Religious Music For Non-Believers

A 6 track ambient album (36m 23s) — released December 10th 2021 on Tresno Records

Religious Music For Non-Believers is Ldgu's fourth album: his first work, Rattigan Glumphoboo, was released on Queenspectra in 2013, followed by the second episode (2018) of the Sriti series published on his Tresno Records imprint, where he joins with tenor sax a typical djidoranensemble, in the streets of the city of Malang (djidoran is a peculiar variation of the better knownjaranan, the music usually played in East Java during trance rituals). The End of a Story, his most recent work, saw the light on Tresno at the end of 2020. Aside from Queenspectra and Tresno, more Ldgu music can be found on Artetetra, Syrphe and Insitu Recordings.

Conceived between long periods spent abroad in Indonesia (2013/14/15) and Morocco (2018) for ethnomusicologic purposes, Religious Music For Non-Believers is at the same time a eulogy for Pauline Oliveros' demise, a homage to the music of Tim Hecker and Earth, and finally a descent into timeless horizons, where Ldgu seeks epiphanies in the realm of sound-related truths. The music heard here is improvised and recorded live on a huge pipe organ over two very, very hot and humid evenings in the summer of 2017. The music here contained is nothing but raw excerpts from long improvisations.

"When I got the scholarship that allowed me to move to Central Java, I was coming from a period of my life in which I had tried to get rid of my ego in every possible way. Through music, through drugs, through sex, through poetry. Dismantling it, atomizing it, in order to re-collect the pieces over and over while looking at them through the microscopic lenses of experience. I was trying to find a deeper meaning in everyday life and the further I was sailing, the more I flaked off. My self was thus losing tiny particles, like cosmic debris, along the journey. After almost three years spent in Indonesia, I got back in Italy with a spiritual strength I was given by the teachings of the Javanese and of the Dayak: my ego, which had been scattered because of the blows dealt by that terribly harsh challenge I imposed on myself, found both renewed strength and unity. These came from infinite and disinterested love, from symbols and rituals, from nature, knowledge and music. At this point, one thing was clear to me: if I had comprehended how and where such learnings were rooted and if I finally felt like a tough oak, instead of a weak shrub, I had also understood the rootlessness of being a western young man in the 2000's. No matter how much I had studied Greek, Latin, philosophy, the history of Italian art, literature and poetry: I was just a product of neoliberalism, an embodied ghost constantly seeking for stronger emotions and singularities, trapped in what was nothing else but a deadly loop. Thus, as soon as I got back, it felt natural to me to look for a sacred instrument, like gamelan is for the Javanese and the Balinese. The choice fell on the pipe organ, which saw its diffusion in Central Italy (Lazio, Toscana, Umbria, Romagna, Marche) because of the Papal States. The first documents talking of pipe organs in Central Italy go back to the IX century. The Papal States ceased to exist when Italy finally got reunited for the first time in 1861 but this doesn't mean that those instruments, mostly hosted in churches, disappeared".

Many thanks go to Riccardo Marchionni (without his help this would have never happened) and especially to Don Antonino Valentino, with whom Riccardo hooked me up and who gave me the keys of the church: matter of fact leaving the entire complex and the gigantic organ at my complete disposal, without even knowing me.

Last but not least, infinite thanks go to Silvia and Andrea at Sagome, for their passion and both active and precious involvement have been fundamental in completing and releasing this work. Indeed, the tape version will only be available through their label.

The mastering is curated by Amir Shoat in his London studio. The hiss you can hear in some parts is the compressor pumping air in the organ. We've decided to leave things as natural as they sound/feel.

And so here we are with Religious Music For Non-Believers: an album that is a sonic quest, a therapy, a monolith of swirling frequencies and finally an attempt to find sense and oneness again, in an otherwise so-called hyperconnected world that most of the times just feels like a bunch of pieces approximately glued together.

If you have the habit of skipping through songs, this is definitely not the album for you.

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