Circo Pobre
Music for the Chromaplane by Passepartout Duo
It was during our tour through South America that we were introduced to the Chilean expression "circo pobre", a phrase that refers to a situation in which you might need to fill the shoes of presenter, tamer, and trapeze artist all at once in order to finish the show. The phrase immediately spoke to our independent spirit: from making our own instruments to presenting the music itself, taking a self-reliant path has guided many of our artistic decisions.
The centerpiece of Circo Pobre is the Chromaplane, a new electronic instrument we've created over the past year. With a pickup coil in each hand, we trace shapes above the instrument's flat surface to unveil its hidden landscape of oscillators buzzing in the electromagnetic field. We first travelled with this new instrument in Tunisia, where we shaped the four long tracks that became this album, defined by taking both a temporal and spatial approach to the music.
Since then, these compositions have been traveling alongside us: filling the corners of Gampa Gallery in Pardubice where we recorded it, bouncing off the walls of The Watermill Center where we filmed it, and overall becoming older with us as we toured throughout a good part of the Americas.
Our albums are usually conceived of as studio works first, but here we decided to include a live recording too, captured on April 16th, 2022 in the Paracas National Reserve in Peru, after an epic drive with Henri (El Paradero Cultural) and his Volkswagen van, fresh after a night of camping on the beach.
Circo Pobre was written at Dar Meso in Tunis (TN), recorded at Gampa Gallery in Pardubice (CZ), and filmed at The Watermill Center in New York (US).
Released July 15th, 2022
Performance Videos
About the Chromaplane
The Chromaplane is a fully analog standalone instrument designed by Passepartout Duo which is played using two electromagnetic pickup coils.
Electromagnetic pickups are sensors that uncover the hidden electromagnetic landscape around us: our laptops and cellphones buzz with the unintentional hums of human activity. With the Chromaplane, we wanted to create a device that lives in this hidden electromagnetic world with an intentional musicality.
The instrument creates electromagnetic fields through its ten oscillators: using the two sensors, the player can highlight each of these ten voices based on the sensors’ proximity to ten corresponding nodes of the aluminum surface.
The instrument was designed and built by Passepartout Duo in Italy with wooden enclosures realized by Giorgio Perini / Falegnameria.