Hemmelig Tempo

{{Infobox musical artist

| name = Hemmelig Tempo

| image = Hemmelig tempo.jpg

| image_size = 250

| caption = Hemmelig Tempo in 2010.

| landscape = yes

| alias =

| origin = Bergen, Norway

| genre = avant-garde, free improvisation, electronic music

| years_active = 2007-present

| label = Musea

| website = {{URL|hemmeligtempo.no}}

| current_members = *Professor Waffel

}}

Hemmelig Tempo is a quasi-scientific, improvisational and partly satirical Norwegian sound experiment group notable for performances, concerts, installations, satirical video productions, album releases and a number of collaborations with artists and ensembles in other fields. Characteristically dressed in laboratory-coats, their output has been described as a "strong commentary to our technological existence".{{cite news|last1=Nordeng|first1=Kjell|title=Råsterk avslutning på Nødutgang|url=http://www.an.no/kultur/rasterk-avslutning-pa-nodutgang/r/1-33-7622836|accessdate=25 August 2016|newspaper=Avisa Nordland|date=5 October 2014|language=Norwegian}}

Biography

Hemmelig Tempo made their first public appearance dressed in white laboratory coats in Bergen, Norway in 2007.{{cite web|title=Documentation of Live research|url=http://www.hemmeligtempo.no/2012/01/documentation-of-live-research.html|website=Hemmeligtempo.no|accessdate=25 August 2016}} Combining a quasi-scientific approach with performance, improvisation and avant-garde electronical sound art, the group became known for their satirical role-play{{cite web |title=Mot til a feile|url=http://www.scenekunst.no/sak/mot-til-a-feile/|website=Scenekunst.no|accessdate=25 August 2016}} and "live research" performances{{cite news|title=Festival Spesial|work=BTV - Bergen TV|date=29 May 2008}} featuring a vast number of diy electronical gadgets, synthesizers, transistor radios, household objects and machines.

During the Bergen Electronic Music & Art Festival in 2008, the group contributed with an installation in which the group replaced themselves with three toy robots producing random Aleatoric music. Reflecting the group's sense of satire, the installation was called Do we really need musicians?.{{cite web|title=Numusic, Punkt og Ekko – Festivaltriumviratet i bibelbeltet|url=http://www.ballade.no/sak/numusic-punkt-og-ekko-festivaltriumviratet-i-bibelbeltet/|website=Ballade.no|accessdate=25 August 2016}} The same year, the group also collaborated with the Norwegian contemporary dance ensemble Molitrix for a series of dance performances called Skin.{{cite web |title=Distant spaces close view|url=http://www.molitrixscenekunst.com/production/distant-spaces-close-view/|website=Molitrixscenekunst.com|accessdate=25 August 2016}} Across the following years, the group produced a series of YouTube videos with titles such as 6 Unlikely Duos,{{cite web |title=Hemmelig Tempo - 6 Unlikely Duos|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pHcgpdBmnG8|website=Youtube.com|accessdate=25 August 2016}} 4 Unlikely Trios,{{cite web |title=Hemmelig Tempo - 4 Unlikely Trios|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gkOQgBGT3ZA|website=Youtube.com|accessdate=25 August 2016}} and Bicycle Mixing Session.{{cite web |title=Hemmelig Tempo - Bicycle Mixing Session|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NW0Iizeh_dM|website=youtube.com}} The latter experiment in Spatial music, described as a combination of a public health initiative and sound-engineering,{{cite web |title=Bicycle Mixing System|url=http://www.hemmeligtempo.no/2013/06/bicycle-mixing-system.html|website=hemmeligtempo.no|accessdate=25 August 2016}} consisted of three bicycles equipped with an amplifier and speaker which transmitted the sound of pre-recorded musical instruments. By placing microphones at each extreme side of a large-sized hall and manoeuvering the bicycles around the hall, a giant mixing system was in effect created, "allowing unpredictable volume and panning effects that could not be replicated with a normal mixing board" (op.cit). Here possibly making a reference to Kraftwerk's well documented interest in bicycles, Hemmelig Tempo has consistently placed themselves within the tradition of electronic music by making references to composers such as Arne Nordheim and John Cage in their album releases.

The group also collaborated with other artist, film-makers and ensembles during the next years, including making sound-design for the contemporary dance ensemble Winter Guests,{{cite web |title=Gunnar Innvær Sound Designer|url=http://www.winterguests.com/about/winterguests/item/26.html|website=winterguests.com|accessdate=25 August 2016}} appearing in a Visual Dissertation short film produced by Amehn Productions and shown at the Borealis Film Festival,{{cite web |title=Kino Borealis|url=http://www.borealisfestival.no/2010/news/kino_borealis/index8ab9.html?newsArchive.start=50|website=borealisfestival.no|accessdate=25 August 2016}} collaborating with actors Liv Ullmann, Dennis Storhøi and Anders Baasmo Christiansen on a short, unreleased Radio play,{{cite web |title=Bergen Seminar & Workshop April 24-26th 2015|url=http://www.hemmeligtempo.no/2015/04/bergen-seminar-workshop-april-24-26th.html|website=hemmeligtempo.no|accessdate=25 August 2016}} and improvising live in a series of performances with Carte Blanche, the largest contemporary dance ensemble in Norway, in 2016.{{cite web |title=Mot til å feile|url=http://www.scenekunst.no/sak/mot-til-a-feile/|website=Scenekunst.no|accessdate=25 August 2016}}

Releases

In 2011, the group released the album Who Put John Cage on the Guestlist on a sublabel of the French label Musea. The album received good reviews and was quoted as one of the Favorite Releases of the year by the US online magazine Asymmetry Music Magazine.{{cite web|title=Favorite Releases of 2011 |url=http://asymmetrymusicmagazine.com/reviews/favorite-releases-of-2011/|website=Assymmetrymusicmagazine.com|accessdate=25 August 2016}} One reviewer referred to the music as some of the most uncompromising electronic music I've ever encountered,{{cite web|title=Hemmelig Tempo 2011 |url=http://www.progressor.net/review/hemmelig_tempo_2011.html|website=progressor.net|accessdate=25 August 2016}} while another described it as totally experimental, far out, challenging, sometimes exciting, sometimes a bit too weird but always intriguing for patient people.{{cite web|title=Hemmelig Tempo Who Put John Cage on the Guestlist |url=http://writingaboutmusic.blogspot.no/2013/02/hemmelig-tempo-who-put-john-cage-on.html|website=writingaboutmusic.blogspot.no|accessdate=25 August 2016}}

In 2012, the group contributed with two tracks for the compilation Muu For Ears 9,{{cite web|title=MUU FOR EARS at Lydgalleriet, Bergen, on Friday, 13 April 2012, at 8 pm |url=http://www.muu.fi/site/?p=5904&lang=en|website=muu.fi|accessdate=25 August 2016}} produced by MUU, an artist run, Finnish interdisciplinary artist association, founded in 1987 to represent and promote new and experimental forms of art. The same year, the group also contributed on two tracks on the album Magic Handshake by the Norwegian space-rock band Seid.{{cite web|title=Seid Magic Handshake |url=http://www.prog-sphere.com/reviews/seid-magic-handshake/|website=prog-sphere.com|accessdate=25 August 2016}}

In 2016, the group released the album Are You Part of Some Kind of Cult?, a concept album about an island of pseudo-science worshippers, inspired by the BBC Radiophonic Workshop.{{cite web|title=Hemmelig Tempo |url=http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/hemmeligtempo|website=cdbaby.com|accessdate=25 August 2016}}

In 2017, Professor Waffel released a solo album, Assemblages, constructed around tiny sampled fragments of classical modernist and ethnic music, field recordings, Foley, and live performances on a number of acoustic and electronic instruments.{{cite web|title=Hemmelig Tempo |url=http://www.hemmeligtempo.no/2016/11/professor-waffels-assemblages.html}}

Members

In the booklet for the 2011 release "Who Put John Cage on the Guestlist", the following members are listed:

  • Professor Waffel
  • Doktor Døv
  • Professor Fokuda-san

References