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Bardo Todol—Music 4 Strings, Sintetizador, Agua, Una Flauta y Electrónika - Vol. 1

Coherent States, Oct. 2020

Bardo Todol—Music 4 Strings...

October 28, 2020

The two sides of Bardo Todol’s Music 4… are distinguished by the instrument which leads them. The basis of side A is a hypnotic and slowly-ululating synth drone (think Éliane Radigue’s ‘Kyema’). Side B is string-dominated, and consequently has a more fragile—but ominous—tone; as though its straining instruments are wound tight enough to implode on themselves. Bardo Todol unify both sides with their use of field recordings, employing a near-constant hiss of running water as the skeleton for their compositions.

Often the boundary between composed and natural elements is fuzzy and dissolute. The result is an enmeshing of landscapes; a collision of natural and unnatural sounds that feels like wandering into the Strugatsky brothers’ Zone. Sounds could as easily be the catcalling of birds as they could alien visitations. Rough-and-ready analogue sources like hurdy-gurdy, violin and flute are transformed beyond recognition through their own interplay, and some supplemental tape effects. It’s a hyper-real album—as tactile as it is preternatural.   

If constricted to a genre, Music 4… is best described as new-age, carrying the torch of composers like Tomita and David Toop. As such, its use of running water feels indebted to decades of tradition. Artists in this field have used water as Taoist shorthand for yonks; it emblemises growth, acceptance, and change, seeking that which is low, and moving with ease rather than force. Bardo Todol use it to create a curious juxtaposition. Instrumental drones hold you in stillness, but the flurrying soundscapes around them emphasise the passage of time.

Occasionally, Bardo Todol break their own spell. Late on side A, the sound of water disappears for a Boards of Canada-style looping melody. It’s a queasily effective moment; almost feeling like a violation or an ad-break. It’s like a spear of clarity has punctured the trance. Side B has a finger-picked, jazzy section which surfaces for scant minutes before being subsumed by the fog again. These moments are the most explicit example of what makes the album so captivating. When you glance at a forest, it looks harmonious and still—but all the while, plants and animals violently contest territory and fight for mates. Similarly, Music 4… is more compelling for its disharmony than anything else, as a multitude of unique voices jostle for supremacy. This album, like the landscape it explores, bubbles with violence, but is all the more beautiful for it.

Music 4 Strings, Sintetizador, Agua, Una Flauta y Electrónika - Vol. 1 is available for purchase and streaming here.

Words: Andrew O’Keefe

In Review Tags Ambient, New age
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Autechre—SIGN

Warp, Oct. 2020

Autechre—SIGN

October 19, 2020

With SIGN, Rochdale duo Autechre has de-invented itself. The album’s back-to-basics approach stands in contrast to the disruptive and demanding work Autechre have become known for. Their last studio release before this was the eight-hour NTS Sessions—a challenging listen even when leaving its length aside. This was followed by the simultaneous release of nineteen live albums which, to a casual listener, were largely indistinguishable. Autechre had become a stereotype which lives in the heads of electronic music’s detractors; impenetrable, cold, and faintly ludicrous.

For better or worse, SIGN is their most accessible work in a decade—perhaps ever. Long-term fans are likely to be divided. Those who saw 2001’s Confield (when it all went weird) as an artistic renaissance may think this a step back or a compromise. Those missing the warmth of Incunabula and Tri repetae may rejoice. Neither camp saw this album coming. A quasi-extension of NTS Sessions’ final couple of hours, SIGN reconfirms the duo’s strengths as soundscapers, as their focus moves away from glitch and back towards the inviting ambiences they cut their teeth in.

The compositional simplicity of SIGN has rustled the jimmies of a few Autechre fans. Perhaps mourning the band’s status as a pleb-filter, SIGN isn’t getting their usual rapturous reception. But in eulogising Autechre’s formal craziness, these fans are chewing everything but the meat of SIGN. Some of this music is the most no-strings beautiful of Autechre’s career—closing track ‘r cazt’ is among the greatest ambient tracks I’ve ever heard. Like thrash or prog listeners, emphasising formalism above all else, fans have been taught by twenty impenetrable years of Autechre’s music to close their hearts.

It’s a great shame—given the time of day, SIGN reveals itself as another essential work in a beguiling and near-unrivalled discography.

SIGN is available for purchase and streaming here.

Words: Andrew O’Keefe

 

In Review Tags Electronic, Ambient
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Joji—Nectar

88rising/12Tone, Sep. 2020

Joji—Nectar

September 25, 2020

The career renaissance of George Kusunoki Miller surprised everyone—none more than Miller himself. He cut his teeth in risqué youtube satire as “Filthy Frank”, a defiantly un-PC amalgam of the worst that humankind has to offer. Miller preached hateful rhetoric with such gusto that its absurdities were thrown into a revealing light. Something about the project transcended shock value or leftist critique—it seemed as though Miller was exorcising his own profane demons, confronting his audience with secret, forbidden, but ever-present ideas that they would otherwise self-censor.

For this reason, despite its extremity, there was a sincere vein running through Filthy Frank. Arguably, the project revealed more about Miller than his more recent hustle in neo-soul as Joji. Miller’s music was once his most closely-guarded secret—but the only thing scandalous about it was its expectation that we see him more as man than meme.

Nectar, Joji’s first album, relaxes into conformity. Its lyrics are emotionally raw—but calculated in their universality. An intentional distance is created between Joji and his listeners through muffly and subdued production (think ‘lo fi hip hop radio – beats to study / relax to’). No corners are too sharp. While this doesn’t obfuscate Joji’s intent or individuality, it does slightly deaden his music’s impact.

Exceptions include ‘Run’ and ‘Tick Tock’, tracks which add welcome variety to Nectar’s 18-song tracklist. ‘Run’, an unashamed power ballad, is perhaps the only song here which allows Joji to really cut loose as a singer. It’s frankly surprising he has such a voice in him—the breathy, bedroom-performer approach he takes elsewhere feels like it’s disguising a lack of ability. And ‘Tick Tock’ is quite bizarre; a fence-sitter between banger and ballad, it samples Nelly’s ‘Dilemma’ to ghostly—albeit comical—effect.

For the most part, Nectar’s songs are rather more timid. It feels like Joji and his musical peers find inspiration in Marvin Gaye’s revolutionarily and singular whispery timbre. Perhaps a more likely inspiration is Lana Del Rey. Either way, the gentle emotiveness of their voices suggests a mood rather than forcing it. But—and this should shock nobody—none of these vocalists has Gaye or Del Rey’s range, versatility, or character. The result is a kind of bedroom-soul; a melancholic and lonely genre too scared to walk the streets, instead looking at them through a closed window or a laptop screen. Soul once celebrated in the face of sadness and adversity—neo-soul cleans up after the celebration; it sounds like emptying ashtrays, crushing cans, rustling binbags on a hungover morning.

Perhaps this narcotic effect results from listening to Nectar straight through. The album’s length is likely a tactic to maximise Spotify streams—not the result of some unifying theme or album-wide concept. Nectar feels intended to be listened to piecemeal; one track at a time, or shuffled. That’s for sure how its demographic, raised on the ephemerality of streaming services, consume music. It therefore feels disingenuous to knock points off for the album’s fatiguing effect, even though that’s somewhat tied up in its manner of presentation.

Joji’s greatest strength seems to be a lack of vanity—he has welcomed a host of guest producers and vocal features, all of whom are used very well. Lil Yachty in particular is surprisingly well-deployed, taking to Joji’s sadboy aesthetic like a fish to water. There has been a suggestion that by bringing on so many personnel, Joji’s playing sideman to his collaborators—but Nectar’s tracks feel too consistent in both tone and quality for that to be true.

Nectar is a passable effort which frustratingly fails to take off. Flickers of talent burst through its runtime—but Joji doesn’t have the confidence to follow his best ideas yet. In future releases, more risks will hopefully be taken—perhaps Joji can channel some of the courage he used when dressing up in a pink morph suit and antagonising members of the public for pranks. That this album plays things safe will no doubt earn it the label ‘commercial’—but this is a rather meaningless and unhelpful term. The same tastemakers levelling this accusation probably praised Solange’s releases on Columbia Records. If anything, Nectar emblemises a rags-to-riches story. Very few had even heard of 88rising a few years back—now they’re huge. Joji has blurred the line between superstar and next-door neighbour more comprehensively than anyone before him. Whether that’s a good or a bad thing simply depends on your outlook.

Nectar can be purchased on all formats here.

Words: Andrew O’Keefe

In Review Tags Pop, Neo-soul, R&B
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Mint Field—Sentimiento Mundial

Felte Records, Sep. 2020

Mint Field—Sentimiento Mundial

September 16, 2020

The cover of Mint Field’s Sentimiento Mundial is unassuming; a camouflage of desaturated pastels mustering semi-coherent suggestions of shape. But the longer you look, the more it reveals a plumage of vibrancy and fine detail, a Klimt-like depiction of fog-swathed blossoms. The album itself works similarly, gathering like mist until it utterly engrosses you.

Sentimiento Mundial feels modest, ascribing a greater value to listeners’ experiences than displays of virtuosity. Vocalist Estrella del Sol performs stunningly in every song, but barely raises her voice above a whisper (channelling of the tender power of legendary vocalist Jarboe). Callum Brown’s drumming is tight as a whip and invisibly energetic; a heartbeat which has been assimilated into the other assorted gurglings of the body, but without which the album’s vitality would be lost. Sentimiento Mundial as a whole gestures towards krautrock—in groovy repetition, but also in understated, seemingly effortless precision. It’s the introvert’s version of the guitar solo; a performance in which not a foot is put wrong from start to finish.

Precision isn’t everything, though—and krautrock is a limiting comparison. Sentimiento Mundial is freakier and more lysergic than most music from that scene. If Mint Field have exhumed the bones of neu!, rather than slavishly piece their skeleton back together, they’ve made a pagan effigy and slathered it in flying ointment. The entire album is peppered with unassumingly bizarre touches. Opener ‘Cuida Tus Pasos’ has a shade of Jandek’s “first acoustic phase”; pitting its vocal and guitar melodies against each other for a tone of isolation, miasma and malaise. This easy dissonance can be heard throughout, and later cleaves ‘No Te Caigas’ into discrete halves. ‘Nuestro Sentido’ feels—impossibly—like an MTV Unplugged version of My Bloody Valentine’s Isn’t Anything.

Not only do Mint Field pull these excursions and experiments off, they preserve beauty and coherence through them. A great vocabulary serves both scientists and poets alike. The tools don’t dictate the job. Some musical experiments are like sitting through a linguistics lecture; Sentimiento Mundial is like reading Emily Dickinson.

Sentimiento Mundial is available for purchase and streaming here. Releasing 25th September.

Words: Andrew O’Keefe

In Review Tags Krautrock, Psychedelic rock, Shoegaze

Kelly Lee Owens—Inner Song

Smalltown Supersound, Aug. 2020

Kelly Lee Owens—Inner Song

September 1, 2020

Following “the hardest three years of [her] life”, Kelly Lee Owens delivers Inner Song, an album as cathartic to listen to as it must have been to write. Owens’ self-titled debut featured a layered and eclectic tapestry of instruments and production techniques. Here, those edges are whittled. An increased focus on lyricism is favoured, and Inner Song consequently comes off much more personal than its predecessor.  

There are upsides and downsides to Owens’ new methodology. In many cases, the album’s stripped-back sound is lean and focused—but it can, too, feel somewhat incomplete. The centrepiece of Inner Song is a ‘Corner of My Sky’, a collaboration with the great John Cale. Cale’s vocal contribution is (predictably) stellar, but feels ill-served by Owens’ instrumental, which slightly outlives its own ideas. When compared to Owens’ own track ‘8’ (replete with zany instrumental choices and tracks stacked miles high on each other), ‘Corner of My Sky’ doesn’t quite nail its slow build-up or cathartic crescendo in the same way.

But elsewhere, the simpler approach works wonders. ‘Melt!’ disciplines itself in a way that solidifies and strengthens its theme. ‘Night’ uses Owens’ (now trademark) formula: an ascent from balladry into ecstatic techno—but feels like a more complete realisation of that potential than before.

Lyrics are strongest when implicit and minimal. ‘Re-Wild’ and ‘L.I.N.E.’ may be too on-the-nose and sneaker advert-y for some tastes—but that just comes with the territory. Owens is an earnest and forthright songwriter. For anyone who remembers ‘Evolution’ off the last album, her very slight propensity for cheese will be no surprise. In their own way, these lyrics support Owens’ new-agey vibes—a former nurse, she was partially inspired to create music as an investigation of its healing properties. Nine times out of ten, her lyrics are perfectly fine—but the superb music around them makes every single clanger resonate that much louder.

‘Jeanette’ is the most emotive this album gets—and not a single lyric is spoken. The track testifies Owen’s nigh-unmatched talent as a producer; it balances its warmth with steely temperance, swaddles its beat in exquisite shrouds of sound. The track feels like a real-time transfiguration of pain into joy—an affirmative centrepiece, which says more than words ever could. It’s the overflowing heart of an album which shelves old experiments, instigates new ones, and seeks throughout to lift the spirit and body.

 

Inner Song is available for purchase and streaming here.

Words: Andrew O’Keefe

In Review Tags Electronic, Electropop
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