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Terre Thaemlitz: Soil | Full-length CD Album | Released 1995 | US: Instinct Ambient, AMB:007-2
Old notes from Terre about the cover design, c.1995
Soil as a cynical reference to spiritualist "Mother Earth" ambient music titles. Soil as an English translation of my first name from the French terre; avoiding the more romantic and universalist semiotics behind its common translation as "Earth." In designing the cover for Soil I was required to work with the Instinct Ambient series' graphical format established by Taylor Deupree, which consists of an iconographic CD booklet cover, textural booklet back, and textural booklet inset. I wanted the process of viewing the booklet to engage the viewer/listener in an awareness of processes of social contextualization. The front cover contains transcendental signifiers (nature, soil) which are typically interpreted as universal and devoid of politic/cultural specificity. I chose Meike Williams' photographs of trees due to their absence of a figure/ground relationship, which reflects the decentralization of melody and instrumentation in Ambient and other forms of electronic music. When the viewer/listener opens the CD case, the triangle on the cover becomes the inverted pink triangle symbolic of Queer empowerment and the "Silence=Death" HIV/AIDS activist and education movements. This time Williams' photography is meant to symbolize a decentralization of identity constructs (particularly the dichotomy of "heterosexual" and "homosexual"). Regardless of whether the viewer/listener has decoded any of the preceding cleverness, when she opens the CD booklet to see a discarded used condom her response is inevitably made in relation to social mores. Whether her reaction is one of intrigue, beauty, disgust, or simply "Right on," it is a political reaction made in relation to a conservative American [typically] social climate which in 1995 still frames such a banal image as this with the potential for radicality. It is this awareness of contextualization on the part of the viewer/listener that I consider most important when interpreting Ambient and electronic music. Recorded at: Meow (Spanish Harlem). |