If I remember correctly, Derrick May (one of the fathers of electronic disco music) said he found the repetitive sound of the machines in the factories where he worked (Detroit) much more interesting than the complex jazz music he inherited from his parents. Something similar happens to me with painting: I am often more interested in simple, everyday elements than in the compositions of the great masters, without minimizing their importance. Elements such as peeling walls, half-erased street signs, walls with uneven layers of paint, floors with appealing patterns, pebbles, reflections of paint on cars, unfinished artworks, advertising panels that generate interesting collages, as well as many other things.
Apart from this relationship, which perhaps has more to do with sound abstraction and its similarity to my visual or plastic research, there are links between these media that are more obvious and do not require such conceptualization. For example, a key aspect is that I usually work with music and this has to be clearly represented in my work. Another equally important aspect, or perhaps more so, is that my father—the person who opened the world of sensitivity and appreciation to me—was a good pianist and music theorist.
From an early age I received a great deal of information, references, and guidelines that I struggled with endlessly, but eventually grew up with. Bach was an institution at home, it was compulsory to listen to him, as well as the great free jazz musicians revered in our environment, like Archie Shepp, Ornette Coleman… I spent part of the early years of my life in a bar run by my father called Be-Bop, where wonderful jam sessions were held, and after a certain hour the dishes would start flying and crashing everywhere.
Musically, however, my father was never a nostalgic or closed-minded person. On the contrary, he was completely in favor of the evolution of sound to new frontiers, hence his involvement and interest in electroacoustic music and the search for abstract sound. I have to thank him for that drive and thirst for research that he was able to convey to me. Indeed, the texts and compositions of Stockhausen, Xenakis, Ligetti, Boulez, Cage etc., that talked about sound, were the most influential for me. Likewise, I can relate best with people who work with sound: my friend Ignasi (Kip Clerk), my father, Elías…