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Αναλυτική Περιγραφή
Unlike anything we’ve heard from her before, Okkyung Lee returns to Shelter Press with
Just Like Any Other Day (어느날): Background Music For Your Mundane Activities, a deeply
intimate body of recordings at the juncture of ambient music, minimalism, and the baroque,
that stands as radical intervention with what experimental music can be, and the place that
organisations of sound occupy in our lives.For more than two decades, Okkyung Lee has stood at the forefront of the most radical
trajectories of experimental music: a virtuosic cellist and improviser, renowned for her
creative rigour and emotive depth. Particularly noteworthy for her range, dexterity, and
adaptability, over the last five years Lee’s output has revealed unexpected shifts and
developments that move far afield from the realms of free improvisation for which she is
most well know. 2020’s Yeo-Neun, a heart-wrenching, ambient chamber work - drawing
inspiration from the Korean popular music of her youth - was issued by Shelter Press
to great critical response, followed closely by Teum (The Silvery Slit) - one of a series
engrossing electroacoustic works created at Groupe de Recherches Musicales in Paris -
on Portraits GRM, and then 나를 (Na-Reul) in 2021, regarded by Lee as a closing statement
of more than two decades living in New York, which set the precedent of her allowing her
emotions to fully occupy the forefront of the music for the first time. Marking her return
to Shelter press, Just Like Any Other Day (어느날): Background Music For Your Mundane
Activities, encounters Lee upturning the apple cart once again, weaving a profoundly
intimate artistic statement on completely unexpected terms.Like its three aforementioned predecessors, Just Like Any Other Day (어느날) belongs to
broadening shift in Lee’s approach to composing that roughly aligns with her return to
her native South Korea, having lived in the United States since her late teens. Infused
with a deep reengagement with her own culture and relationship to memory, it is equally
a response to those critical challenges and questions provoked by significant life change.
Worked on in isolation, and continuously returned to, over the course of four years, the
album’s nine pieces began with a simple recognition that experimental music is not always
what we imagine it to be. It is a practice and a pursuit - a music for which, at its inception,
the outcome is unknown - rather than an idiom defined by certain syntaxes, approaches,
and qualities of structure and sound. From this departure point, Lee began to inquire after
the utility of music itself: what is it for, what does it do, and what place does it (or can it)
occupy in our lives?
This solitary and durational journey, each composition gradually moving through different
phases and evolutions over years, led Lee toward uncharted ground: a music that is not
only playful, introspective, and seductive, but also intended to provoke a relationship to
experimental music beyond its normative expectations. Rather active or deep listening,
it pursues passive listening. Rather than a grand statement, it is discreet. Rather than
virtuosity, it embraces the elegant and direct. Even more strikingly, for the first time, the
music of Just Like Any Other Day (어느날) encounters Lee leaving the cello entirely behind.
Created at home on keyboard, computer, and an inexpensive cassette recorder, Just Like
Any Other Day (어느날) presents a remarkable form of ambient music - organisations of
sound that become their own environment, to be occupied - intended, as the album’s
subheading infers, as Background Music For Your Mundane Activities. An expansion of the
creative pathways opened by the Korean pop imbued compositions of Yeo-Neun, aspects
of electronic process explored by Teum (The Silvery Slit), and the emotive foregrounding
of 나를 (Na-Reul), each of the pieces presented across the two sides of Just Like Any Other
Day (어느날) implies something far greater than the limits of its own temporarily: a mood,
provocations of memory and place, mirrors for the solitude within which it was made, and
palpable emotion lingering just out of grasp. For Lee, each of the album’s compositions
could be continued or looped for an indeterminate duration: straddling a ground between
the minimal and the baroque, enveloping the listener in endless cycles of appreciating,
repetitive and rhythmical notes, flirting with the melodic and implying a disembodied
imagism that borders on the profound.
Remarkably beautiful and direct, Okkyung Lee’s Just Like Any Other Day (어느날):
Background Music For Your Mundane Activities - issued by Shelter Press on vinyl -
represents a radical reconfiguration of experiential music, stripped to its bare essence in
defiance of the widely presumed aesthetic signifiers. Unlike anything we’ve heard from
her before, this immersive body of intimate recordings not only reveals new dimensions of
Lee’s striking range as an artist, but also of how we might regard and occupy music itself:
an ambience to lived and felt like a second skin.