Earn Rewards >> Sign up & get 2% store credit back on your purchases
Free Shipping On Purchases Over $75 (US Only)
Over 30,000 LPs IN STOCK
Over 50,000 LPs IN STOCK

Currency

Your cart

Your cart is empty

Check out these collections

Bill Orcutt- The Anxiety Of Symmetry

Bill Orcutt- The Anxiety Of Symmetry
Bill Orcutt- The Anxiety Of Symmetry

2025 repress. "Bill Orcutt's latest 'counting' album, The Anxiety of Symmetry, completes a trilogy on his Fake Estates label that started with Pure Genius (2020) and A Mechanical Joey (2021), all realized with his own Cracked computer music software. Comprising two 15-minute-long improvisations, the album's terrain is limited to six samples of female voices singing the number of the corresponding note value in the first six pitches of a major scale. These are fashioned into compact phrases (1-2, 1-2-3, 1-2-3-4, etc.) that are looped and layered. As the loops combine in multiple permutations and cycles, their uneven lengths create polyrhythms and syncopations as well as harmonies. On the surface, Anxiety is unusually placid for Orcutt, reminiscent of Minimal classics like the 'Knee Plays' of Phillip Glass' Einstein on the Beach (which also features sung numbers, although without the one-to-one relationship between pitch and interval number) and the breathy soprano voice loops in '2/1' from Brian Eno's Music for Airports. However, the album's title is adapted from Orcutt's essay of the same name in the Spectres III anthology about a compulsive behavioral condition known as 'Just Right' and it's parallels and possible applications to music, which suggests that this titular music's inspiration is not trance- inducement, but rather a kind of mental obsession with ordering and re-ordering. In the essay, Orcutt posits that 'for the 'Just Right' subject composing or performing with the computer, the fixation with repetition, symmetry and arrangement in sound can be mediated with software, creating new prospects for both therapeutic engagement with their compulsions and the creation of music with a length, density and scale not possible without machines... Offloading one's 'Just Right' auditory compulsions onto the computer fulfills the promise of automatic art, allowing the full expression of the subconscious by removing the need to focus on anything but the arrangement and rearrangement of elements, and the sounds themselves become merely a byproduct of the process of satisfying these feelings.' The Anxiety of Symmetry might then be comparable to artist Hanne Darboven's quasi-Minimal compositions and their basis in odd mathematical calculations derived from the calendar, in taking it's cue from an extra-musical process. The two pieces' polyphony is not far off from Orcutt's recent Music for Four Guitars, but also marks Anxiety as a departure from both Pure Genius and A Mechanical Joey. The latter bypassed melody and harmony altogether; it's relentless, phantasmagorical looping and subdivisions of Joey Ramone's trademark onstage count-offs could be seen as a wry comment on the repetitions within repetitions of rock songs and their ongoing performances, or simply the monomania of years of touring for months on end. Pure Genius presented a male and female voice stolidly reciting the numbers that correspond to the notes of a scale that are simultaneously generated with sine tones (i.e., when a voice says 'one, ' the first note of a scale is heard at the same time); Anxiety collapses Pure Genius' juxtaposition of pitch and counting by having the numbers sung. Stripped down yet excessive (in the tradition of his other works with Cracked), Anxiety seems less like it's predecessors' deconstructions than a new kind of subversive easy listening."- Alan Licht

Shop online 24/7 at Darkside Records.


Follow us on Instagram.

> Due to the current limited nature of music titles, ALL CD & Vinyl purchases are limited to ONE copies per customer, per item. If you place multiple orders for multiples of the same title, your subsequent orders will be canceled.

Format: New Vinyl/Rock

Bill Orcutt- The Anxiety Of Symmetry

Regular price $893.00
Unit price
per

Release Date: 5.23.25

 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

🩷 Open My Records To Avoid Seam Splitting

In order to ship your records to you in the safest way possible, and to avoid seam splits, we recommend removing the record from the jacket when shipping. That said, we will never open sealed records and do this without your permission. If you would like your records shipped to you this way, please add Open My Records to your cart.

We will place your jacket and record inside a FREE protective poly with all shrink and hype stickers intact.

2025 repress. "Bill Orcutt's latest 'counting' album, The Anxiety of Symmetry, completes a trilogy on his Fake Estates label that started with Pure Genius (2020) and A Mechanical Joey (2021), all realized with his own Cracked computer music software. Comprising two 15-minute-long improvisations, the album's terrain is limited to six samples of female voices singing the number of the corresponding note value in the first six pitches of a major scale. These are fashioned into compact phrases (1-2, 1-2-3, 1-2-3-4, etc.) that are looped and layered. As the loops combine in multiple permutations and cycles, their uneven lengths create polyrhythms and syncopations as well as harmonies. On the surface, Anxiety is unusually placid for Orcutt, reminiscent of Minimal classics like the 'Knee Plays' of Phillip Glass' Einstein on the Beach (which also features sung numbers, although without the one-to-one relationship between pitch and interval number) and the breathy soprano voice loops in '2/1' from Brian Eno's Music for Airports. However, the album's title is adapted from Orcutt's essay of the same name in the Spectres III anthology about a compulsive behavioral condition known as 'Just Right' and it's parallels and possible applications to music, which suggests that this titular music's inspiration is not trance- inducement, but rather a kind of mental obsession with ordering and re-ordering. In the essay, Orcutt posits that 'for the 'Just Right' subject composing or performing with the computer, the fixation with repetition, symmetry and arrangement in sound can be mediated with software, creating new prospects for both therapeutic engagement with their compulsions and the creation of music with a length, density and scale not possible without machines... Offloading one's 'Just Right' auditory compulsions onto the computer fulfills the promise of automatic art, allowing the full expression of the subconscious by removing the need to focus on anything but the arrangement and rearrangement of elements, and the sounds themselves become merely a byproduct of the process of satisfying these feelings.' The Anxiety of Symmetry might then be comparable to artist Hanne Darboven's quasi-Minimal compositions and their basis in odd mathematical calculations derived from the calendar, in taking it's cue from an extra-musical process. The two pieces' polyphony is not far off from Orcutt's recent Music for Four Guitars, but also marks Anxiety as a departure from both Pure Genius and A Mechanical Joey. The latter bypassed melody and harmony altogether; it's relentless, phantasmagorical looping and subdivisions of Joey Ramone's trademark onstage count-offs could be seen as a wry comment on the repetitions within repetitions of rock songs and their ongoing performances, or simply the monomania of years of touring for months on end. Pure Genius presented a male and female voice stolidly reciting the numbers that correspond to the notes of a scale that are simultaneously generated with sine tones (i.e., when a voice says 'one, ' the first note of a scale is heard at the same time); Anxiety collapses Pure Genius' juxtaposition of pitch and counting by having the numbers sung. Stripped down yet excessive (in the tradition of his other works with Cracked), Anxiety seems less like it's predecessors' deconstructions than a new kind of subversive easy listening."- Alan Licht

Shop online 24/7 at Darkside Records.


Follow us on Instagram.

> Due to the current limited nature of music titles, ALL CD & Vinyl purchases are limited to ONE copies per customer, per item. If you place multiple orders for multiples of the same title, your subsequent orders will be canceled.