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Le Raccourci is a welcome introduction to the world of Sebastian Gandera.
The impressionist landscapes of a sensitive soul self-reflecting, these
miniature compositions alternate across a rudimentary set up of piano,
field recorder, sampler and four-track recorder, melancholic utterings
hastily captured some 100km east of Paris. Classically trained by the
same teacher as his parents, Gandera first began recording in the
confines of his university dorm room, inspired by a C60 from friend and
future collaborator Bernard Odot (A Gethsémani). Humbly
existing without sparing a thought to music industry or career,
Gandera's personal efforts surfaced via the European and US cassette
networks from 1988 to 1994. Impressively accomplished for the DIY scene
they orbited, these tapes were issued in scant quantities, rendering his
pieces as private secrets shared and duplicated in small concentric
circles. Aside from a sole, avowedly traumatic performance, the material
was never shared in a live context. Selected by Sky Girl co-conspirer Julien Dechery, Le Raccourci
culls 15 tracks from Gandera's extensive cassette discography,
discarded DAT recordings, and split CD with Lyon toy music project Klimperei.
These sentiently charged compositions only hint at his larger catalog,
but act as a compelling cross-section of the artist's oeuvre. The
identity is further detailed by archival images, Glen Goetze-penned liner notes and original artwork from Perks and Mini's Misha Hollenbach. While Gandera's nostalgic melodies incidentally parallel with the piano key manoeuvres of Pascal Comelade, Robert Haigh and Dominique Lawalrée, Le Raccourci could only stem from the escapist desires of Eric Morin.