 Bit by Bit, 
        Cell by Cell
 
        Bit by Bit, 
        Cell by Cell
        Yoav Gal, 
Composer
        Yael Kanarek, 
Lyrics and Images
        Sarah Rivkin, 
Vocals
        Evann Siebens 
Video Art  
      
     
     
      from Innova: Remember the Atari and the dawning of computer game technology? Well, 
        it's back, not with a vengeance but as an intense musical tool for an 
        enigmatic Postmodern opera out of New York City known as Bit by Bit, Cell 
        by Cell.
      The fantastical production is a team effort of media artist Yael Kanarek, 
        composer Yoav Gal, and dance-filmmaker Evann Siebens, packaged as an enhanced 
        CD collectible art-object designed by Mushon Zer-Aviv. Together, it is 
        a World of Awe production, helped along by a residency at Harvestworks. 
        And what a production it is.
      The plot (in itself an award-winning narrative) revolves around a lone 
        traveler who searches for a lost treasure in a parallel world. Finding 
        a portal in front of 419 East 6th Street and performing a dance right 
        there in the street (see it when you place the CD in your computer), the 
        hooded traveler escapes toward Sunset/Sunrise.
      The rest is unclear but beautiful, striking in its mystery: Excerpts 
        from the traveler's journal are set to the processed voice of soprano 
        Sarah Rivkin combined with the sounds of the lost world/old-school of 
        the Atari 800XL to convey the traveler's different moods, and create the 
        musical topography of World of Awe. 
      In a collection of letters to a distant lover (how operatic!) the traveler 
        signs them: "Yours forever, your sunset/sunrise forever yours, yours forever 
        yours." What happened? Answers, please, on a postcard...
     
     
      
      
Reviews
      Dream Magazine, 
      
      Like clusters of angels caught in various beams of light and held suspended 
      as their songs bleed through to our world. Actually this is a “postmodern 
      opera”, and features a performance of the opening track Portal as a Quicktime 
      movie in addition to the eleven songs. The musical backing and interludes 
      are all performed on an Atari 800XL. Soprano Sarah Rivkin’s voice is sometimes 
      layered into choirs of operatic/angelic voices. The Atari 800XL sections 
      have a thick antiquated/timeless quality, sometimes almost sounding like 
      a seriously deranged harpsichord. Quite lovely, listenable, and beautifully 
      packaged as well. 
      
by George Parsons 
       http://johnsonsrambler.wordpress.com/tag/reviews/ 
        
        Taking his cue from the hyperlinked, hyperreal digital landscapes of Yael 
        Kanarek’s WorldofAwe, Yoav Gal constructs 11 sonic typographies from an 
        old Atari 800XL, the voice of soprano Sarah Rivkins, and some alert sounds 
        borrowed from Apple. Repeating layers of samples are deposited on top 
        of one another until out of the cumulative weight are forced verdant valleys 
        and hard mountain ranges. The texture is at once enveloping water and 
        resistant granite. Intended originally for choreography – a sample video 
        is included on this enhanced CD – it is effective, music of physical effect 
        demanding a physical response. Gal’s compositional technique borrows much 
        from medieval polyphony: vocal samples stretched inside the Atari across 
        an inhuman tessitura create possibilities for refined mensural canons, 
        as well as a curious human-nonhuman chorus effect that can be melody, 
        accompaniment and sonic environment all at once. It is in this world that 
        the Traveller of WoA finds herself in pursuit of an elusive treasure. 
        Her journal narrates her experiences in this mysterious world; she also 
        uses it to set down letters to an anonymous and absent lover. WoA is set 
        in a hinterland that is both sunset and sunrise; and this is also how 
        she comes to sign the letters. It soon becomes apparent that dusk/dawn 
        is not the only duality that has been obliterated, as voice becomes sound, 
        organic becomes digital, Traveller becomes landscape. It is no longer 
        clear in this hexadecimal hallucination who these letters are from, or 
        who they are to. In the end, as the Traveller gives herself up, bit by 
        bit, cell by cell, to the rapture of digital oblivion, she perhaps discovers 
        that after all, she is also the treasure she has been searching for. It’s 
        fairly high-concept stuff – and you can include the low-tech approach 
        in that equation – but perfectly accessible and often quite beautiful 
        for it. 
        by Tim Rutherford-Johnson 
       STARTLING 
        MONIKER 
        Yoav Gal & Yael Kanarek — “Bit by Bit, Cell by Cell” 
        — A gorgeous work for Atari 800XL and soprano voice, this multimedia 
        disc on Innova Recordings really threw me for a loop. There are many 
        layers of meaning here, to the point that its ultimately unclear what’s 
        happened. Nevertheless, this release really pushed the envelope of how 
        much can be asked of the listener. I’m more than certain I’ll be using 
        a large portion of 2007 to continue figuring this album out. 
        –DaveX 
       La Folia
        Gal and Kanarek contrive an unsettling universe. Kanarek’s cryptic story 
        unfolds through a traveler’s postcards. Gal’s music extends Rivkin’s serenely 
        innocent soprano with campy processing and gushy electronics, his only 
        tool being an ancient Atari 800XL. Taken together, the audio, the booklet, 
        the enhanced CD’s video and the online site (http://www.worldofawe.net/), 
        Gal and Kanarek lay out a puzzling mystery in a parallel universe utterly 
        askew. The short track “Grid” ranks high amidst techno-minimalist chatter, 
        à la Reich and Lentz. Gal’s artfully constructed retro score achieves 
        more than the work of many who compose with up-to-date gear. 
        by Grant C. Covell