Showing posts with label Fabio Fabor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fabio Fabor. Show all posts

January 17, 2025

Fabio Fabor – Discantus Novus (1971, LP, Italy)


Tracklist:
A1 Orizzonti 2:32
A2 Infrastrutture 2:34
A3 Oscillon 2:19
A4 Postdoctoral 2:18
A5 Individualization 2:22
A6 Bi-Triangle 2:18
B1 Spasmoreturn 2:27
B2 Gliss-Cantata 2:16
B3 Algorithmique 2:31
B4 Ridens-Drama 2:32
B5 Optical-Tone 2:30
B6 Asymmetric-Waltz 2:35

Musicians:
Composed By [Musica Composta], Performer [Realizzata] – Fabio Fabor
Music especially created for films, television, radio, publicity and industrial use. Vol. 41

April 12, 2022

The Astral Dimension – Galassia M81 (1985, LP, Italy)


Tracklist:
A1 Galassia M81 3:35
A2 Nebulosa 2:45
A3 Via Lattea 3:10
A4 Antares 3:00
A5 Macchia Solare 2:48
A6 Beta 700 2:57
B1 Stella Nova 3:32
B2 Venere 3:27
B3 Eclisse 3:30
B4 Saturno 2:56
B5 Marte 3:15
B6 Monte Palomar 3:00

Musicians:
Composed By, Performer – Fabio Fabor
Recorded By, Mixed By – Antonio Arena


Italian studio library music project by Antonio Arena and Fabio Borgazzi.

May 16, 2021

Fabio Fabor – Pape Satan (1980, LP, Italy)


“My electroacoustic music knowledge encouraged me to attempt a mix of voices, percussions, instruments and synthesizers to deal with a theme that had fascinated me for some time: the eschatological-Dantesque environment in its transcendent metaphysical imagination and, at times, even ironic interpretation.
The search for sound materials of the most varied origin allowed me to achieve particularly effective timbric results, the fruit of a patient elaboration of the materials themselves with operations suggested by the mixer and by the various systems for treating sound.
What I would define essentially as ‘electroacoustic music’, finds its unavoidable realization exclusively in recording, as by nature one cannot imagine other and different forms of execution: therefore I believe that the most effective and intimate listening the disc allows is the logical point of arrival of my artisan work, which I hope can achieve its own artistic meaning.” Fabio Fabor

There are certain records that burst into the cultural mechanisms of "modernity" of each period, which mould fashions and manners, styles of life and shape the thought of what's contemporary.
These records, and the music they contain, transform themselves into signals, points of arrival, undisputed targets for the youth cultures they meet. They are points of reference for the reading of sound periods. Others instead are invisible at their time, lost and mysterious for decades and decades. They transmit sound signals that cannot be heard by common people, squeaks for the most attentive ears, maybe, but no signal for the mass of the Society of Spectacle. Then the volume rises again, suddenly. Decades later, those forgotten records resurface from the stocks of the scrap merchants and start shouting out the power of their sound and culture. Despite being recorded decades earlier, they become contemporary and very modern, the sounds that the grooves produce seem to predict tomorrow's sound landscape. This is what happened with Pape Satan by Fabio Fabor, which Plastica Marella (editor in Modo Moderno) released in 300 limited edition copies, in see-through 180 g. vinyl.
Pape Satan was mysterious from the beginning of its creation (to this day it's impossible to set a precise release date, which is believed to date back between 1978 and 1981), inscrutable and occult, but Fabio Fabor has always been the unaware protagonist. After all, Fabio Fabor created this record for pure personal pleasure, for research and individual curiosity. Initially produced to fuel the circuit of library music, it almost immediately transformed into something different, halfway between electronic music, electroacoustic and esoteric alchemy applied to music. The author himself is a riddle; Fabio Fabor was one of the pseudonyms adopted by Fabio Borgazzi, who was born in Milan in 1920 and died in Rome on the 3rd of August 2011. Great composer and musician, author of over 500 songs, 8 times his tracks were protagonists of the Festival of Sanremo, the temple of Italian pop music. He also worked on numerous musical and lyrical operas, pieces for theatre, radio and television. In the end the meeting with electronic music and its declensions: he created tens and tens of recordings to enrich his personal archive, a treasure of sounds we hope will soon be unlocked.
An underground cult that of “Pape Satan”, fuelled by the reaffirmation of the occult electronic scene, which has in Demdike Stare its maximum expression. And Miles Witthaker was the person who rediscovered the work of Fabio Fabor; he found a very rare copy of “Pape Satan” in Rome, in the most famous Italian flea market, and since then Fabor became a part of his personal sound Olympus.
When one listens to Fabio Fabor's work today, it's like a very fast fall into the soul's oblivion, occult psychedelia for enraged hearts. A masterpiece. Absolute.

June 20, 2020

Giancarlo Barigozzi, Fabio Fabor & Oscar Rocchi – Stressorama N° 2 (1974, LP, Italy)


Tracklist:

A1. Traslucido 2:16 (Barigozzi - Fabor) spinet, 5 flutes, clarinet
A2. Super Session 2:08 (Rocchi) 5 saxes, drums, electric piano
A3. Orient Market 2:48 (Barigozzi) 3 clarinets, flute, piccolo, electric piano, alto sax
A4. Fotocellula 2:21 (Rocchi - Fabor) 3 flutes, 2 clarinets, electric piano, bongos
A5. Voli Di Sax 2:36 (Barigozzi) 2 alto saxes, 4 trombones, electric piano
A6. Assenteismo 2:04 (Rocchi - Fabor) 4 clarinets, clarone, drums, electric piano
A7. Surriscaldato 2:18 (Barigozzi - Fabor) 6 saxes, electric piano, drums
B1. Irrazionale 2:34 (Rocchi - Fabor) 4 flutes, clarinet, spinet
B2. Training 2:25 (Barigozzi) 5 clarinets, clarone, electric piano
B3. Memorizzato 2:30 (Rocchi) 2 clarinets, alto sax, tenor sax, barytone sax
B4. Nickel-Cadmio 2:21 (Barigozzi - Fabor) 2 clarinets, 2 flutes, tenor sax, drums
B5. Timer Plus 1:55 (Rocchi) 5 saxes, electric piano, bass
B6. Reflex Up 2:37 (Barigozzi - Fabor) 4 flutes, 2 clarinets, electric piano, bass
B7. Zona Alogena 2:20 (Rocchi - Fabor) 2 flutes, 3 clarinets, spinet, small cymbals (or crotales)

Fonovideo – FLP 109

An excellent music library concerning the stressful sides of modern life. 14 tunes characterized  by coincided and syncopated sonorities which give prominence to the dramatic power of the themes.