Electroacoustic Music from Latin America? The editor 
          of the present CD, Odaline de la Martinez, is aware of this unusual 
          pairing. Unusual at least for European ears. In her preface she recounts 
          this little anecdote: 
        
 
        
"Not long ago I had a conversation with a fine 
          British musician who had been both attending and adjudicating some of 
          the electronic competitions in the continent. His words were something 
          like ‘Those Latin Americans, their music is so original that they walk 
          off with all the prizes.’" 
        
 
        
And indeed the twelve tracks by five Latin American 
          composers on this disc are full of inspiration, surprises and a wide 
          range of ‘acousmatic’ music, ranging from the eclectic use of dance 
          forms to the most sublime minimalism. 
        
 
        
M. Rosas Cobian, an Argentinian composer, born 
          in 1953, has the privilege of opening and to concluding the CD. His 
          Gato’s Raid for marimba and electroacoustic sounds is from 1994. 
          It is an almost impressionistic work. The program of the ‘Cat’s Raid’, 
          is a journey through the musics and cultures of America, from its ethnic 
          regional music to the present. 
        
 
        
Whereas Gato’s Raid follows a traditional pattern 
          of ‘Programmusik’, Augustín Fernández’s Silent 
          Towers for tape (1990) comes from the more experimental direction 
          of contemporary music. This twelve minute composition follows the idea 
          of the juxtaposition of two types of sound and their respective characters 
          and atmospheres. The continuous harmonic flow of the sound, represented 
          by one of those spheres is punctuated by another sound pattern that 
          will finally freeze the harmonic flow until the two types of music interlock. 
          The contact between them brings about a new character. The point of 
          this composition is that tape music generally communicates none of its 
          physical information. Where the ear seems to be able to infer something 
          about the sound patterns and their atmosphere, the inner ear combines 
          the two different sounds to produce a third one. 
        
 
        
Latin Soul, Alma Latina (1996, rev. 1997), by Rajmil 
          Fleischman from Peru is the most hermetic work on the present disc. 
          There are notes about the piece and its mental and biographical background 
          in the booklet. These help in placing the concept together with the 
          brutal acoustic sounds. "Images of pain" predominate alongside 
          shreds of the "physical sensation of dance", laughter, mourning 
          and singing. The very concept of a Latin Soul is more an intellectual 
          than an acoustic one. 
        
 
        
The Five Micro-Études for tape (1992) 
          are the first attempts of Mexican-born Gabriela Ortiz to compose 
          for unadorned electroacoustic sounds. They are études in the 
          classical sense of the term. These short little pieces - all are about 
          two minutes long – treat different musical questions and explore the 
          possibilities of electroacoustic sounds. The pieces contain small rhythmic 
          and melodic inflections. 
        
 
        
Timbral and rhythmic structures are the subject of 
          Mario Verandi’s Dancescape for tape from 1996. Vocal sounds 
          and instrumentals dominate in M. Rosas Cobian’s three pieces from his 
          Urbis #4 for tape. The composer states that this work is an expression 
          of his relationship with the city, popular culture, jazz and other mundane 
          events of his daily life. His clips are a virtuoso mix and re-mix of 
          sonic and musical vocabularies, playing with effects of dynamics and 
          silence. 
        
 
        
The CD comes with a booklet that is full of informative 
          explanations of the different works. 
        
 
        
All five Latin American composers on this CD have studied 
          or lived in Europe, and worked at the most important centres of electroacoustic 
          music. Whatever the strengths of these pieces I find it impossible to 
          find a specifically Latin soul in this music. The specifics and roots 
          of Latin American musicality do not seem to have any linkage with electroacoustic 
          soundscapes. 
        
 Uwe Schneider