Bernhard Günter

Bernhard Günter is a leading example of post-Cagian composers whose materials cover the entire sonic range and expand the boundaries of musical exploration. His first album, Un Peu de Neige Salie, was cited by Wire Magazine as one of the top 100 records that shook the world and was at the forefront of the minimal, post-techno music known as microwave or lowercase. He became interested in Japanese esthetics and haiku and this interest is reflected in the economy of his compositional materials and the use of silence in his work. Although some of his earliest compositions used only computer-generated sound, he has more satisfactory results with sampled sounds because of the more complex overtone structures. His approach to sound is non-referential and contemplative, without calling attention to the original source of the sample (in this, his approach is dramatically different from other sample-based composers such as John Oswald, John Wall, or David Shea, all of whom play with the recognizability of the original sound sources). Günter's music has evolved over the last decade from the very quiet microwave clicks and pops to a more expansive, but equally quiet and tranquil, music which owes more to Morton Feldman than to anyone from the popular music world.