Oval (musical project)

Oval is an electronic music group founded in Germany in 1991 by Markus Popp, Sebastian Oschatz and Frank Metzger. The group is regarded as pioneering glitch music, writing on CDs to damage them and produce music with the resulting fragments.[1]

Oval
Background information
OriginGermany
Genres
Years active1991–present
Labels
Associated acts
MembersMarkus Popp
Past members
  • Sebastian Oschatz
  • Frank Metzger

History

Oval was founded in 1993 by Markus Popp, Sebastian Oschatz and Frank Metzger. Disdaining the use of synthesizers, Oval instead deliberately mutilated CDs by writing on them with felt pens, then processed samples of fragmented sounds to create a very rhythmic electronic style.[1]

Oschatz and Metzger left the group in 1995, with Popp continuing under the Oval name. After a series of releases on Thrill Jockey and Form & Function in the late 1990s and early 2000s Oval was on hiatus until 2010, when the EP Oh was released.[2] The first Oval album in almost a decade, titled O, was released later the same year, on Thrill Jockey. In March 2013, Oval released a sixteen-track album titled Calidostópia!, a project was funded by the Goethe Institute and the Cultural Foundation of the State of Bahia.[3] Later that same year he released VOA (2013), an album that also emerged from the collaboration with singers and musicians from South America.

In 2016, Popp started his own label, UOVOOO. Its first release was French artist Mei's twelve-track album Partura and the second being Oval's eleven-track album Popp.

Other works

Markus Popp was an integral part of the creation of Gastr Del Sol's 1998 album Camoufleur. In 2003 his collaboration with Japanese singer Eriko Toyada, entitled So, was released on Thrill Jockey. He also composed the soundtrack for a short film Retina.

Frank Metzger released some singles with Mego and the Internet label Falsch, and started a collaboration with Rossano Polidoro and Emiliano Romanelli from "TU M'" in 2003 called Steno. Sebastian Oschatz is an interaction designer with Meso, a German media design collective.

In 2001 Björk sampled the track "Aero Deck" (from the 1994 album Systemisch) on her Vespertine album.

Awards

  • 2015 QWARTZ Award "Lifetime Achievement Award"[4]
  • 2013 QWARTZ Award "Best Experimental Music"[5]
  • 2011 Prix Ars Electronica Honorable Mention[6]
  • 2001 Prix Ars Electronica Award of Distinction[6]

Discography

Albums

  • Wohnton (Ata Tak/1993)
  • Systemisch (Mille Plateaux/1994)
  • 94 Diskont (Mille Plateaux/1995)
  • Dok (Thrill Jockey/1998)
  • Szenariodisk (Thrill Jockey/1999)
  • Ovalprocess (Form and Function/2000)
  • Pre/Commers (Thrill Jockey/2001)
  • Ovalcommers (Form and Function/2001)
  • Oh (Thrill Jockey/2010)
  • O (Thrill Jockey/2010)
  • OvalDNA (Shitkatapult/2011)
  • Calidostópia! (Goethe Institute/2013)
  • Voa (2013)
  • Popp (UOVOOO/2016)
  • Eksploio (UOVOOO/2019)
  • Scis (UOVOOO/2020)

Compilation Albums

  • I Said No Doctors! (2017, Dymaxion Groove)
gollark: To rethingy: I think that, regardless of whose body or creation or whatever it is, the person who is actually carrying it and bears the associated issues of having it glued to their circulatory system and such should get to decide whether to keep doing that.
gollark: A fetus contains some of your genes but ~all of its materials come from what the mother eats/processes, so that isn't relevant either.
gollark: I'll rephrase a bit or something.
gollark: You were saying that it was "half another person's body" earlier.
gollark: As much as applying copyright laws to babies might be fun, aaaaa.

See also

References

  1. Cooper, Sean. "Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-08-20. Retrieved 2010-04-04.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. Pelly, Jenn (8 March 2013). "Download a New Album From Oval for Free". PitchforkMedia. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  4. "Qwartz Music Awards". Qwartz. Retrieved 18 November 2016.
  5. "Qwartz Music Awards". Qwartz. Retrieved 18 November 2016.
  6. "Prix Ars Electronica". Ars Electronica. Retrieved 18 November 2016.
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