#Anklepants #Joshua Head #Reecard Farché #electronic music #IDM #breakcore #techno #house #grime #prosthetics #animatronics #experimental #Australian #music video
To be clear: this guy wears an animatronic dildo mask and his voice and music is controlled by sensors located in his suit? Shit just got weird. You either get Anklepants or you don’t. The brainchild of Reecard Farché, the 17th century fictional character brought back to life by Berlin-based Australian-born artist Joshua Head, is a deeply melancholic ghost. The electronic music of Anklepants is either loathed or loved, primarily because of superficialities: the mask he wears onstage has an animatronic dildo for the nose, better known as the “facé of Reecard Farché.” Interviewing Head is an incredibly layered experience - for one, he speaks of himself in the third person, then there are his characters, plus there’s the use of the accent aigu (é) in place of the English vocabulary. With a background in prosthetics and animatronics for films like Star Wars Episode 3 and special effects for Prometheus, he brings together his talents in robotics and prosthetics and combines them with beats for the one-man mechanical-faced masterpiece. With over 20 releases to date, Anklepants’ voice and input are created from custom controllers and sensors within his (somewhat scary) custom-tailored suits. He combines electronic music with hardware, synths, guitars, animal growls, field recordings and custom instruments. The question “Why the dick face?” is understandably the most pointed question, but beyond this is a musician who fuels the experiences around him for a complex soundtrack. Also, his You Tube channel is filled with anecdotes from living on top of an African church, which tried to push him out of his former home in London.
Q: You’ve worked in prosthetics and robotics for films like Star Wars Episode 3. How did your trademark, the Facé of Reecard Farché, come about?
Anklepants: The Facé of Reecard Farché was in the beginning the direct fusion of prosthetics, animatronics, and 80s animatronic control (retro). Using midi input to output pwm to servo motors gave Reecard Farché the power to sequence servo motors from any conventional midi sequencer.
Q{ What kinds of reactions do you get both on and offstage?
Anklepants: As Reecard Farché enters the building, people are generally filled with a desire to touch, a desire for control. Watching Reecard Farché carry out his duties gives the viewer the feeling that their mind is being formatted, and they leave having no recollection of their life before they watched the Reecard Farché. It’s kind of a cleansing experience, and at the same time similar to the feeling when you have not taken library books back, and you realize this seven months after the due back date. Generally its "heterosexual" males that become the most sexually charged, they just want Reecard so bad that their little eyes light up and they forget what they were supposed to be doing. It’s really nice. The bodily gestures of Reecard Farché in the midst of extracting a linear input from the mic I take it is desirable for any social complexion. The suggestion is to try it out; it’s not tested on animals.
From: https://www.vice.com/en/article/rm5gyr/the-mechanical-face-of-anklepants