Ammassed Media Spotlight:
Kaffe Matthews
November 12, 1998
ELECTRONIC MUSICIAN, KAFFE MATTHEWS, DOESN'T
PLAY ELECTRONICA
in the "techno" sense. You'd be hard-pressed to find any back-beats
or "Get up and party" Iyrics in her songs. Nor does she rely heavily
on preprogrammed sound. Her two full-length solo CDs (cdAnn, & cdBea)
are filled with only live recordings "with 80% of the editing happening
on stage." Her violin, effects and most importantly, live improvisational
technique are what define her musical personality. And when Kaffe
(pronounced "Calf") says she has never played two pieces exactly alike,
that each recording is from "a particular place, with a particular
audience, at a particular time of day, after a certain kind of journey,"
she really means it. Hiding microphones outside in the street, putting
them in the club's kitchen, or attaching them to everything short
of lightning rods, Kaffe feeds her show with actual live sounds that
come from inside and outside the playing site. (She even hides them
under the audience's chairs.) The drone of an idle car engine. A running
faucet. The chopping of a distant helicopter. Whatever siren or chirp
she tunes into and samples during the performance becomes fodder for
her public's sonic environs. She works in the moment. Taking her time,
drawing out every creak, patiently layering every murmur, Kaffe creates
an invisible crescendo which pulls listeners into her world so gradually
it's almost unnoticeable. As the piece progresses and the levels get
pushed slowly to eleven, Kaffe then tweaks her noises from something
organic and generally recognizable into something almost otherworldly
and extremely distinct . The idling engine becomes serious and alarming.
The running faucet becomes a steady stream of ball bearings pouring
into a tin can. The chopping helicopter blades turn into a swarm of
locusts. Once the volume's turned up and everything's merged, the
line blurs between electric and organic, and what at first seems like
an assortment of innocent, almost monotonous tones transforms into
a mutant hybrid of intimidating noise. But just as Kaffe scares, she
is also playful. She understands what it means "to move" her listeners
and she's in complete control. Because when the cacophony becomes
almost unbearable, when the sweat starts to form on her listener's
brows and the walls of the trash compactor start closing in Kaffe
shuts everything off. Just as easy as slamming a door, she cuts off
the engine, puts the bb's and the locust's away and switches the tone
to something a little easier on the ears, like what it must be like
walking through a carnival the morning after a delirious evening.
The sky is grey, the cIowns are sIeeping, and there's an accordian-grinder
playing inside a tent somewhere. But even though this new soundscape
seems calmer, the stress of that previous movement remains hard to
shake. There's still a feeling that something just ain't right. And
it might be that mic hidden under the chair.
by Jeyon Falsini
ammassed media
interviews - music - art snobbery - books
down-with-whatever
November 12, 1998