Catalog Number: MDR084
Color: Black
Format: LP
UPC: 5053760123590
Viator is as skeletal as it is instantly recognizable. Following the inception of the unmistakable post-power electronics cubist-Latin-blues that kept Adrian de Alfonso busy during his Don The Tiger days, the first album under his own name is a ruthless step forward into a new form of avant-garde balladry, raw and stripped down, poetic yet enchanting, anchored in a sort of stubborn and repetitive primitivism, which synthesizes the future rituals of a stateless tradition.
Viator consists mainly of a series of frayed ballads and deformed instrumental miniatures, underpinned by the heavy swing that intertwines Adrian de Alfonso's lyrical coplera vocals and improviser Mike Majkowski's rubbery double bass, which is often drained of its acoustic nature through computer and tape manipulations. The record takes on an extra sheen from the slow heels of crooked dancer Siri Salminen, the murmuring choir composed of Victor Herrero, Lorena Alvarez and Marcos Florez, and the arachnid shreds of de Alfonso's unamplified midi guitar.
This is material that draws deeply on flamenco, copla, bolero, tango and sardana, but is transfigured into the uncanny by Adrian's relentless use of FM transmission, unhinged sampling/midi techniques, musique concrete outbursts, stripped-down chanting and outlandish operatic procedures. Viator - traveller in Latin - was recorded with a bunch of piezos and cheap mics (sometimes with the window open) in de Alfonso's bedroom in Berlin, in a bathroom (without vents) in the Alpujarra of Granada and in some desert locations around Almeria, which allows for an incessant crossfading through time, spaces and membranes. A traveller on the rise, not just flowing through, permeating the space with a new found awareness.