- Digital
Nina Pixel
Ancestral Archeology
Weltschmerzen
- Cat No: WS022
- Release: 2023-07-14
- updated:
Track List
-
1. Nina Pixel - Manifest
01:13 -
2. Nina Pixel - Everything Was Set on Fire
04:04 -
3. Nina Pixel - Doba Extázy
04:20 -
4. Nina Pixel - Plague Remedy
01:24 -
5. Nina Pixel - Zmrzlí
01:49 -
6. Nina Pixel - Odovzdať
06:17 -
7. Nina Pixel - Dialogické Vyvolávania
05:03 -
8. Nina Pixel - Goddess Disappears in the Sky
00:46 -
9. Nina Pixel - Puhpowee
06:27 -
10. Nina Pixel - Artemisia
00:34 -
11. Nina Pixel - It Felt Like I Was Supposed to Follow It
02:27 -
12. Nina Pixel - Šeptať
04:30 -
13. Nina Pixel - Otvoriť Žilu
01:15 -
14. Nina Pixel - Doba Odriekania
01:59 -
15. Nina Pixel - Deväť Mien
00:21 -
16. Nina Pixel - Keď Si Pán, Zaplať Džbán
03:31 -
17. Nina Pixel - Pohár Viny
06:07 -
18. Nina Pixel - Crash It to Dust
03:33 -
19. Nina Pixel - The Catharsis of Human Sorrow
03:06 -
20. Nina Pixel - Death Comes When You Stop Counting on It
00:43 -
21. Nina Pixel - A Goddess Comes from Within the Earth
05:06 -
22. Nina Pixel - Chytať Sa
04:39 -
23. Nina Pixel - 13th Month
06:33
24bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
Nina Pixel averts the perils of lapsing into inauthentic fakelore by building her music with, rather than on, the ethnographic riches of Slovakia. With the eagerness of a genuine archeological prospector, Ancestral Archaeology invokes the always present but seldom perceived linchpins of folklore culture: the desperate clinging to the memory of pre-Christian paganism and witchcraft, songs with narratives of beautiful innate wyrdness that is utterly unfit for mass culture, and superstition as the most serious longing for the balance between sense and irrationality.
If we acknowledge the truism of folklore as the shared way of expression in rural society, the techno music on Ancestral Archeology proposes that, in the urban society of ours, this role is served by raves. The argument isn’t as much declared as it’s implied // in music and in the spoken-word lyrics that are rife with historical and contemporary sources. An 18th-century recipe by the writer and priest Juraj Fándly proposes snorting the grounded flowers of the medicinal weed Valerian as a way of curing bad vision. “It is a proven remedy!” we are repeatedly assured, and it’s not hard imagining Fándly and his parishioners, strung out on Valerian, moving almost involuntarily to the rhythms of their era just as we can move to Ancestral Archeology.
Nina Pixel is a Slovak music artist based in Berlin. Lyrics are inspired by Slovak folklore traditions, songs and shared beliefs.
Manifestation tools: cello, overtone flute koncovka, fujara, gong, metal bowls, sheep bell, field recordings of Slovak forests, Andreas’s tom and various drum machines.
Voice samples:
Sutartinės (A Goddess comes from within the Earth)
Funeral Lament, recorded in Vernár 1973 (Puhpowee)
Panoráma Ľudovej Kultúry; Liptov (Pohár viny, 13th Month)
Hay-making Songs; Selec, Kysuce, Terchová (It Felt Like I Suppose to Follow It, Zmrzlí,Dialogické vyvolávania)
