Tag Archive for 'minimal'

Stars of the Lid - and Their Refinement of the Decline

Stars of the Lid - and Their Refinement of the DeclineThere was a time when I was deep into Ambient–thanks to an introduction to the genre via Future Sound of London, Aphex Twin, Thom Brennan, and Robert Rich–but had drifted away from the genre in the past years for one reason or another. Recently, I picked up Stars of the Lid on a complete lark, partly because of the positive word of mouth and partly because I was thirsty for something new and and Their Refinement of the Decline deserves the praise that it is receiving as well as more than quenched my thirst for new sounds while renewing my interest in Ambient.

Reviewing Ambient albums is a challenge. What do you focus on? Most of the work in the genre is slow building and often very abstract with tempos measured in minutes and key changes that occur almost imperceptibly.  Pieces are designed around textures and moods with the aim of conveying a particular state of mind. While most Ambient works are developed using purely electronic means, and Their Refinement of the Decline is built upon symphonic instrumentation there is the use of a brass section, soft strings, and even some choral fragments all of which lend it a warm human quality and is reminiscent of the more exotic leaning Temple Of The Invisible which made heavy use of human performed instruments.

Much of the album drifts by like a soundtrack for a non-existent film (”Apreludes (in C sharp major)” has every feeling of dropped into the middle of a planetarium show). It is lush and unobtrusive and is best listened to when your mind is calm and when you have two hours free to be gently carried from beginning to end. This is a perfect example of headphone music as the work envelopes you, softly wrapping threads of sound that caress and coax.  Throw it on your favorite player and take a walk outside, rain or shine, woods or scrap yard, it doesn’tt matter as the album will provide a theme for almost any environment.

You can sample some the album over at their Myspace page, including “Apreludes (in C sharp major)” which has an accompanying video.  Beautiful and highly recommend.

Joanna Newsom - Ys

Joanna Newsom - YsPossessing no discernible reference to the mythical city of the same name Newsom has dropped an album that is just as enigmatic and shrouded in mysticism. After reading so many glowing reviews I felt enticed to pick up Ys and see what lay within and having not heard her debut, The Milk-Eyed Mender, I was not entirely sure what I would encounter. While the album spans a scant five tracks each song is often a sprawling epic that is at once minimal and dense, gilded with metaphors, allegories, and allusions that will leave a listener fretting for sometime at each song like they were tiny knots.

The trouble I have is that I want to love this album as an album but I’m not. Some might take exception to Newsom’s delivery style, a sort of breathy twitter punctuated by squeaks, however I do not since it seems to fit the material so well. Ys is more of a literary experience, one that is best enjoyed as a performance like the work of Shakespeare or studied like The Divine Comedy or Beowulf. The music of the album is regulated to the background, it is akin to the soft strumming of minstrel to help set the mood or provide moments of dramatic flair to the tale. Newsom fleshes out her work with her harp and songs are occasionally padded with soft string arrangements but both are unobtrusive never really rising above the lyrics which leaves me wanting, particularly given the length of each song which range from a brief seven minutes to one that strains at seventeen.

As literature I love Ys. Newsom proves herself to be both a deft poet and a nimble storyteller, drawing characters that are compelling and breathing life into them as she relates their tales. Take for instance the improbably love story of a monkey and bear who attempt to run away to live out the remainder of their lives together.

but still;
they have got to pay the bills
hadn’t they?
that is what the monkey’d say

so, with the courage of a clown, or a cur
or a kite, jerking tight at its tether
in her dun-brown gown of fur
and her jerkin’ of swansdown and leather

Bear would sway on her hind legs;
the organ would grind dregs of song, for the pleasure
of the children, who’d shriek
throwing coins at her feet
then recoiling in terror

sing, dance, darling
c’mon, will you dance, my darling?
oh darling, there’s a place for us
can we go, before I turn to dust?
oh my darling, there’s a place for us

Ys is ambitious and a very worthwhile experience as it pushes the boundaries of what people might consider the conventional forms of Folk music. Yet it is an exhausting listen as it demands your attention: miss a bar or a phrase and you could be hopelessly lost in the story. Highly recommended but with that caveat.

Kobra Audio Labs - Sunshine, Shadows and Luck

Kobra Audio Labs - Sunshine, Shadows and LuckSunshine, Shadows and Luck is a snack sized album more akin to an EP but with more tracks but what it lacks in length it certainly makes up for in flavor. Mark Scanlan, the beat scientist behind Kobra Audio Labs, works out a series of tracks that possess a sort of dystopian, sci-fi funk. They can be often rubbery in sound but lurch about unexpectedly like the charmingly creaky “War All The Time” with its heavily chopped and spliced guitar line that stumbles through fields of lo-fi drums that stretch and snap or the psychedelic “Down To The Dozens” with its breathy flutes and vague steel drums floating in the background.

Parallels could be drawn between Kobra Audio Labs and DJ Shadow, Pete Samples, and DJ Spooky but Scanlan draws on a wider body of material than just the world of recombinant music. “In Opposition” sees him dipping a toe into a dirge like ballad that comes closer to the work of the psych-folk music found in the work of Guido Möbius and Bibio though in a more traditional manner. Brushing against Ambient soundscape is “We Have The Strength But We Don’t Have The Will” which floats on lazy synth pads and loping drum beats, a blissful head nodder that will have your eyelids dropping and a slow smile spreading across your face.

Overall, Sunshine, Shadows and Luck is worth grabbing; short but sweet. You can sample some free tracks at the Kobra Audio Labs website.

Ghislain Poirier - Pampa Pimp

REBONDIR EPPoirier is back and this time is slinging beats for himself under his own label, Rebondir Records and last week saw him release an EP with Pampa Pimp as the first single. It is classic Poirier with stripped down beats an a retro bump and grind feel to it sort of like Blade Runner meets the Ying Yang Twins. The song is built around a thumping tom-tom line with a percussive line providing a semblance of melody but the focus really is on hypnotic rhythms that are stark yet shuffle about. Worth a listen and I look forward to hearing the rest of the EP when I pick it up.

You can grab it over at his site or at XLR8R for the next week or so.

Weekend Listening…

After a rough Friday I decided to take it easy over the weekend and per usual was listening to my collection on random. However some artists and albums bubbled to the surface that pulled me in for a closer listen.

Kad - Societe
He’s been compared to both Manu Chao and Serge Gainsbourg and it holds up. Societe is a fun and sometimes campy, romp with a tropical splash of Brazilian Electronica to round things off.

Pitchfork - 2006 Pitchfork Music Festival Sampler
Twenty-Four tracks. Free. Hot. Get it. Now.

Banco De Gaia - Farewell Ferengistan
Eighties inspired Ethno-tronica with a heady political edge. Dreamy yet informed.

DJ Cheb I Sabbah - La Ghriba, La Kahena Remixed
Incredible followup to last years excellent La Kahena sees those tracks reformed into French-Algerian rap numbers, swirling and thrashing dance numbers, and trance inducing minimalist techno pieces.

Guido Möbius - Klisten
Glistening layers of guitars and other instruments makes for a wonderful companion to Bibio’s sublime Hand Cranked. Delightful music for heady summer evenings.

DaFluke - Bad Timing EP

DaFluke - Bad Timing EPDaFluke’s Bad Timing EP was a CC Hits find for me buried somewhere in between tracks 60 and 70 of one evening’s listening the track “New Strut” had me perk up from my state of lassitude with its soft bursts of static and distortion providing a rhythmic backdrop for the burbling synths that envelope your head in warm snugness. It was change from the hard rock and occasional folk ballad that had preceded it and it fit well with the mood of that lengthening evening.

Lucas Granito, the name behind DaFluke, crafts songs that are little pockets of comfort. Instead of challenging the listener or becoming deeply involved in a narrative arc he writes pieces that evoke a general sense of calm but have a higher level of energy than either Ambient or Chillout music. Building on waves of synth pads “Somewhere In Us” relies on low-fi drum programming to provide momentum propelling the listener along on waves of sound. In contrast, “Can’t Wake Up” possesses a greater sense of urgency approximating the Detroit Techno sound popularized by Derrick May and builds a feeling of suspense by punctuating the track with vocal samples that sound as if someone is just about to speak but hesitated. It is that abstraction that lends the release a sort of IDM feel though it is more organic in nature and less processed sounding in execution.

Released in May of last year, Bad Timing was a something that would have completely escaped me if it were not for services like CC Hits and judging by the quality of work that Granito presents here I am eager to hear more. The EP can be obtained for free either at Archipel or Internet Archive. Recommended.





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