Gudrun Gut recommends The Field’s <em>Looping State of Mind</em>

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January 13, 2012

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# Gudrun Gut recommends The Field’s Looping State of Mind ***Gudrun Gut** is a musician, DJ and owner of the label **Monika Enterprise**. Not only being an early member of **Einstürzende Neubauten** Gut also co-founded the legendary German bands Malaria! and Mania D. She lives in Berlin, where she co-hosts the weekly radio show **Oceanclub** together with **Thomas Fehlmann***. Even though I listen to loads of music, I don't usually listen to a new record every week. I'm more the type to get attached to a specific artist and then follow him or her intensely. I've been a big fan of **The Field** since the very first twelve inch, he released on **Kompakt** in 2005 and needless to say, I was anticipating big things from **Looping State of Mind**. The album has surpassed all my expectations. It's very much in line with The Field's previous releases, which are very loop-based. But these aren't your normal loops: they're incredibly precise and bril-liantly cut and spliced moments of sound, that immediately draw you into the music. It's hard to describe the difference between the average loop and what The Field does, but I would say it's a difference in emotional quality. The repetition -- often a spoken phrase or syllable -- is embedded into the rest of the music in a way, that makes it kind of like the song's motor -- something, that drives or propels the music forward. Of course there is more than one sound being looped and the smallest non-vocal micro-samples are like cogs in the machine of a bigger, syncopated push ... which is partially due to the fact, that some of the songs were written with a band and played with a live drummer. But the sound always stays warm, which is why it has a kind of krautrock feel to it, even though it's undeniably techno. I think you can categorize it as a form of serial music, because he's clearly operating from within some sort of compositional system -- mostly based in the framework of his loops. Maybe my description sounds intellectual, but honestly the music just makes me happy. It's a deep, deep joy that I get from listening to Looping State of Mind, which also comes from the organic way in which the songs build and turn and explode--- totally different from your average techno album.
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blueprint: article
title: 'Gudrun Gut recommends The Field’s <em>Looping State of Mind</em>'
date: 2012-01-13T15:30:08+01:00
wp_id: '11291'
slug: gudrun-gut-recommends-the-field-s-looping-state-of-mind
contents:
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    type: text
    text: '<p> <em><strong>Gudrun Gut</strong> is a musician, DJ and owner of the label <strong>Monika Enterprise</strong>. Not only being an early member of <strong>Einst&uuml;rzende Neubauten</strong> Gut also co-founded the legendary German bands Malaria! and Mania D. She lives in Berlin, where she co-hosts the weekly radio show <strong>Oceanclub</strong> together with <strong>Thomas Fehlmann</strong></em>.</p><p>Even though I listen to loads of music, I don&rsquo;t usually listen to a new record every week. I&rsquo;m more the type to get attached to a specific artist and then follow him or her intensely. I&rsquo;ve been a big fan of <strong>The Field</strong> since the very first twelve inch, he released on <strong>Kompakt</strong> in 2005 and needless to say, I was anticipating big things from <strong>Looping State of Mind</strong>.</p><p>The album has surpassed all my expectations. It&rsquo;s very much in line with The Field&rsquo;s previous releases, which are very loop-based. But these aren&rsquo;t your normal loops: they&rsquo;re incredibly precise and bril-liantly cut and spliced moments of sound, that immediately draw you into the music. It&rsquo;s hard to describe the difference between the average loop and what The Field does, but I would say it&rsquo;s a difference in emotional quality. The repetition &ndash; often a spoken phrase or syllable &ndash; is embedded into the rest of the music in a way, that makes it kind of like the song&rsquo;s motor &ndash; something, that drives or propels the music forward. Of course there is more than one sound being looped and the smallest non-vocal micro-samples are like cogs in the machine of a bigger, syncopated push &hellip; which is partially due to the fact, that some of the songs were written with a band and played with a live drummer.</p><p>But the sound always stays warm, which is why it has a kind of krautrock feel to it, even though it&rsquo;s undeniably techno. I think you can categorize it as a form of serial music, because he&rsquo;s clearly operating from within some sort of compositional system &ndash; mostly based in the framework of his loops. Maybe my description sounds intellectual, but honestly the music just makes me happy. It&rsquo;s a deep, deep joy that I get from listening to Looping State of Mind, which also comes from the organic way in which the songs build and turn and explode&mdash; totally different from your average techno album.</p>'
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# Gudrun Gut recommends The Field’s Looping State of Mind ***Gudrun Gut** is a musician, DJ and owner of the label **Monika Enterprise**. Not only being an early member of **Einstürzende Neubauten** Gut also co-founded the legendary German bands Malaria! and Mania D. She lives in Berlin, where s...

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I'm more the type to get attached to a specific artist and then follow him or her intensely. I've been a big fan of **The Field** since the very first twelve inch, he released on **Kompakt** in 2005 and needless to say, I was anticipating big things from **Looping State of Mind**. The album has s...

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Of course there is more than one sound being looped and the smallest non-vocal micro-samples are like cogs in the machine of a bigger, syncopated push . which is partially due to the fact, that some of the songs were written with a band and played with a live drummer. But the sound always stays w...