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・ Perdikkas, Kozani
・ Perdio Radio
・ Perdita
・ Perdita (genus)
・ Perdita (moon)
・ Perdita (The Winter's Tale)
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Perdition City
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・ Perdix (mythology)
・ Perdix, Pennsylvania
・ Perdizes
・ Perdizes (district of São Paulo)
・ Perdizes, Minas Gerais
・ Perdizione
・ Perdomo
・ Perdomo (cigar brand)
・ Perdomo (TransMilenio)
・ Perdona bonita, pero Lucas me quería a mí
・ Perdonami!


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Perdition City : ウィキペディア英語版
Perdition City

''Perdition City'' (subtitled ''Music to an Interior Film'') is the fifth studio album by Norwegian collective Ulver, issued in March 2000, via Jester Records. The album was recorded and edited by Kristoffer Rygg and Tore Ylwizaker, mixed by Ylwizaker at Beep Jam Studio and mastered by Audun Strype at Strype Audio.
''Perdition City'' continues the experimentation seen on ''Themes from William Blake's The Marriage of Heaven and Hell'' and ''Metamorphosis'', containing elements of trip hop, jazz, ambient music, spoken word and electronica. Described on its release as moody, atmospheric electronica, cinematic in scope,〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title=Ulver Perdition City )〕 evoking a soundtrack for an imaginary film. Kerrang! praised the album, noting "This ain't rock 'n roll. This is evolution on such a grand scale that most bands wouldn't even be able to wrap their tiny little minds around it." Musically, Ulver not only explores new genres, but also shift from extrovert, into more introverted moods, or interior music.
==Background==
The ''Metamorphosis'' EP, issued in September 1999, showcased Ulver's new electronic sound, delving into what will become the foundation for all future records. Thus, acting as a musical trailer for ''Perdition City''.
Now consisting of only two members — Rygg and Ylwizaker — the duo started to incorporate field recordings into their work. During the making of ''Perdition City'' they would hang microphones outside the window of Tore’s 5th floor apartment, to capture inner city street sounds, car horns, people chattering, etc.
The potential Ulver was discovering in digital sound manipulation with ''The Blake Album'' would have a clear affect on the evolution of ''Perdition City''. It was obvious that the various new alleys they had walked down with the Blake album had given them enough satisfaction that their curiosity to see what else they could do with computers was too tempting to ignore. As Garm explains, “We wanted to focus on the electronic aspects of ''The Blake Album''. We’ve always cultivated the opposites of things in a sense. So ''Perdition City'' ended up being a very electronic record. We kind of use all the music knowledge that we’ve acquired.”〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title=Ulver )
“For every record we make it takes more and more time and more and more in the way of thinking,” notes Garm. “We have higher standards that we have to live up to, not exactly commercially or to the audience but to ourselves. We have pretty strict demands on ourselves. It’s easy for us to make music but very difficult to make music that we think is interesting. Every record is failure. It’s a relative failure. It’s always a failure. But you go on when you fail. And there’s some comfort in that idea. That kind of getting close to that own space or musical personality but it’s still relative failure in our book. In that sense it’s a struggle for us to make music. We are our own worst critcs.”〔
Subtitled ''Music to an Interior Film'', ''Perdition City'', and companion EP’s ''Silence Teaches You How to Sing'' and ''Silencing the Singing'', represents a natural bridge to their work in film scores. Musically, the collective shift from extrovert, into more introverted moods, or interior music.〔 In response to the subtitle, Rygg adds, "We mean just what we say, an abstract "inner movie". It wouldn't be wise to comment on anything afterwards in case there would be a hidden message." Some reviewers have stated that ''Perdition City'' is “much more than background music, which is capable of adding atmosphere to a film but taken out of context as a standalone piece is ultimately worthless. This music is too obtrusive, and to be frank, too good for a soundtrack.“〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title=Ulver - Perdition City )
Expanding on the photography included in the ''Perdition City'' booklet, Rygg comments, "We didn't consciously think of taking the listener into a concrete city, it's more of a metaphor and abstract. A friend of mine who has written books and taken many photographs inspired me to capture weird pictures. We then compiled the best of them to support the story the lyrics make. We tried to make an anti-aesthetic whole that would create a documentary feeling."〔
Printed in the sleeve note is states: "This is for the stations before and after sleep. Headphones and darkness recommended."〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title=Ulver - Perdition City )〕 Kristoffer Rygg adds, “Darkness is always fascinating, as well as the great void. It doesn’t matter under which aesthetic circumstances this void appears. It is always there and that was important for us to realize on ''Perdition City'': the void is even over the voice. (…) It is funny you call us criminal alchemists. Indeed in our lyrics there are enough criminal and alchemical aspects, or fascinating borderline topics, to be more concrete. That all takes place in the dead city, or better: in a centre, an imagined location of nowhere and nothing.”
Rygg, commenting in Unrestrained magazine in 2007, said, "It's like I say, we only have three consistent albums. I think ''Nattens madrigal'' is one, I think ''Perdition City'' is one, and I think this ''new one''. They all sound pretty dead set. We were heavily into stuff like Amon Tobin, Warp Records, et cetera, and that certainly influenced the sound of that one." Continuing, “(film soundtracks ) was more painstaking work than we thought. It's exciting work, but it's also more commercially orientated. You can apply your own tastes and your own vision, of course, but only to a certain extent. It always comes down to what the director and producers have in mind. And I respect that, as they are the ones with lots of money at stake. As a musician, it's an advantage if you get involved early in the process, before the editing is done because then you can cross edit sounds and images for better momentum or what have you. Whereas if the stuff is already edited, it can be difficult to get it to fit. Also, you have to learn to put your ego aside because the film itself is obviously the priority, so it's not like making an album. It's not music on its own terms. It's an underscore, aimed more at the subconscious experience. In a cinema context, you're not really supposed to listen to the music, but feel it."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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