The album Living Theory Without Anecdotes confates Nicolas Wiese's  acousmatic compositions from the years 2009-2011. There is a common  thread: all four compositions are constructed out of samples from  acoustic instrument and object recordings, and mostly have rather  foating structures with slow crescendos and little disruptions. A  significant element in Wiese's soundworks is the spatial layering -  there is an architecture of foregrounds, backgrounds and diferent  midgrounds that integrate an analoge room feel, subdivide the dynamics  in a manner unusual for a 'non-played' music and therefore question the  obvious digitality in most of today's electronic productions. The  longest piece, filling the entire B side El Jardín Revisitado, is based  on a 2 hours long multiscreen video 
 ensemble piece conceived together with composer Tom Rojo Poller. Sound  manipulations from the original instruments have been taken into further  processing by Wiese afterwards, serving as a pool for a series of  audiovisual solo performances. The album version contains compositional  'cells' which vaguely resemble the original ensemble piece, altogether  employing them in a very diferent meta-structure. Der Elefant im  Porzellankfg (the elefant in a cage of porcelain) has been developed as a  reassembly of a few short samples delivered by German sound collagist  Thorsten Soltau. Most of Soltau's samples have been played back and  re-recorded through tiny speakers, partially coverd by plastic and other  sounding / sound-blocking matter. The result is a merging of  borrowedsounds and their haptic transformation - layered, cut and  overlapped into percussive and harmonic properties and relations that  have not been there before. Subfertile is an elegy; maybe the most  elegic piece Wiese has ever written. It is comprised almost entirely of  string samples, plus a few textural percussion layers recycled from  Wieses ÔBreathing Gadgets' (2004). The origin of the string instruments  is impossible to track back since most sound bits have been drawn from  recorded live performances, in which Wiese has used allkinds of string  instrument sources. Due To Idle is based on samples taken from the same  recording sessions that have been set up for 'El Jardín'. Additionally,  Wiese performed some zither scrubbings and cello pluckings himself.The  idea of the piece is a concurrence of 'hectic' and 'calm' elements,  resulting in an ambiguous tempo.Nicolas Wiese (*1976, Itzehoe -  Germany) is an audiovisual artist, graphic designer and  composer-performer of electroacoustic music.
Edition of 300 copies.