* En anglais uniquement
Florian Hecker's releases under his own name contain some of the most subtle, nebulous computer music issued by the extended group of artists associated with the Vienna-based Mego label. Similar to colleagues such as
Peter Rehberg,
Christian Fennesz, and
Farmers Manual,
Hecker utilizes the computer as a means to new compositional strategies, leaving behind standard musical structures and seeking out unusual timbral and textural effects through primarily, sometimes exclusively, digital means.
Born in Augsburg, Germany in 1975,
Hecker has also performed live with many of the aforementioned artists, as well as with
Tony Conrad,
Gerhard Potuznik,
Ramon Bauer, and
Jim O'Rourke.
Hecker's first solo release appeared in 1998 via Mego; the
IT ISO161975 CD was a vague scuffle of digital processing, and among the label's most obscure and inferential releases to date.
Hecker followed
IT ISO161975 with a release for the Or label's CD-R series Made to Order in 1999. (Or also released
Farmers Manual's
Explorers_We in 1998.) Titled [OT] xackpy breakpoint, the Or release rehashed elements of the Mego CD while adding a bit of movement and energy. In addition to his solo releases,
Hecker is also a member of cd_slopper, a collaborative project with Oswald Berthold of
Farmers Manual.
Sun Pandämonium from 2003 received the award of distinction at the Prix Ars Electronica -- the "International Competition for CyberArts" -- that year. In 2006, Recordings for Rephlex appeared on the Rephlex label.
The passing years saw
Hecker in a tireless state of recording and performing, often working with sound installations in galleries, museums, and spaces outside of typical music performance venues. His work branched out to include elements of noise, techno, and musique concrète. Some standout releases in a lengthy discography include multiple collaborations with like-minded sound artist
Russell Haswell, including 2007's Blackest Ever Black; recordings for Warp; and a remix of kosmiche masters
Popol Vuh in 2008.
Hecker worked with conceptual artist Cerith Wyn Evans on an experimental opera entitled No Day No Night, which was shown as part of the 2009 Venice Biennale.
Hecker's collaboration with Iranian philosopher Reza Negarestani resulted in a string of releases, including 2012's Chimerization and the dense, skittering electronics of 2014's
Articulação. In 2017, he released A Script for Machine Synthesis, his third collaboration with Negarestani. Inspection II, a further study of computational techniques for analysis and re-synthesis, appeared in 2019. Statistique Synthétique was released in 2021 as half of a split-LP with
Okkyung Lee, issued by Portraits GRM. ~ Sean Cooper