activity of crayfish" on their first album [1] and "recorded the snips, clicks, snaps, and squelches of various surgical procedures, then nipped and tucked them into seven remarkably accessible, melodic pieces of experimental techno" for their album A Chance to Cut Is a Chance to Cure.[2]

Personal life [link]

M. C. Schmidt and Drew Daniel are also a couple, as stated in an interview in BUTT Magazine.

Schmidt formerly worked as a teacher in the New Genres Department at the San Francisco Art Institute.

Daniel has successfully defended his dissertation on the literary cult of Melancholy, directed by Janet Adelman at the University of California, Berkeley, and is currently an assistant professor in the Department of English at Johns Hopkins University. This brought the band to relocate their home base to Baltimore in August 2007. Daniel also has a personal dance music project, The Soft Pink Truth. He is a contributing writer to the online music magazine Pitchfork Media, and wrote an essay about the Throbbing Gristle album 20 Jazz Funk Greats for the Continuum Books series 33 1/3. Both Schmidt and Daniel appeared in the Sagan music film Unseen Forces by Ryan Junell.

Discography [link]

Albums [link]

EPs [link]

Limited edition [link]

References [link]

  1. ^ Cooper, Sean (2008). "Matmos", AllMusicGuide.com
  2. ^ Phares, Heather (2008). "A Chance to Cut Is a Chance to Cure", AllMusicGuide.com.

External links [link]

Interviews [link]


https://wn.com/Matmos

Matmos (album)

Matmos is the 1997 debut album of American electronic music duo Matmos. The album features field recordings of everyday activities as well as more unusual things, such as nerve activity of a crayfish, on "Verber: amplified synapse".

The album is of an experimental nature and has elements of different genres of electronic music such as drum 'n bass, minimal techno and glitch.

Track listing

  • "It Seems"
  • "Plastic Minor"
  • "...And Silver Light Popped in His Eyes"
  • "Lunaire"
  • "This is..."
  • "Three Guitar Lessons"
  • "Office Furniture (After Evidence)"
  • "Electric Things"
  • "Verber: amplified synapse"
  • "Nugent Sand"
  • "Schluss"
  • References

  • Matmos biography at brainwashed.com
  • "Review" at allmusic.com
  • Holler

    Holler may refer to:

  • Holler (surname)
  • "Holler" (Spice Girls song), a 2000 song by British pop girl-group the Spice Girls
  • "Holler" (Ginuwine song), a 1997 song by R&B singer Ginuwine
  • Holler (EP), an album released in 2014 by South Korean girl group Girls' Generation-TTS
  • "Holler" (Girls' Generation-TTS song), 2014
  • Holler, Germany
  • Field holler, a song form
  • Goofy holler, a stock sound effect that is used frequently in Disney cartoons and films
  • Hollow, a small valley, as commonly pronounced in Appalachia
  • Holler (film), a Dana Adam Shaprio film about segregated proms in the South
  • Holler, Luxembourg, a village in the commune of Weiswampach, in northern Luxembourg
  • See also

  • Höller, a German surname
  • Holder (surname)
  • Hollar (disambiguation)
  • Holla (disambiguation)
  • Holler (Ginuwine song)

    "Holler" is a song by R&B singer Ginuwine. It was the sixth and final single released from Ginuwine...the Bachelor. It became a UK top 15 hit.

    Single track listing

    CD single

  • "Holler" (Album Version) - 4:37
  • "Holler" (Full Crew Phat Mix) - 4:12
  • "Holler" (Full Crew Smoove Mix) - 4:20
  • "Holler" (Strike Mix) - 7:04
  • Charts

    References

    External links

  • Lyrics of this song at MetroLyrics
  • Holler (Spice Girls song)

    "Holler" is a song by British pop girl-group the Spice Girls, released as one of the two songs picked as the lead single from their third studio album, Forever (2000). The song was written by the Spice Girls, Rodney Jerkins, LaShawn Daniels, and Fred Jerkins III, with Jerkins also producing it. The single was released as a double A-side single along with "Let Love Lead the Way" internationally, on 23 October 2000, except within the United States and Canada.

    "Holler" is considered a more mature song, with R&B influences, and with lyrics talking about sexual pleasure. Critics gave "Holler" favorable reviews; though some thought it was too different from their previous sounds. However, most praised its funky groove and called it "a pleasant surprise", picking it as one of the best tracks on the album. The single was a number-one hit in the United Kingdom, while it also reached top-ten positions in more than 10 countries.

    Background

    After releasing "Goodbye" as their first single without member Geri Halliwell, in 1998, the band took a break and only came back to a recording studio in mid-1999, when Rodney Jerkins signed up to give their then-upcoming new album a tougher sound. Jerkins said, "I went out to dinner with a couple of the Spice Girls about a month and a half ago and they told me that they want me to, you know, do some work on their album, so I'm planning on going to London at the end of January, early February to work on the album, so it should be cool. I'm ready for it, it will still have a pop appeal, but the beats will be a little harder."

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