Ghédalia Tazartès ‎- Diasporas

Ghédalia Tazartès ‎- Diasporas

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Amazing, mindbending music from the one and only Ghédalia Tazartès! Part of the original Nurse With Wound list, and you can imagine a teenaged Stephen Stapleton really getting into the hallucinatory repetition of these recordings.

RECOMMENDED if your tastes go OUT THERE!

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Ghédalia Tazartès is a truly indefinable French musician. Born in Paris in 1947, he has been steadily putting out his music on various labels since the late 70’s with upwards of 20 releases. In 2011, Dais re-issued his first album, Diasporas, which was originally put out in 1979 on the French label Cobalt. Diasporas summons you into an esoteric world full of exotic, bizarre, and mysterious vocal chanting and electro-acoustic reverberations. Originally recorded in 1977, following a limited release in 1979, Ghédalia Tazartès debut album, Diasporas, introduced listeners to the surreal, mysterious and truly unclassifiable statement of Tazartès and his out-of-time place in the French avant-garde canon. Born in Paris in 1947 to Judaeo-Spanish parents of Greek descent, Tazartès spent his early career as an autodidact utilizing his knowledge of repetition and collage, coupled with his Ladino linguistic heritage, to create some of the most unique recordings of the late 20th century. Interest in the works of Tazartès truly sparked when artist Steve Stapleton included his follow up album, Tazartès' Transports, in his famed “Nurse With Wound List,” thus adding endless curiosity to the folklore behind Tazartès and his mystical entrée. 

From the onset of Diasporas, looping incantations seemingly pile up at the behest of Tazartès. In almost a prayer-like decree, Tazartès chants to the gods in an undefined whail that is both haunting and spiritually divine. Tazartès unique use of tape loops to capture the disappearing traditions of his family’s past creates an atmospheric texture that unexpectedly complements his cut-up, manipulated vocal experiments. While contemporaries within the French avant-garde maneuvered academic theory and rigid tradition, Diasporas strays away from these boundaries, working in Tazartès’ invented practice of ‘impromuz’, a method in which he endlessly records for hours and edits only the moments that display any sense of spontaneous enlightenment. Further emboldening the obtuse nature of Diasporas are the seemingly random recitation of poet Stéphane Mallarmé and the traditional ‘Parisian-style’ piano accompaniment of experimental composer Michel Chion. 

Since its initial release over 40 years ago, both Dais Records and Alga Marghen have released reissues of Diasporas in various formats, with the initial Dais Records vinyl edition falling out of print. Dais Records presents an official reissue, newly remastered by Josh Bonati, utilizing the original artwork of Diasporas in its sole album form, for the first time in over four decades.t devoted followers of the avant-garde down a road that is beyond all classification and outside the realm of conventionality, in adherence only to his own unique vision.