Pantha_Du_Prince

Pantha du Prince

Pantha du Prince

German musician


Hendrik Weber (born 1975 in Bad Wildungen, Germany),[1] better known as Pantha du Prince, Panthel, and Glühen 4 is a German producer, composer and conceptual artist for electro, techno, house, minimal, and noise, affiliated with Dial Records,[2][3] and Rough Trade Records.[4][5]

Quick Facts Background information, Birth name ...

Career

Weber's style evolved from the harder end of the house music spectrum[2] and minimal techno to something he described himself as "sonic house," and incorporating acoustic elements, electronically altered field recordings,[6] and shoegazing references.[7] He launched his Pantha du Prince identity in 2002, with the four-track 12" "Nowhere".[8] His first full-length album Diamond Daze (2004), featured hard-edged club songs,[2] with samples of The Chills' "Pink Frost" on the track "Circle Glider".[8][9] Writing for allmusic, Jason Birchmeier also detected an affinity for shoegaze bands such as My Bloody Valentine and Slowdive, as well as stylings of Detroit Techno producer Carl Craig.[8]

Weber's 2005 remix 12" "Butterfly Girl Versions" and the 2006 "Lichten/Walden" 12" were again published on the German label Dial.[8] In 2007, Weber released This Bliss[5] where he explored travel, time, and the joy of forward motion.[2] Commenting on the album's juxtaposition of ethereal melodic elements and a dance music backbone, Tim Finney gave it 7.7 out of 10 in a review for Pitchfork.[10] The New York Times critic Jon Caramanica described This Bliss as Pantha du Prince's "high-water mark, [and] a pensive, slender and tough album".[11]

In 2010, Weber switched to Rough Trade Records before releasing his third album Black Noise,[11] where he sought to "incorporate a wide range of sounds — field recordings, atonal noise, and stray percussion," as part of a "period of musical exploration in the Swiss Alps."[12] Unlike a totalizing experience of This Bliss, some saw tracks on Black Noise as a more compartmentalized treatment of moods and textures that retained Weber's "gift for generating heavily melodic mazes of sound."[13] Featuring Animal Collective's Noah Lennox and LCD Soundsystem's Tyler Pope as guest artists, and following the aforementioned label change, Black Noise was met with more excitement than Weber's previous work.[14]

In 2012, Pantha Du Prince collaborated with Stephan Abry of the band Workshop; the duo formed the project Ursprung (after an Austrian town), and released an album Ursprung on Dial. In 2013, Pantha du Prince and the Norwegian percussion five-piece The Bell Laboratory released their collaborative album Elements of Light.[15] The ambitious project was a symphony for electronics, percussion and bell carillon, a three-tonne instrument comprising 50 bronze bells.[16] When asked if there was anything he wanted listeners to take away from Elements of Light, Weber said, "It was intended to be listened to in one piece [...], more like a DJ mix."[17]

Due to his integral approach, Pantha du Prince manages to unite different areas of cultural production including popular music, performance, and fine arts to one artform.[1] Weber's installations coalesce sounds, architecture, and objects into a transcendental space.[1]

Discography

As Pantha du Prince

Albums

Singles/EPs

  • 2002: "Nowhere"
  • 2005: "Butterfly Girl Versions"
  • 2006: "Lichten/Walden"
  • 2009: "Behind the Stars"
  • 2009: "The Splendour"
  • 2010: "Stick to My Side"
  • 2010: "Lay in a Shimmer"
  • 2015: "The Winter Hymn"
  • 2017: "Mondholz : Remixes & Canons" (with Arash Safaian)

Compilations

  • 2011: XI Versions of Black Noise
  • 2011: V Versions of Black Noise
  • 2017: Coming Home

As Glühen 4

Albums

  • 2003: Das Schweigen der Sirenen

As Ursprung

Albums

  • 2012: Ursprung

As Hendrik Weber

Albums

  • 2021: 429 Hz Formen von Stille

Selected exhibitions and shows

Single exhibitions

  • 2004: Death by a light of a phonograph at Nomadenoase, Hamburg
  • 2007: Eisenkaute at Nomadenoase, Hamburg
  • 2010: Transitory Triplet at Splace Berlin, Fernsehturm am Alexanderplatz, Berlin
  • 2010: Pantha du Prince at Gallery of Modern Art Brisbane, Australia
  • 2013: Pantha du Prince & The Bell Laboratory at Queen Elizabeth Hall, South Bank Center London

Group exhibitions

  • 2005: No competitive offers Dial at ARTIS, Den Bosch, Netherlands
  • 2010: Based in Berlin at Kunstwerke, Berlin
  • 2013: in C by Terry Riley, Pantha du Prince & The Bell Laboratory im Barbican, London

Curatorial engagement

  • 2011: Kunst als Klang at Vittorio Manalese, Berlin

Awards

  • 2011: Echo in the category "Kritikerpreis"
  • 2014: Musicboard Berlin – Grant Recipient of the Villa Aurora in Los Angeles

References

  1. Hendrik Weber (Pantha du Prince), villa-aurora.org, retrieved 23 April 2014
  2. "Pantha du Prince – Artist Profile". eventseeker.com. Retrieved 2019-12-20.
  3. Sam Thorne (Issue 129, March 2010). "Music. Black Noise. Pantha Du Prince" Archived 2010-12-12 at the Wayback Machine, Frieze Magazine.
  4. Charles Ubaghs (February 11, 2010). "Review. Pantha Du Prince. Black Noise", The Quietus.
  5. "Black Noise by Pantha du Prince". Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  6. "Pantha Du Prince". Retrieved 1 October 2016.

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