Irdial Discs – 54 ird aev 2
Released in 1994 by the unpredictable Irdial Discs imprint (who later
became notorious for their collection of Conet Project recordings),
visual artist and musical explorer Anthony Manning’s debut album was way
ahead of its time. It would be easy to lump Islets in Pink
Polypropylene in with other ‘electronica’ records of the day, but
Manning’s painstaking experiments were a marked degree of separation
from Autechre’s crisp and chirpy Amber or even Aphex Twin’s esoteric
Selected Ambient Works Volume II. This unique quality can be attributed
to the fact that Manning had a particularly unusual production method,
one which 20 years later sounds almost impossible to believe.
In his own words, the process took “many weeks per piece,” and those
were weeks of spent doing very little else, including sleeping. The
inherent speed bump in his process was that Manning had decided to limit
himself to exclusively composing the album on a Roland R8, a cheap drum
machine which was elevated (slightly) by its pitch function and fiddly
(but serviceable) sequencer.
Being a drum machine, the R8 couldn’t be ‘played’ like a regular
synthesizer, but Manning eventually came to the realization that the
initially confusing numerical values attached to each sound’s pitch
(from -4800 to +4800) could be worked with in multiples of 400 to create
a makeshift scale. After tapping out his rhythms in real time using
sounds from an R8 ROM card (“mostly the Dance card, number 10”), he used
the pitch slider in real time to improvise melodies from each voice and
would then edit each note separately, adjusting its numerical value to
the nearest multiple of 400.
WHEN THE RECORD WAS FINALLY COMPLETED, MANNING ADMITS THAT HE FINALLY
GOT A CHANCE TO SLEEP AGAIN, VOWING TO NEVER, EVER REPEAT THE PROCESS.
Here’s where it’s important to remember that working on a tiny LCD
screen using submenus made it almost impossible to get any feel for the
composition as a whole (we were a fair few years from today’s DAW
systems), so Manning countered this by drawing each track out on graph
paper using the Y axis for pitch and the X axis for time. He says that
this would make it “easy to see too many notes clustering around too
tight a pitch range” or “a single note straying down into the lower
register while all the others were in the upper,” but more importantly
it allowed him to get a sense of each track’s beginning, middle and end,
and work on his compositions far more efficiently.
The fact that Manning managed to even finish Islets in Pink
Polypropylene makes it at least worthy of closer investigation, but even
now it sounds like little else that’s emerged since (Phoenecia’s
Brownout came close, but seven years later). With electronic innovation
and nostalgic regression happening at such a rapid pace, it can be hard
to weed originality from facsimile, so it’s refreshing to hear an
all-electronic album that sounds so organic yet so totally alien.
When the record was finally completed, Manning admits that he finally
got a chance to sleep again, vowing to never, ever repeat the process.
In a world where it can take less than five minutes to produce tracks
that can actually be quite brilliant it’s important to remember that
blood, sweat and tears do, every once in a while, result in something
truly remarkable.

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