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Is "Endless House Foundation" actually Aphex Twin?


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There is a really obscure "compilation" album out on new label Dramatic Records called "Endless House Foundation", which I strongly suspect might be a new alias for Richard James.

Or at least it sounds like he was strongly involved in the making of the music on this "compilation".

 

You can hear a couple of samples here and here.

 

The press release offers some rather odd info:

"An obelisk of noise that rose rudely above the treetops of the Bialowieska Forest, the Endless House project shone for a mere six weeks in the spring of 1973. The outlandish brainchild of wealthy audiophile/maniac Jiri Kantor, its stated mission was "to become the cradle of a new European sonic community... a multimedia discotheque" that should "surprise and delight" artists and dancers alike. For all the wide-eyed optimism of its manifesto, however, the enterprise was never unknowing in its flirtation with disaster and self-destruction. The brilliant Czech may have made his millions as the midas-touched entrepreneur/taste-maker behind Paris-based magazine Otium International, but Endless House was always a vanity project as irredeemably vain as its maker..."

 

The more I listen to this record, the more I am convinced that this whole "compilation" is actually an Aphex Twin recording.

The harmonies, instrumentation, sounds and rhythms on this release sound so much like Richard James, that it must be either him or someone trying very hard to imitate his style. The only thing that confuses me are the vocals. But maybe it's Richard collaborating with someone else?

There is even a hidden Aphex reference in the notes that come with this release. One of the cards says that Earnesto Rogers (one of the artists on this "compilation") was "famously expelled from Stockhausen's lecture group for playing repetitious African rhythms". That is actually almost exactly what Karl-Heinz Stockhausen said about Aphex Twin's music when UK magazine The Wire played him one of Aphex Twin's pieces in 1995:

 

 

"I heard the piece Aphex Twin (sic) of Richard James carefully: I think it would be

very helpful if he listens to my work Song Of The Youth, which is electronic

music, and a young boy's voice singing with himself. Because he would then

immediately stop with all these post-African repetitions, and he would look

for changing tempi and changing rhythms, and he would not allow to repeat

any rhythm if it were varied to some extent and if it did not have a

direction in its sequence of variations."

 

I'd like very much to hear other people's thoughts on this...

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aDklTR3Cd1Q

Could _possibly_ be a collab between RDJ and some others, but its hard to tell. The Stockhausen reference certainly seems like a clue, but it could be a red herring.

 

More likely its a bunch of other people.

 

But this stuff certainly wasn't recorded in a forest 30 years ago.

 

Earnesto Rogers crops up again on this blog post:

http://stadiumsandshrines.com/?p=2398

  On 2/15/2011 at 12:24 PM, nicola said:

to me it's not. but i notice this:

FELIX URAN

APHEX TWIN

 

omg i think your on to something there!

hahaha you're either fucking thick or a promoter

meanwhile - the local maternity ward - nurse comes in with a great big sledgehammer

  On 2/14/2011 at 11:35 PM, ieafs said:

it's just some blog person trying to get people to listen to their music (and who knows that aphex/stockhausen reference)

 

this is pretty much it, yes.

 

I am sure a lot of people have read that interview. So you've probably got a strong Aphex influence from the reference, which makes for the similarity in sound.

This sounds far more like early Ae than Aphex. And even then, comparing this to Ae is near impossible. So pretty much, definitely not Aphex.

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  On 2/16/2011 at 7:44 AM, amni said:

If you even think this is RDJ you neeed a bullet to the ears

 

What's the point getting rude about this?

 

  On 2/16/2011 at 5:21 AM, noise said:

hahaha you're either fucking thick or a promoter

 

Manners, please.

Definetly not RDJ. The posted track is the one that reminds me most of him ( The Tuss), but it can't be him. I can feel it.

  • 5 months later...
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  On 8/11/2011 at 5:12 PM, manmower said:

Can't listen to it right now, but LOL at a 1973 project using the term "multimedia" in its manifesto.

 

The term "multimedia" was coined[citation needed] by Bob Goldstein (later 'Bobb Goldsteinn') to promote the July 1966 opening of his "LightWorks at L'Oursin" show at Southampton, Long Island. On August 10, 1966, Richard Albarino of Variety borrowed the terminology, reporting: “Brainchild of songscribe-comic Bob (‘Washington Square’) Goldstein, the ‘Lightworks’ is the latest multi-media music-cum-visuals to debut as discothèque fare.”[1]

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