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Music For Short Films

Lappa Poupeta / Peristeris Spyros

Music For Short Films

Label: Intersonik Recordings

Genre: Soundtrack

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  • LP €23.99
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Intersonik Recordings proudly presents
"Music for Short Films 1983 - 1992" by Poupeta Lappa & Spyros Peristeris, a limited vinyl release including previously unreleased material used in obscure Greek short films and documentaries shot between 1983 to 1992, utilizing mainly electronic music instruments such as analog synthesizers (Moog Prodigy, Korg Polysix), drum machines (Roland TR 606, TR 808, Sequential Circuits DrumTracks) and samplers (Ensoniq Mirage, Akai S900). During a deep exploration of the composers’ personal archives, we unearthed all these mind-blowing recordings, since the original reel-to-reel tapes were destroyed (sticky shed syndrome) and thrown away as garbage.

While digging in Poupeta's warehouse, we found a couple of dusty boxes with old reels, cassettes and DAT tapes in relatively good shape. We listened carefully and were extremely lucky to discover all the original material that Poupeta and Spyros recorded before going to the studio for the final 2-track mastering.

We also recovered the reel tape of the long lost synthwave, drone soundtrack of “Verdalak” (1985), a short film directed by Vangelis Kotronis, using the “baking” technique. In addition, this vinyl anthology also includes the main theme from “Flash” (1984), a short film also directed by Vangelis Kotronis, with the characteristic bell arp bringing back memories of John Carpenter’s “Halloween” and Mike Oldfield’s “Tubular Bells” accompanied with a minimal synth rhythm sequence and a free jazz sax theme.

The adventurous nature of these recordings is further highlighted by the anatolian manners, oil tin can sounds, and reversed Poupeta’s vocals floating over atmospheric synth pads played by Spyros for the film “Αsfael” (1987), as well as by the new age musical journey recorded for the Greek-French documentary “Histoire d’un Jour et d'Autres” (1990), directed by Petros Sevastikoglou. Some proto-shoegaze experiments via a profound use of samplers, can also be traced on the music they created for the film “Plumeria Rubra” (1988) by Stella Theodoraki.