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at dust

by matt robidoux

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1.
the bouquet 02:27
what are you doing with those fresh cut flowers? what are you doing with those flowers dried flowers? what are you doing with those fading flowers? what are you doing with those flowers dying flowers? what are you doing there? what are you doing there? 1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1 what are you doing there? 1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1 flowers dried
2.
meant to send you something but didn’t this is that instead meant to send you something but didn’t this is that instead meant to send you something but didn’t this is that instead this is why my mother laughs this is that instead got to choose a job but the duties are vague got to choose a job but the duties are vague got to choose a dog this is that instead meant to send you something but didn’t this is that instead meant to send you something but didn’t this is that instead meant to send you something but didn’t this is that instead ________send you something but didn’t this is that instead
3.
4.
ob birds 02:18
birds do the best they can they set an example a proper example the example of birds the example of the wings the flight of birds the example of the nests the voyages and the songs of birds the example of the beauty of birds the example of the heart of birds the example of the light of birds something pretty for the birds something useful for the birds something beautiful for the birds something useful for the birds
5.
ee-ya 01:36
6.
interstitial 03:41
7.
hi beams 03:21
hi beams hi beams hi beams hi beams i risk it all i risk it all hi beams hi beams hi beams hi beams i risk it all i risk it all hi beams hi beams hi beams hi beams i risk it all i risk it all hi beaaaaaaaaams i risk it all i risk it all hi beaaaaaaaaams i risk it all i risk it all i risk it all i risk it all i risk it all i risk it all i risk it all i risk it all
8.
green i-beam 01:45
9.
dinghy 02:23
the garden's gentle wind an open palm in the morning new england weather is strange it makes you feel too puritan this dinghy's blowing in the wind this dinghy's blowing in the wind this dinghy's blowing in the wind this dinghy's blowing in the wind
10.
sea wall 04:54
11.
so long 03:09
so long so long it's smithereens so long so long

about

alreadydeadtapes.bandcamp.com/album/at-dust

At Dust, the new album from San Francisco-based musician Matt Robidoux, feels both microscopic and as if he’s soundtracking his own pastoral realm. The follow-up to last year’s Brief Candles, is painstakingly detailed and spacious. The vibrancy of these eleven eclectic tracks is simultaneously unplanned and contained by loose compositional parameters. Like some of the artists referenced in his lyrics such as Chris Kraus, Banana Yoshimoto and Jacques Prévert, At Dust is at times surreal or experimental in its approach to reframe space and time. Robidoux’s music complicates what you expect to hear versus what vibrations are entering the crevices of your ears. Take the short and wiggling “Cloud Dance #7.” At first, there’s a crunching static, akin to careful steps marching across snow, then a rush of electronic scribbles like a high-pitched, warped popping of bubbles, some slippery strokes of piano, and finally the twinkle of birdsong and rushing water. In under two minutes, we’re led outside and the surroundings expand, collapse, and burst.

With field recordings, drum programming, and a vast array of instruments (brass, woodwinds, violins, guitars, drums, plastic saxophone, banjo, Gamelan instruments), Robidoux’s practice is an exciting warp of familiarity in multiple ways. Not only is he playing with the pop song structure, but the manipulation of space on At Dust is intimately personal. Some of the album is built off environmental samples from Robidoux’s grandmother’s house in Winchendon, MA, a now shuttered factory town. It’s his most electronic-based project, unearthing a level of granular detail in production that Robidoux had never experienced in his practice. “It employs in equal measure forms that are familiar and unfamiliar to me.”

Robidoux was visiting his grandmother who was ill “That time was also for saying goodbye to the house, where 3 generations of my family grew up. What I wanted to keep for myself from this place ended up being sonic footprints, soundwalks—through the snow and ice on a field behind the house, the sounds of a train tunnel as it began to thaw.” Other tracks on the record follow diaristic impulses: the feeling of procrastination in sending something to a friend in a mail, or the daily roll call of the birds on the power lines outside the window.

At Dust follows the intentioned and welcoming patterns of Robidoux’s past work. Indebted to the the DIY community in New England, a founder of several underground music venues, and an avid spokesperson for creating welcoming, accessible creative spaces—the Prepared Guitar Ensemble, in partnership with Creativity Explored, a visual art center serving adult professional artists with developmental disabilities—this album is built on various collaborations. Those involved include: Ky Brooks (Lungbutter), Matt Norman (Lily and Horn Horse), Cody Putman, Kris Force, Tony Gennaro, Adam Hirsch, Jake Parker-Scott, Mitch Stahlmann, and Tim Russell.

As an improvisational composer, much of Robidoux’s work is based on chance—an infinite amount of possibilities with only one impulsive result. But like many great improvisers, his work doesn’t feel random, but intuitive. Even the album title, which comes from a misprinted old postcard found at Adobe Books—a volunteer arts co-op gallery, bookstore, and an important meeting space in the Mission District of San Francisco Robidoux is a part of. The postcard said “San Francisco At Dust.” A chance encounter, something one might view as a silly mistake, Robidoux finds immense inspiration in. He says, “watching a sunset is making. that which is not being made collects dust. Dust is a fine, dry powder consisting of tiny particles of earth or waste matter lying on the ground or on surfaces or carried in the air!” Robidoux is reframing not only the understanding of space, but how compositionally that understanding can be reinvented.
- Margaret Farrel

credits

released October 1, 2021

Ky Brooks — voice (9)
Matt Norman — trumpet, trombone, euphonium, rhodes (1)
Cody Putman — bassoon, coronet (9)
Kris Force — violin, viola (5, 6)
Tony Gennaro — percussion (2,5,9)
Mitch Stahlmann — flute (4)
Adam Hirsch — alto saxophone (6)
Jake Parker-Scott — alto saxophone (7)
Tim Russell — drums (11)
Matt Robidoux — compositions, field recordings, drum programming, guitars, vocals, synthesizers/electronics, percussion, drums, clarinet, plastic saxophone, banjo, peking/demung, ukulele.

Mixed by Adam Hirsch and Matt Robidoux at The Creek, Oakland, CA
Mastered by Nathan Corder

Artwork and design by Milo Moyer-Battick
www.milomoyer-battick.com

mattrobidoux.com

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matt robidoux San Francisco, California

composer, improviser

corn synth,
hay seed electronic music

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