* En anglais uniquement
Mexican-born musician
Fernando Corona primarily records and performs under the name
Murcof, creating ghostly compositions that fuse elements of classical music, minimal techno, ambient drone, and free improvisation, among other genres. His first album, 2002's
Martes, blended the holy minimalism of composers like
Arvo Pärt and
Henryk Górecki with glitchy, microscopic beats. He abandoned techno influences and focused more on collaborating with live musicians on later releases like 2008's
The Versailles Sessions; additionally, he has recorded albums or performed with
Talvin Singh,
Erik Truffaz,
Philippe Petit, and others.
Murcof's ambitious 2021 full-length
The Alias Sessions encompassed all of the project's sonic hallmarks, from sparse, eerie ambience to minutely detailed beats.
Fernando Corona was born in Tijuana, close to the United States border, and learned English in San Diego before relocating to the coastal city of Ensenada. His earliest exposure to electronic music was through hearing artists like
Jean-Michel Jarre, Isao Tomita, and
Jorge Reyes, and he bought his first keyboard when he was 15. At the end of the 1980s, he began attending clubs in Tijuana that played industrial, synth pop, and acid house, and he formed a short-lived group called Vortex with some of his friends. He also played in a band named
Sonios, which evolved from indie pop to a more experimental sound influenced by prog rock and fusion. During the mid-'90s, he participated in experimental projects heavily influenced by 20th century composers such as
Xenakis and
Ligeti, and he began creating electro-acoustic music, digitally processing samples of classical music and using feedback effects. In 1998, he started a solo project called
Terrestre that blended glitchy electronic music with samples of tambora, danzón, and salsa records. He became a member of
the Nortec Collective and appeared on their 2001 release The Tijuana Sessions, Vol. 1, which received worldwide acclaim.
While continuing to make music as
Terrestre,
Corona started another project called
Murcof. Far from
Nortec Collective's more playful, club-friendly work, his early
Murcof recordings featured precise, glitchy beats and manipulated samples of compositions by
Morton Feldman and
Arvo Pärt. His 2002 debut EP, Monotónu, appeared on
Sutekh's Context imprint. Having left
Nortec, he co-founded Static Discos and released the full-length
Martes, which was released internationally by Leaf. The 2004 release
Utopía included remixes by artists such as
Deathprod,
Fax, and
Colleen as well as both sides of the previous year's Ulysses 12" and additional material. After issuing an album as
Terrestre (Secondary Inspection),
Corona composed the
Murcof album
Remembranza in order to cope with the loss of his mother. Incorporating recordings of classical instruments rather than samples, the album was more complex than his previous, more minimalist records.
Corona moved to Barcelona in 2006, the same year he began performing in a trio with tabla player
Talvin Singh and trumpeter
Erik Truffaz.
Murcof's
Cosmos, a dark ambient album influenced by
Ligeti, appeared in 2007. Breaking from the pattern of successive albums whose titles correspond to letters of his moniker,
Murcof released Mexico (with
Truffaz) and
The Versailles Sessions, a set of pieces commissioned for an installation that were performed on Baroque instruments.
Corona's soundtrack for the film
La Sangre Iluminada was released in 2009. He remixed
Powerplant's recording of
Gabriel Prokofiev's piece Import/Export, and made appearances at festivals such as Berlin Atonal and Denovali Swingfest.
Murcof's collaboration with
Philippe Petit, First Chapter, appeared in 2013. He collaborated with
Truffaz on the 2014 album Being Human Being, and released the soundtrack to another film, Patrick Bernatchez's Lost in Time.
Murcof and pianist
Vanessa Wagner recorded the album
Statea, containing pieces by
John Cage,
Aphex Twin,
Erik Satie, and others. It was issued by
Infiné in 2016, along with three EPs containing remixes.
Murcof returned in 2021 with
The Alias Sessions, which included material composed for dance performances by Geneva-based company Alias. ~ Paul Simpson