Kameleon

by Jasper d. H.

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1.
-Will I ever be ready, to stop trying, to bury myself back, to the other side of the world? -Okay. -Will I ever be ready, to stop trying, to bury myself back to the, other side of the world? -Okay. -Are we floating, or is the other end sinking? Did we lift out of the water, Did the strings start? Do I have to make room, for all the former selves? “ ( ) ” -Okay -Will Mimicry get me closer? “Thank You” “Thank You” “ (   ) “ Was I not critical of myself? -Okay  -Thank You. Is the ego-death the start or the end, or the whole thing? Was I not critical enough of myself? Thank you. Will I ever be ready, to stop trying to bury myself, back to the other side of the world?
2.
-We’ve already put down the carpet and chair, -And also, -The light is on, I just didn’t want to be kicked, through the door. -And also, -I think I can stop enthusiastically. -And also, -We’ve already put down the carpet and chair. The light is on, I just didn’t want to be kicked through the door. -” (   ) ”
3.
-“ (   ) “ -Am I out of tune,  because I’m not listening to the choir? -You just think you’re out of tune, because you cannot hear the choir. And also, -Am I out of tune, because I’m not, listening to the choir? -You just think you’re out of tune. Because you cannot hear the choir, an organ with room to resonate. -Do I have to make room for all my, former selves? -Okay. -There’s a fantasy I keep having of already being part of the forest floor. Do I take up all the air in conversations? -Okay. -Am I close? -Okay. -I’m a deer, frozen in the headlights, of your eyes. A howling rock-scape,  with a growing opening,  making space for wind, to blow. -Who’s to say? And also, -Okay. -Okay. -Okay.

about

In lieu of donating 5 dollars as a thank you for these downloads we are asking folks to please donate anything you can to help people in New Orleans and other Louisiana towns get back on their feet. Considering the short news cycle is leaving so many without aid. There are a couple of direct Mutual Fund efforts listed below that you can donate to via Venmo or Cashapp. We’ve turned off the ability to pay for the download to avoid confusion.

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This song-cycle (or tone poem or demo) started as a unattainable sound I kept imagining about 7 years ago on a trip with some friends to the West Coast to fill-in as a guitarist for Subservient Fuck. We had long drives and two shows a day blasting ourselves with 10 minutes of unprotected feedback soaked hardcore at a time. The tour ended with me feeling unable to go home, and in a dissociative state staying at Sterling’s house, whom I’m sure was just as confused as I. I spent a couple of days just walking around Austin spiraling and finally took a megabus home.

As someone who is happiest when learning something new, I dove all the way into whatever music made me wince, and fell in love with the cognitive dissonance that happens when something takes time to come into focus. The results should be apparent here. Gloria Coates broke my brain wide open with compositional and tonal possibilities. After discovering her, I gleamed more inspiration from and adoration for the music of Ellen Arkbro, Martha Forsberg, Kali Malone, Anna Thorvaldsdottir, Caroline Shaw, and so many more. (largely by way of the “Meet the Composer” podcast by the amazing viola player, Nadia Sirota and the Big Ears Festival, where I was able to hear and meet some heroes of mine, in a non-pretentious setting in Knoxville.

Besides these influences, there’s clear usage of Heavy Metal. Those who know me know exactly where that part comes from. I’ve always loved extreme music, and metal keeps making people more and more immune to extreme sounds. The logical conclusion here has already been found and is having it’s boundary shown by The Body, Pissgrave, Corrupted, etc. The most interesting thing to do there is clear, it’ll be a lot more transgressive and extreme if you try to tenderize some parts. Metal has a bad history of misogyny, racism, etc. and needs to be constantly reinvented. Besides, as Thor Harris said one time on Instagram, “Metal is Always Funny.”

The songs together attempt a structure like Death and Transfiguration, but tries to evoke an ego-death rather than literal death, which the male western cannon, like me, has already ruined with it’s predictable misogyny. Or in trying to find an answer to the violence of the music I love. I hope this makes an attempt at an answer, instead of just violence without context or respite.

At a moment when I saw the bottomless nature of the project, I had a panic. Sarah and Ben and Bill helped pick me up enough to finish this. Thank you, so much.

credits

released September 10, 2021

Music: Jasper Samir den Hartigh
Vocals on Track 3: Sarah Contey
Mastered by: Matthew Williams from Subodin Studios

The following people may not know it, but they have contributed, at least as an inspiration, often a lot more:

Sarah Contey, Benjamin Krause, Josh Eaton, Andy Gibbs, Jesse Kees, Emily McWilliams, Bryan Funck, Bill Indelicato, Marcos Rocha, Eleanor Bernadas, Max Alper, Mike Wilson, Melissa Guion, Daniel Patrick Tipton, Darin Acosta, Matt Carney, Amy Berkowitz, Lee Buford, Chip King, Coral Mercy, Sebastian Figueroa, Maria Elena, Mitch Wells, Craig Mulcahy, Chris Stein, Eric Johns, Dan Kautz, Maureen Iverson, Ruth Mascelli, Colby James, Caroline Eck, Thomas Rabon, Sterling Dowdy, Gladin Scott, Mike Stone, Travis Swisher, Arjan de Boer, Russell Pants, and Ernst and Sonja den Hartigh.

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about

Jasper d. H. Austin, Texas

Jasper is a Dutch artist and draftsperson born in Almelo in 1988. He lives and works in Austin, TX.
jasperdenhartigh@gmail.com

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