Jump in the Wayback Machine, Sherman, and let’s go back
to the heyday of analogue electronic music! Set the controls—no,
not for the heart of the sun, Sherman—for Computerchemist’s
well-programmed and enjoyably nostalgic CD, Atmospheric.
Invoking Berlin School inspiration and a love of Tangerine
Dream, Computerchemist (aka Dave Pearson) fires off a batch
of beat-and-melody driven joyrides that are a pleasure to
listen to, especially if you’re a fan of old-school
electronica. (Like me.) There’s nothing overly original
here—many pieces will likely dredge up thoughts of other
music you’ve heard—but it’s solid. That’s
the best compliment I can offer: it’s solid. There’s
no immediate “wow” factor, but there’s nothing
making me want to shut the CD off, either. The opener, “Marshfire,”
morphs from a tangle of interwoven skeins of electronic murmurings
into a smooth, almost loungey space-ride. “Domino’s
Lament” and “Flight of ‘F’”
bounce along on rocking sequencer lines and the steady-if-predictable
beat of synthesized drums. All along the way Atmospheric
embraces 70s-style electro-bombast and snippets of prog-rock
keyboard grandioso, but it’s never so over the top as
to bring anything but a nod and a smile. This is how it was,
and it wasn’t all that bad! Well worth a listen, and
a nice addition to any mix.
In
just two albums, Slow Dancing Society (aka Drew Sullivan)
has been placed squarely in my sights as an artist to not
only watch, but to eagerly await new music from. SDS' debut
CD, The Sound of Lights When Dim, first introduced
me to Sullivan's artful blend of echoing, lonely guitar and
crisp, intriguing electronics. On its enjoyable sequel, The
Slow and Steady Winter, Sullivan revives that feel and
expands his work to encompass even more processed, flowing
guitar textures. In fact, it’s interesting to hear how
Sullivan evolves the guitar-ness of his guitar work up from
the ambient depths on Winter. In the first track,
the shimmering and watery “The Early Stages of Decline,”
the guitar is all effect, a processed, wavering echo of sound
drifting hypnotically from ear to ear. It stays low and incognito
in the shadowy snarl of “Depths of December,”
where a bass-drone rumble mingles with garbled phantom voices.
With the title track the guitar begins to emerge to pepper
the track with a slash and jangle of distorted chords over
Sullivan’s signature washes. (I must confess here that
the phone-ringing sound in the background on this sets my
teeth just a little on edge...) The guitar at last becomes
a guitar as Sullivan's
elegant, slow-handed playing comes to the front in the shuffling
melancholy of “The Time We’ve Spent,” with
picked notes redolent of Mark Knopfler. On “Romantica”
the guitar shares even billing with glitch-based percussion
straight from "A Lonesome Sentiment" on Lights,
familiar SDS territory. It's a nice touch. The garage-blues
overtones of “The Rest of Our Lives” makes it
a highlight of the disc. Slow, slow chords that wobble with
tremolo, a lazy snare echoing into yesterday and a casual
bassline wander along like the last-call song at a smoky four
a.m. bar. The disc closes and pulls it all together with the
lyrical “February Sun,” where a very simple melody,
one that may have been plucked from an old 50s doo-wop ballad,
repeats around and through sudden, dense guitar washes and
floating chords, all anchored around a lazy beat. Toward the
end Sullivan cuts loose, wailing for all the world to hear
with high, crying notes before letting that old-time melody
take over and fade to a reflective quietness. While I'm not
as totally blown away by Winter as I was by Lights,
it's still an astounding piece of work that again cements
Slow Dancing Society's place--in my ears, at least--as an
artist whose next disc I'll always be looking forward to hearing.
Bravo, Drew.
Slow-moving and lovely, The Witch’s Garden,
the debut CD from Abandoned Toys (aka Brett Branning) comes
on at first like a New Age piano album and then quietly sprouts
tendrils of intriguing electronic treatments to weave depth,
texture and color into each piece. As it moves forward, Garden
easily blends a western classical feel (to quote the composer)
with unobtrusive electronic atmospheres and vocals in pieces
that drip with drama and gothic airs. Branning’s piano
style is clearly the star here, gentle, sophisticated playing
that forms a bed for the other elements to rest easily upon.
Truth be told, I have to imagine that a CD of Branning’s
solo piano ruminations would be a worthwhile listen as well.
But there’s more here—mournful strings and distant
percussion, whispers of sound at the periphery of hearing,
a sense of grim secrets long held close, all administered
by a tender compositional hand. The Witch’s Garden
is a very good low-volume listen, preferably under dim lighting
and with a glass of blood-red wine close at hand, but also
has enough going on in the background to make it doubly interesting
in headphones.
Liquid
Mind, Relax—A Liquid Mind Experience
Recording as Liquid Mind, Chuck Wild has been producing softly
undulating, soporific electronic music aimed at the meditation-and-healing
crowd since the early 90s. In this collection, Wild pulls
together from previous releases a number of beautiful, slow
and graceful pieces that ease the breathing, calm the mind
and refresh the body. Wild calls his works “musical
healthcare,” and not without good reason. A listen to
this CD, whether with the immediacy and presence of headphones
or just allowing it to fill a space quietly with low-volume
repeat play, brings a very distinct calm and sense of oneness
with the self. Long, deep-breath synth washes drift one over
the other, unhurriedly and concerned only with your relaxation.
One piece melts into the next, as they should, for a truly
immersive journey. I must confess that prior to receiving
this CD my only exposure to Liquid Mind was what I heard in
the mix on the ambient/electronic digital cable radio channel—but
even at that, it caught my ear and attention, so that I was
very happy to get this CD to review. And now I need to experience
more of the sedative, soft-crafted worlds of Liquid Mind.
For those in need of very calming music or as an introduction
into electronic/ambient music this Liquid Mind sampler would
be a very wise choice.
A
strong sense of narrative drama underlies every track on Parallel
Worlds’ superb new CD, Obsessive Surrealism.
Lushly dark, beat-driven and meticulously constructed, Surrealism
makes great use of frontman Bakis Sirros’ adoration
for and mastery of analogue systems. Classic-feel electronic
twiddle and sequencer runs blend smoothly with breathy synth
pad textures as Sirros leads the listener through his shadowy
musical explorations. “Beneath Fear” opens the
disc with a gentle piano riff playing in the middle of an
ever-darkening atmosphere. Electro-critters chirp in the undergrowth
and a phantom chorus sings like a hymnal. “Different
Pathways” drips with something both sinister and urgent,
a feel that carries into the potent, if short, “Empty
Human Cells.” The pace slows for “Increasing Complexity,”
where glitch-and-blip notes arc and bounce over a simple melody.
Two short pieces follow (“Interlude” being the
better of the two), providing something of a aural palate
cleanser before Sirros hits his stride with the 10-minute
“Reflective,” where a sequenced bass line stalks
like a masked killer on a rain-slicked street. Sirros cites
the soundtracks of John Carpenter movies as an influence,
and the cinematic tint to Surrealism is obvious—as I
have said too many times before, these pieces are bits of
background music in search of their scenes. And it’s
never more obvious than in “Reflective.” “Mindmists”
grabs hold of the listener with heavy-handed piano chords
over weeping strings before spreading out to a lighter, more
melodic feel. “Pale Yellow Sky” offers more glitch-beat
goodness (again tinged with the ominous). “Distracted”
is an oddly danceable bit of funk, with its twangy analogue
bassline and body-moving backbeat. The disc ends with “Crying
Spells,” a piece accented with slightly too bombastic
percussion. Other reviewers have noted appreciatively that
Sirros keeps his tracks fairly short. I concur. It allows
each piece to be a scene unto itself, an enjoyable-if-melancholy
story told wholly and never overdone. Overall, Obsessive
Surrealism is an enjoyable blend of old and new, melody
and melancholy, and dark and light and it’s worth many
a listen.
Go
into Byron Metcalf’s A Warning from the Elders
prepared to treat it as the ceremony/journey it truly is.
Metcalf’s prayer to the earth, powered by shamanic drumming,
didgeridoo, and overtone singing, carries the feel of the
sacred from its opening moments. “Facing the Truth”
is a breath-based devotion with the vocals and didge easing
in over a rise-and-fall drone. Percussion moves in, shakers
and drums, and the journey begins in earnest. A moment’s
pause, and then deep overtone singing ushers in the title
track. Ominous yet warm, the resonance of the voices opens
channels in your head and heart. A gong crashes intermittently
and a driving beat slides under and in, the drums becoming
stronger and more insistent. This is music to dance around
the fire by, the force that opens the door between worlds.
About halfway in, the track strips down to layer upon layer
of nothing but drums for a few minutes—always a Metcalf
highlight—and it’s a sound to purely lose yourself
in. The power continues in “Heart Warriors,” which
rides primarily on a breathy didge drone and the frame and
hand drums, an effective tribal minimalism. Then the ritual
soars into the thunderous energy of “Fire Passage,”
15 minutes of core-shaking drumming, the high point of the
disc and the focal point of the journey. This is the sound
of your soul empowered, your spirit awakened, alert and energized.
And then Metcalf brings the listener downward into the solemnly
beautiful peace of “Earth Om—Sacred Resonance,”
where the breath cleanses, refreshes and refocuses. It provides
time to reflect as body and soul rejoin. It is the reverent
end-point to a journey both far and deep. Set aside an hour.
Get somewhere dark and quiet. Focus on the music and your
breathing. Release. See where Warning takes you.
It’s guaranteed to be an amazing trip. For its beauty
and potency, A Warning from the Elders is a Hypnagogue
Highly Recommended CD.
Austere:
Remittance, Rorrim and Faded (with
Stephen Phillips)
I
have tried several times now to put into words why you, as
an ambient/electronic music listener, should take the time
to discover the duo called Austere—if you haven't already.
Despite all the reviewer-ly verbiage at my theoretical disposal,
after repeated, blissful listens to Remittance, Rorrim
and Faded, the best I can offer is this: Just listen.
Live the music. Then you'll understand. Austere consistently
put out gorgeous, drone-based experimental landscapes crafted
around a particular theme which often seems like a challenge
they've set for themselves--using only guitars to create the
warm-wash textures of Remittance, for example, or
crafting compositions that mirror themselves musically on
Rorrim. But while the intriguing intent of an Austere
CD is something to be considered when listening, it's the
depth, beauty and mastery of the work that overrides it all.
These are sounds to immerse and disappear into; slow-crafted,
constantly re-evolving soundworlds that you live within, comfortably
locked into a dreamstate attentiveness, places you almost
hate to return from and look forward to revisiting. And when
you combine all that with the glacial-drift drone-mastery
of the Dark Duck Stephen Phillips himself as he adds his talented
hand to the duo's Faded disc...I have to say again.
Just listen. Live an Austere CD. Now. Then you'll understand.
And like me, you'll be completely captivated--and happily
so.
The
debut CD from the duo Tkatka (PJ Norman and Carlsson) rolls
in on chunky beats that shoulder their way through an array
of electronic goodies and catchy melodies to land firmly in
a spot halfway between music for the commercial for the world’s
coolest sportscar and the soundtrack to a Blade Runner-esque
sci-fi movie. It’s tweaked EDM riding on lounge-style
backbeats and overall it’s a pretty fine ride. Push
past the clunky opener, “LazerLab” to get to the
meatier “E.L.D.A.C.” where the feel of a fuzz
guitar escorts you through a spy-flick groove. “Scorn
Proof Weather” courses through its four minutes with
a lightly dramatic feel—perhaps the backdrop to a driving
scene in that sci-fi flick—propelled on a catchy sequencer
line. The highlight of the disk comes in the airy “(It’s
Just A) Molecule” with its feel-good bounce and a melody
that rolls along like a narrative. “Bedroom Dust”
starts slow but soon becomes more welcome as it burrows its
way into your need to move. It’s another soundtrack-worthy
cut. “Sundae Haze” lopes through with blissed-out
ease and psychedelic intentions, aided by a nicely warbling
guitar in the background. “Globyl,” the 10-minute
closer, slides in under the mental radar and starts to massage
the brain with its odd collection of subtle beats, washes
of electro-noise, chopped and diced editing (which sometimes
grates on the nerves just a bit) and distant vocal samples.
The best word for it is “interesting.” Weak tracks
here are few and thankful a bit far between. There’s
a good diversity of sound across this disk and the elements
all play together nicely. It’s a very good CD to have
as part of a mix as it brings a nice blend of electronic funk
and downtempo pleasure.
As
you can see at the top of the page, I did something
I've been meaning to for a while. I changed the header.
I always liked the old one, but it's been five years
or so now, and it had that subhead about "news
and reviews." I did intend, at one point, to have
an area on the site where I could post news about upcoming
discs, live events, etc. But it never panned out. Knowing
me as I do, it was probably just too much damn work.
But I've been meaning to freshen things up a bit, so
there it is.
And
while it's only a logo, I'm hoping that over the course
of the year it will lead me to refine what and how I
do things here. I will be the first to admit that getting
reviews posted has a tendency to slide down my priority
list in life--which is a bad thing. I don't enjoy doing
guilt-fired reviews. It's time to recommit myself to
being as regular as possible with reviews. Like all
good New Years' resolutions, this one might hang around
for a month or so--or maybe I can make it stick and
get reviews done within a week or two of the discs landing
on my doorstep. It's not as if I'm not listening to
them.
New
year, new logo, new outlook? Remains to be seen.As we
launch into 2008, the best I can offer is that I'll
certainly try.