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Tim Catlin
Radio Ghosts
23five Incorporated CD
Available through the Helen Scarsdale Agency: $12.00
The name Tim Catlin may not be terribly well known amongst
the avant-guitarist circles; but his recorded output
clearly stands amongst the best that Glenn Branca, Keith
Rowe, and Jim O'Rourke have mustered from their six
strings hard wired into the histories of electroacoustics,
minimalism, and post-punk experimentation. Based out
of Melbourne, Catlin is a guitarist who incessantly
tinkers with the mechanics of his instrument, envisioning
it as alternately as a mimetic sculptural object and
a pure sound generator. Through his experiments with
alternative tunings, atypical string gauges, and Rube
Goldberg contraptions of interconnected motors, speakers,
and radios, he seeks out the rasping textures of strings
vibrating against each other, the acoustic phase patterns
of two microtonally tuned strings, and the electrical
purity of circuits feeding back upon themselves, essentially
creating a polyglot drone symphony cast in smoldering
monochrome. Radio Ghosts arrives nearly five years after
his debut album Slow Twitch and showcases Catlin's unassuming
expertise with the finer aspects of the mechanically
prepared guitar. For all of its dynamic frequencies
and crosshatched vibrations, Radio Ghosts is devoid
of Marshall stacks, Sunn amps, and stomp boxes, as Catlin
captures the acoustic phenomenon of the guitar's transient
vibrations and steers clear of any tricked out sonic
demolition. Instead, Radio Ghosts focuses upon the minutiae
of the guitar: wood, strings, and amplifier. Through
his refined, tabletop guitar techniques, Catlin prefers
to set his guitar in motion, allowing the process dictate
the course of action with minor edits and sleights of
hand from the composer himself. Catlin's drone guitar
work is simultaneously capable of expressionistic illusions
(e.g. cicada choruses, industrial grind, uncanny ephemera
from the radio waves, etc.) and a sonic transcendence
of pure sonic introspection. Given that the final piece
on Radio Ghosts replaces the guitar with a crash cymbal
that Catlin agitates through similar processes, Catlin's
work shows that Organum does not have exclusivity on
the bowed cymbal for creating epic, tactile sound fields.
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