pole

scape (de) live

clubraum - Samstag

Pole, mit gebürtigen Namen Stefan Betke und gleichzeitig Kopf des Berliner Labels ~scape wird am Poolloop-Festival eines seiner begehrten Live-Sets präsentieren. Pole ist begnadeter DJ, Remixer und Studio-Betreiber und eine der zentralen Figuren der Geschichte der heutigen elektronischen Musik. So prägen seine als "Knusperdub" (Eigendefinition) bezeichneten minimalistischen und reduzierten Knacks-Sounds noch heute Produzenten aus den Bereichen Pop, Jazz, Hip Hop oder Minimal-Techno weltweit.
Bereits mit früheren Veröffentlichungen wie seinen eigenen oder Arbeiten auf seinem Label wie beispielsweise von Jan Jelinek ("Loop-Finding-Jazz-Records") konnte Pole beweisen, dass minimalistisches Laptop-Gefrickel und Partystimmung einander nicht ausschliessen müssen. So konnte er mit der Veröffentlichung seiner sehr minimalistischen 4 ersten Platten "1", "2", "3", and "R" Musikfreunde wie Kritiker gleichermassen begeistern. Auf dem 2003 erschienenen Folgealbum "Pole" verarbeite er Einflüsse aus Dub, Jazz, Minimal sowie Hip Hop und arbeitete erstmals mit dem US-Rapper Fat Jon (Five Deez) zusammen. Seine aktuelle Platte "Steingarten" geht noch stärker in elektronische und tanzbare Gefilde, ohne aber auf die Pole-typische Klangästhetik zu verzichten. Mit dem anschliessenden Werk "Steingarten Remixes" konnte er sich mit Neuversionen von Produzenten wie Deadbeat, The Mole, Frivolous oder Ghislain Poirier in die Playlists angesagter DJ's bringen.
Pole, der seinen Namen übrigens von einem defekten Waldorf 4 Pole-Filter bezieht, ist ein Genie im Spannungsmachen, seine Musik und Live-Perfomances sind knisternd im wahrsten Sinne: Warme deepe Bässe und rhytmische Texturen verdichten sich einem vielschichtigen Klangerlebenis, ohne den Anspruch zu verlieren tanzbar zu sein. Längst sind Pole's Livesets nicht mehr einer Stilrichtung zuzuordnen, Dub, Minimal-Dub, Techno oder Dubstep, Pole's Live-Performances sind auch geprägt durch stilistische Überraschungen. Es wird spannend, das Pollloop-Festival freut sich auf Pole!




english
The music of Stefan Betke, a.k.a. Pole, is constantly in a subtle state of flux. His recordings are evidence of his music’s evolution, milestones along an open-ended journey. But this does not mean Pole’s albums are provisional or incomplete; on the contrary, they express a kind of perfectionism always aimed at reaching an imagined musical core.

The way Betke strips layer after layer of sound, working toward a minimalist essence, everything is possible. For Pole musical reductionism isn’t repetitive or deterministic. It involves constant motion around an ideal core, the smallest possible unit. As a result, all of Pole’s releases, despite their differences, are united by a central question: How can one extract the most intensity from the least amount of material as possible. Consolidation and purification as mutually beneficial processes.

It does not make any sense to try to approach Stefan Betke’s music with buzzwords or narrow musical categories. At the beginning there was, however, an often repeated anecdote, namely that of a minimalist dub musician who found his style by chance, if not accident. In 1996, Thomas Fehlmann and Gudrun Gut gave Betke a Waldorf-4-Pole filter, which had been damaged in a fall. Betke found it made beautiful static noise – a kind of crackling -- that became an integral part of his first series of recordings. The releases were just sequentially numbered (“1” in 1998, “2” in 1999, “3” in 2000) so no titles would interfere with people’s interpretation by preconceptions. The covers only differ in their colour – blue, red, and yellow, the primary colours of the spectrum from which all other colours can be mixed – mirroring the fact that for Betke, this series offered a musical equivalent to the three primary colours, able to be mixed in infinite combinations. The track titles “Stadt” (City), “Fremd” (Strange) do not really go a long way toward explaining the sounds, either. For Pole, titles only serve the purpose of making it possible to discuss tracks - they do not constitute any statement about the music. Pole’s minimal-electronica and dub remains abstract, but not empty. From the very beginning Pole has been using a warm, groovy, and elastic sound, but doesn’t lose himself in dancefloor functionality. The music can be heard as sound-architecture, as well as a story.

Stefan Betke, who was born in Düsseldorf - after a couple of years in Cologne - now lives in Berlin and works as a DJ, remixer and studio operator. In 1999, together with Barbara Preisinger, he set up the label ˜scape. These days he’s cut back on his DJ-ing to devote more time to his own music and his production work. But DJ-ing allowed him to keep on the lookout for new sounds to incorporate into his own music, too. His sets ranged from dub, jazz, and minimal music to hip-hop, the latter leaving its mark on Pole’s second series of records, which consisted of the two EPs, “45/45” and “90/90”, and the album “Pole” (mute, 2003). For “Pole”, Betke abandoned the static noises and, for the first time, worked with vocals, which were supplied by rapper Fat John from Ohio (US). Since 2005, Betke has also been working as part of a live trio, with bass (Zeitblom) and drums (Hanno Leichtmann). After numerous live gigs with this line-up, a mini-album is planned for 2007, which is set to update Betke’s musical ideas in an even broader format.

But neither hip-hop nor dub were the defining elements in Betke’s first two musical phases. Betke has never been a reggae or hip-hop artist. His music isn’t based in a scene or in private experience, but in musical structures, which he decontextualizes in order to integrate them into his own personal musical language. In Betke’s 2007 release “steingarten” there are no more references holding the music together. Electronics, loops, minimalism – all of that is there, of course, but now it’s all operating in a space all its own. Betke’s work, created in a vacuum, independent of musical trends and clearly defined reference systems, is not predicated on anything or prefacing anything - it’s a timeless artistic achievement.