Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Electroacoustic. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Electroacoustic. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 5 de abril de 2011

Tape ::: Revelationes



















Tape ::: Revelationes
Genre : Electroacoustic, Ambient

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Listen

01 - Dust and Light
02 - Companions
03 - Hotels
04 - Byhalia
05 - In Valleys
06 - The Wild Palms
07 - Gone Gone

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Since 2008's gorgeous 'Luminarium', Swedish troupe Tape have been holed up in their Summa studio in Stockholm, studiously busying themselves hand-crafting a follow up. And what a sequel it is; 'Revelationes' is everything you would hope for from the band and more, finding the well-worn sound of brothers Andreas and Johan Berthling pushing into darker, more downtrodden territory. The overwhelming prettiness of Tape's back catalogue has been pushed aside; echoes of Slint's genre-defining 'Spiderland' haunt the opening notes of 'Dust and Light', but when the signature organs and electronics finally make an appearance it is a markedly more subtle and melancholy affair than we might have expected from the band. 'Revelationes' is somehow deeply sad and incredibly affecting, but is a record flecked with hope - the curiously uplifting vibraphones, wavering theramin and jazz-tinged drums offering an occasional and much needed counterpoint to the mood. The band have refined their craft over an enviable selection of full-lengths, and 'Revelationes', which clocks in at an economical thirty-two minutes, is easily their most focused to date. No song drags or outstays its welcome, instead their pieces are pointed and enjoyable, bringing to mind Tortoise at their very best.

lunes, 13 de diciembre de 2010

Upward arrows ::: Upward arrows

















Upward arrows ::: Upward arrows
Genre : Electroacoustic, Ambient

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Listen

01 - ^ - 2010
02 - ^^ - 2010
03 - ^^^ - 2010
04 - ^^^^ - 2010
05 - ^^^^^ - 2010
06 - ^^^^^^ - 2010
07 - ^^^^^^^ - 2010
08 - ^^^^^^^^ - 2010
09 - ^^^^^^^^^ - 2010
10 - ^^^^^^^^^^ - 2010


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Part Timer's John McCaffrey unveils a new guise for the Under The Spire, delivering an album specifically with that label's agenda in mind. Even the project's name references Under The Spire: "the name Upward Arrows is an allusion to the thousands of church spires that pepper the world, all pointing upwards like arrows aimed at the sky" says McCaffrey. In musical terms McCaffrey has adapted his musical strategy to what he perceives as in-keeping with the Under The Spire sound, venturing into the border territories between the modern classical and ambient genres. Taking as his starting point unfinished pieces from his hard drive, field recordings and even sounds provided by William Ryan Fritch (a contributor to Asthmatic Kitty's Library Catalog Music Series) and the Fourplay String Quartet, McCaffrey takes a step in a new direction without totally abandoning the tone of his established oeuvre. You'll still hear snatches of the kind of fluttering, processed guitars you'd find on a Part Timer record, and a similarly warm, melodious atmosphere is conjured along the way, but Upward Arrows feels a little more ambitious, embracing hazy, Tim Hecker-like expanses of reverb and a kind of slow, stately orchestral feel that at times recalls Stars Of The Lid. Delightful stuff that's sure to please both Part Timer and UtS fans.

Part Timer ::: Real to Reel



















Part Timer ::: Real to Reel
Genre : Electroacoustic, Ambient, Experimental

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Listen

1. The Distance Between One (feat. Danielle McCaffrey)
2. Campsite Sundown
3. Unfound (feat. Heidi Elva and Aaron Martin)
4. A Long Inhalation
5. Suspended Belief
6. The Runner (feat. Heidi Elva and Aaron Martin)
7. Where We Used To Go (feat. Nicola Hodgkinson and Aaron Martin)
8. Interalia (feat. Aaron Martin)
9. In Your Hand
10. Untold, Unfold (feat. Danielle McCaffrey)
11. It’s A Storm
12. Never Meant To Be (feat. Heidi Elva and Aaron Martin)
13. Taken Along Quietly



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Brand new album of folk-tinged electronic love songs featuring contributions from Nicola Hodgkinson, aka Empress, Aaron Martin and Heidi Elva on vocals and harp* Starting out as a member of sorely missed Northern duo Clickits, John McCaffrey has redefined himself over the last few years as a prime purveyor of beautiful, folk-tinged electronic love songs. Yes, songs, I said it – these three-to-four minute slices of bliss are far from the directionless vignettes you might expect from an ‘electronic musician’, they have a beginning, middle, end and even choruses. Who’d have thought? The impeccable production McCaffrey has exhibited throughout his career is utilized here maybe better than ever before. Nicola Hodgkinson (aka Empress) and John’s wife Danielle each contribute vocals which wisp graciously over McCaffrey’s stuttering percussion and staccato string plucks like billows of smoke from a French cigarette. It is Empress who I might say is the best reference point here, it’s been a while since we've heard her bleak tones on record and they're matched beautifully by McCaffrey's productions -coming across as both painfully sad and delicately optimistic. Let Part Timer wrap you up in dusty ¼” tape and sink into a deep blissful state...

domingo, 28 de noviembre de 2010

Pospulenn - Sun People Sleepwalker



















Pospulenn - Sun People Sleepwalker
Genre : Ambient, Electronic,Electroacoustic,

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Listen

A1
Farther Twig And Grasshopper Song

A2
Feather Gem Drift

A3
Luno's Outer Scale

A4
Rainbowed For A Fish In The Wind

A5
Flown/Flewn

A6
This Is How I Sing To The Moment

A7
Frozen Beach

B1
Mint Mountain

B2
Silver Lake

B3
Lazy Oasis

B4
Frozen Beach Pt. 2

B5
Porcelain Solar Halo (Live 10/07)

B6
Safe In The Cedar Alcove (Live 10/07)

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Once again, the fine folks at Housecraft have put out a release that is unnecessarily limited. Each release on the label is unique to one another, in that they all bring the listener into a new environment completely of their own. Artists like Xiphiidae, Peat Raamur, and Samsara Vista all have an eerie yet enveloping feel in their sound. Pospulenn's Sun People Sleepwalker is of a completely different breed.

Pospulenn was an alias of Kane Pour (of Tricorn & Queue and Hundreds) that was mainly guitar-based in its sound. Sun People Sleepwalker is a compilation of Kane Pour's recordings under the Pospulenn name, which total up to over an hour in length. This release, I would say, is the best work I have ever heard from Kane Pour as of yet. In all 13 tracks, melodies are layered over one another as the songs build, and each one hits every single note in its key. In the midst of the guitars, field recordings faintly add density. This combination creates a dream-like feeling that seems completely new to me. During their slow builds, the songs begin to sound so lush that they form a drone that is absolute ecstasy. For its entire 69 minutes, Sun People Sleepwalker never loses its momentum.

I would highly recommend seeking this out, though unfortunately due to its limited amount of 50 copies, I doubt many distributors still have this tape in stock. Due to this, I hope Sun People Sleepwalker receives a proper vinyl release someday. However, if this can be found at the right price, grab it immediately... it's a gem.

viernes, 26 de noviembre de 2010

Oathless - Standing Where Our Paths Shall Meet



















Oathless - Standing Where Our Paths Shall Meet
Genre : Ambient, Electroacoustic, Electronic

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Listen

1. Under Porcelain Wings
2. Cascading Skies
3. A Single Rose
4. Winter (A Prelude)
5. White Horizons
6. Tigerlily
7. Winter Into Autumn
8. Ghost Providence

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When Oathless was initially conceived as an acoustic folk effort in late 2006 by Simon Housley, the current sound associated with the project that has constantly evolved in the past four years would have been hard to imagine with the raw and simplistic sound that once existed. “Standing Where Our Paths Shall Meet” is an ambient release of much more sophistication and quality than the original three-track demo released in 2007. From the moment the first resonating ambient sounds of 'Under Porcelain Wings' reach your ears, there is a much darker sound than heard in previous releases. Following on from 'Zephyr' (the last release by Oathless), the sound of the album focuses on the upcoming cold of autumn and winter, embodied in particular in the aforementioned opening track and 'Tigerlily'. What has become a theme of more recent releases is still present, the slow, reverb-drenched strings that ooze. Heavily processed piano also underlies a number of tracks, none more so than the album's closer 'Ghost Providence', which ends the album in a very minimalist style to evoke a feeling of isolation and cold as winter approaches. Through subtle melodies and slow, reverberated chord changes, Standing Where Our Paths Shall Meet is an album that the listener can either choose to sit down and relax to use as a soundtrack for autumn and winter, or to listen to in more depth and to find more meaning in the sound after each listen, maybe attributing and associating their own experiences to the sound encapsulating them.

jueves, 14 de octubre de 2010

Miko ::: Chandalier



















Miko ::: Chandalier
Genre : Electroacoustic, Folk

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Buy it!

01. Sea House [3:30]
02. New Town [3:19]
03. Kikoeru [3:26]
04. Keshiki [3:22]
05. Cherries [3:34]
06. America [2:17]
07. Humming [3:17]
08. Ashitaga Hare Demo [3:50]

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Miko (Rie Mitsutake) composes her songs in shades of light and dark. Based on the outskirts of Tokyo, she seeks out vibrant harmony and shimmering rhythms that coalesce to create micro-universes in song-form.

On her sophomore album Chandelier, Miko creates a luminescent collection of songs that expand the unique and personal sound she explored on her debut album (issued by Plop). Working with organic instrumentation, led by voice, harmonic piano and restrained guitar lines, Miko utilises other less conventional elements (field recordings, unconventional percussion and more) to transform her songs from the everyday into something imaginary and evocative.

Choosing the name ‘Chandelier’ both for its sound when said and its association with light, Miko’s new album sees her inhabit an entirely warm and atmospheric song space. Its shapes and instruments bring to mind a new kind of folk music – in which the sounds of the spaces that fill her day connect with and influence the songs she writes. This is a profoundly enticing and personal space in which she is working and one that is illuminated by Miko’s imagined song worlds.

jueves, 15 de octubre de 2009

Fjordne – The Setting Sun



















Fjordne – The Setting Sun
Genre : Ambient, Clásica, Electroacoustic
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Listen

1 Collide 4:57
2 A Woman, A Girl 6:35
3 Trees See All 9:09
4 After You 5:37
5 Torn Out 6:47
6 Vivid Memories 4:38
7 Will You… 4:17
8 Rustle Of Leaves (After Sunset) 6:53
9 Autumn; Grace 6:20
10 Last Sun

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Shifting, reversed sounds of serene and simple piano melodies, fused with light as summer breeze female vocals, field recordings of forest walks and nature scenes with chirping birds amidst another cacophony of tweeting beeps and clicks are some of the first impressions after listening to the beginning of Fjordne’s new album on Singaporean label and art tank, Kitchen., curated by Ricks Angalongside photographer April Lee, who many will recognise as the duo behind aspidistrafly who we reviewed in connection with the inauguration of this lovely label. And the album comes in an amazing hard-cover sleeve with recycled, coarse paper (ed. always love the smell of this paper!) folded in accordion-style with several quadratic photos of the aforementioned Lee capturing moments of sunsets and domestic still life, vintage clocks and old shoes, tulips and nature viewed from city scenes.Fjordne may not be a name many are well-versed with, but nonetheless a growing prominent figure of Japanese electronic music, and behind this naturesque moniker, we find the Tokyo-based solo artist, Fujimoto Shunichiro who now treats us to his fourth album, with prior releases on Ryoondo Tea, Dynamophone and U-Cover. And there is something so harmonious and heartfelt over Fjordne’s music, that it brings out the childlike and curious in the listener. At once, treated to the lush and personal soundscapes of Fjordne on a leisurely saunter throughout nature and everyday life, the listener could feel transported into a Japanese anime and display the same show of fascination as all the little children when faced with those marvellous inventions of, say, Hayao Miyazaki (directory of Ponyo on the Cliff, Howl’s Moving Castle, etc.). Or take for instance the ingenious mind and ideas of Haruki Murakami; Fjordne’s music becomes like a soundtrack – much like I cited the works of label-colleagues aspidistrafly on their first release. There is something overtly Japanese at work, the music sounds nothing like what I am used to, whether it stems from an inherently child-like view on the compositional process or cultural differences, one can only feel grateful for discovering such albums at times.The music of Fjordne also shows Fujimoto has matured with the releases he has on his repertoire now, the vivid sound artistry is sprinkled with broken jazz fragments and rolling piano and guitar chords in post-classical themes appearing like broken and sprinkled inspirations of say, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Goldmund, Library Tapes and Yasushi Yoshida and guitar heaven of the likes conjured by Helios. Attention-wise, I felt glued to the speakers from the onset of the first track, “Collide”, and over the course of ten songs Fjordne invited me along to see nature from his perspective, assisted by the gentle and delightfully elegant photography of April Lee. “Last Sun” then comes in conclusion to end this lovely adventure to the most tranquil of setting suns and though it is the end of Fjordne’s fourth album, his musicianship is far from over and we warmly recommend this release as Kitchen. deliver with their second release.soundscaping

miércoles, 14 de octubre de 2009

Teruyuki Nobuchika – Morceau



















Teruyuki Nobuchika – Morceau
Genre : Ambient, Clásica, Electroacoustic
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Listen

01. pola
02. tainy fairy
03. in the park
04. tranquille
05. half moon
06. piano bit
07. deauville
08. p2d
09. hypnotique
10. bagatelle no.1
11. reposer
12. nocturne

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Teruyuki Nobuchika is a musician, composer and producer, based in tokyo. He composes mainly the soundtrack of the TV drama and the movie.

miércoles, 7 de octubre de 2009

A Dancing Beggar - What We Left Behind


















A Dancing Beggar - What We Left Behind
Genre : Shoegaze, Post Rock, Electroacoustic
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Listen

1.Tuesday Rollers and Strollers
2.Major Spillage
3.All The Boogies In The World
4.Monday Boogies Forward Forever

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A Dancing Beggar is the musical project of 21-year-old musician, James Simmons. Having played a mixture of drums and guitar in previous bands, a solo project seemed the next step in achieving other creative goals. Using just a laptop, a couple of guitars and a cheap microphone, everything is written, recorded, mixed and produced in his bedroom.

Influenced by seminal post-rock artists like Maps, Sigur Ros, Amusement Parks On Fire, and Epic45, A Dancing Beggar began in summer 2007. After the purchase of some recording equipment a number of songs were written, recorded and distributed across MySpace. It wasn’t until early 2008 that a collection of songs seemed to link together for a possible release. These were recorded and subsequently turned into the 5 track EP ‘How They Grow’ which has been described by The Stool Pigeon as a ‘post rock treat’. In late 2008 the entire EP was re-mixed, and on the 23rd February 2009 Grand Independent released ‘How They Grow’, as a 6 track EP on iTunes. ‘How They Grow’ takes elements of post-rock and shoegaze and has been compared to the sounds of Mogwai, Explosions in the Sky, Ulrich Schnauss and July Skies.

As of March 2009, work had begun on new songs for A Dancing Beggar’s eagerly anticipated full-length album, ‘What We Left Behind’. These songs are more acoustic based, less distorted and euphoric with emphasis on a more organic sound. Composed and mixed by James, all eleven tracks were recorded in James’ bedroom again using an acoustic and electric guitar, microphone and laptop, between November 2008 and June 2009. This time incorporating field recordings by artists Peter Caeldries, Adam Danz and Cynthia Lawson, samples of which can be heard on ‘Our Distant Memories’, ‘Skinny Trees’ and ‘Branches and Nettles’. Notably an extract of ‘Day 16 - Recall Your Favorite Childhood Memory’ by Cynthia Lawson, a story about how she nearly jumped into a swimming pool with no water in it when she was very young. Such samples only compliment the ethereal sounds of ‘What We Left Behind’, marking a turning point in the maturity of A Dancing Beggar’s music which in most parts navigates around the concept of nostalgia.

viernes, 31 de julio de 2009

Sleeping Me – Lamenter




















Sleeping Me – Lamenter
Genre : Electroacoustic, Ambient, Experimental
Listen

1. Bleeding Riverbed
2. Kinski for Halloween
3. Norther Pacific
4. Redeemer
5. The Magnanimous Security Guard

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jueves, 30 de julio de 2009

A Broken Consort – Crow autumn part two














A Broken Consort – Crow autumn part two
Genre : Electroacoustic, Ambient, Experimental
Listen

1.Mountains Ash (11:44)
2.The River (13:39)
3.Beneath (4:21)

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Message to Bears – Departures


















Message to Bears – Departures

Genre : Electroacoustic, Ambient, Experimental
Listen

1.Running Through Woodland
2.Hidden Beneath
3.Pretend To Forget
4.Hope
5.Autumn
6.At The Top Of This Hill
7.November
8.Snowdonia
9.Find Our Way Home
10.Lost Birds

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jueves, 23 de julio de 2009

Robin Guthrie - Angel Falls EP




















Robin Guthrie - Angel Falls EP
Genre : Ambient, Electroacoustic
Myspace
Buy It!

1. Camera Lucida
2. Love Never Dies a Natural Death
3. Red Moon Rising
4. Delicate

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