news -
releases -
shop
#11
keijo
CDR
Sold out
Here, enjoy the keijo cdr mp3 release! Click on the tracklist below to download.
1. wide clouds 7:30
2. supper on the beach 4:49
3. one night again 6:38
4. clouds of the summer 8:43
5. when the sun is rising 5:04
6. low highways to the stars 8:19
download printable keijo cdr artwork
Keijo Virtanen is a Jyväskylä-area (A place that is said to be the center of
the universe) free music
stalwart and a writer/thinker. His music is very honest, humble and
beautiful. Computers, oriental
instruments and synths merge together lulling the listener to a state of
quiet happiness. The liner
notes consist of excerpts from Keijo's writings. If one for some reason has
to compare this record to
something, Sunroof and Tangerine Dream come to mind, and maybe even some of
the MV stuff.
----------------------------------------------------------------
"One of the most beautiful things I've heard in a while
and I'm lucky enough to get lots of pretty amazing
music. Subtle electronics (samples, organs, theremins)
mix with acoustic string lines (some of which are
played on home made instruments by the look of the
cover), harmonic singing, and bells and chimes to
formulate the kind of mystically infused landscape
that is unreachable on any kind of purely terrestrial
plane. It all feels something like a trip BETWEEN the
lines of words on a page in some guilty ecstatic
travelogue of a journey amongst Bon shamens in Tibet,
with all the skull bowl raksi and tantric darkness
extant. Sorry about my gushy employment of mystical
metaphors, its just the way this music seems to have
effected me. I really can't recommend the disk highly
enough. Thanks to all involved."
-Antony Milton/ PseudoArcana
----------------------------------------------------------------
”Now this is possibly one of the most unique things I’ve been fortunate enough to treat
my ears during 2003. It’s simply impossible to place this recording in any given genre
but at the same time it’s firmly rooted in the past. The past is represented through
harmonic acoustic strings, medleys of bell tones and deep resonating chimes while the
future shines through it all with synthetic landscapes constructed from samples, organs, theremins and computers. To stand by and see the subtle collisions between ancient Tibetian soundscapes and modern technology is not only striking it’s downright mesmerizing. Despite the modern touch there is something old and mystical about all this, as if the record had been hidden from us for some 30 years and only recently appeared in the daylight. If forced to mention someone who I could imagine doing a record in a similar ball park as Keijo Virtanen I’d say Matthew Bower of Sunroof! Fame, or maybe Neil Campbell could be a man for the task. But what Keijo does is still folkier and certainly sends a discrete nod in the direction of the so called ”New Weird America” scene. Virtanen is from the Jyväskylä area in Finland, which in some circles is said to be the center of the universe. I’ve allways commented to this with something like, ”yeah, right” before but after hearing this album I’m starting to think that there might be something to such a statement after all. Either way, this is an album that
you can’t ignore, that whit its exploratory and glacial, but ever-changing qualities
move like dark cosmic clouds across a dense galactic plane, or should that be around
a Tibetian temple in a mountainous setting? It’s your pick.”
- Mats Gustafsson / Broken Face #18
----------------------------------------------------------------
"More weirdness from Finland. That country is stewing wonderfully in its own
musical juices: Pylon, Avarus, The Anaksimandros, Kemialliset Ystavat, Uton,
Skullpture, Apna, Dio Daga, Oral Phase. More micro-labels than you could
poke a spindle of 3” CD-Rs at.
Keijo’s music crosses some impossible divide between medieval musings and
u/g electronics sploot. The liner notes hint as such, positing some tension
between digital technology, tradition, and locating one’s own voice. “Yew’s
harp can be imitated with a computer but it is only an imitation unless it
is used as a new instrument.” Keijo’s music is at times impenetrably
single-minded, like the direct streaming of one man’s consciousness into
musical form. At other times he maps out complete galaxies (“One Night
Again” particularly startling for this effect.) Antony Milton at
Pseudo-Arcana has just released a double Keijo CD-R. Can’t wait to hear
that."
-Jon Dale / worldsofpossibility.blogspot.com
----------------------------------------------------------------
"This is trans-locality, a locality with an unrestricted ideology and dimension.” Thus does Jyväskylä-based writer
and musician Keijo Virtanen describe his music, where echoes of global cultures, modern technology and
psychological introspection meet. The six pieces here express Virtanen’s concept as acoustic string
instruments, gongs, bells, computers, and synths merge into swirling journeys. “Supper on the beach”
weds a jaunty banjo and jew’s harp ostinato to massive, howling digital tones. “One night again” builds
to a dizzying density as drones, blips, xylophone, wooden percussion and distant guitar shift around in
movement that is more kaleidoscopic than linear. Keijo hypnotizes with its tone meditations that evoke
emotions intimate and universal, times ancient and futuristic, spaces humble and grand."
- Matthew Wuethrich, All About Jazz